If you're a brokerage owner or team leader, one thing you might be missing is building out your culture. And culture is incredibly important. One of my good friends told me years ago: "Culture beats strategy every day of the week."
Here's what that means:
You can have amazing technology, great coaching, strong leadership, solid systems, excellent staff, a great location, and competitive commission plans... but if people hate coming to work every day, none of that matters.
You need a culture where people are excited to show up, love the work experience, have work-life balance, and enjoy being part of the team. So the real question is: How do you build culture?
Culture doesn't happen by accident. It's intentional. You have to invest time, effort, and energy into building it.
One thing we do at our company is host social nights—sometimes during the day, but we call them social nights or events. We aim to plan one every 6 to 8 weeks. These events can be anything from go-karting, atten...
If you're running a great office meeting, and hopefully you are as a brokerage owner or team leader, you should be hosting these at least once a week. These meetings should be inspirational, motivational, and educational. Something people actually get excited to attend.
If you're doing that, I want you to start thinking about using your meetings as a recruiting opportunity. If you have strong relationships with co-op agents at other firms, why not invite them to your office meeting? Worst case, they say no. But you could say something like:
"Hey, we love working with you. We'd love to have you join us and check out our company. Just come experience an office meeting. I know we haven't closed a deal in a while, but if you want to see what we're all about, we'd be happy to have you. By the way, we invite co-op agents all the time. You can even pitch one of your listings or a buyer need—no pressure, just a chance to connect."
Another approach is if you have a guest speaker - a lender, ...
What's the number one motivator for someone to move from Company A to Company B? It's not the commission plan, so get that out of your head.
The answer is this: the reason I'm going to move from Company A to Company B is because I believe Company B can help me close more transactions.
Transaction count is the number one motivator for all agents. Yet, when I talk to most brokers and ask them to list the top five reasons someone should join their firm, the first things they often mention are: "We've got a great culture here. It's a family organization really connected to the community. People just trust each other. We've got a great staff."
These are all fantastic qualities, but let me tell you what that is: soft value.
Soft values are what keep agents at your company. People love to work at places with great culture, a charitable spirit, an open-door policy, and strong support staff.
But soft value isn't what moves an agent from Company A to Company B.
What moves agents is one thi...
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