Blog
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An Agent’s Most Valuable Tool: Understanding, Building, and Delivering Your Value Proposition
Your value proposition explains the unique benefits a customer gets from choosing to work with a particular brand, vendor, or in your case, real estate agent. It’s what drives clients to work with you over any of your competitors.
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Learn How to Learn: Create Your 2024 Training Calendar
Whether you’re a rookie real estate agent or a veteran in the business, consistently learning and continuing your education should be a top priority if you want to build a successful career and a fulfilling life. -
Get Purposeful With Models
Models are all about providing a framework of best practices that are proven to get us from point A to point B as quickly and efficiently as possible. Systems are the methods we use to set those models in motion. Unless you are truly venturing into undiscovered territory chances are there’s a best practice for what you’re trying to accomplish. -
The Monotony of Success
In order to see our habits through, we need to view them less as goals to be accomplished in one grand, fell swoop, and more as what they are: essential building blocks that combine to make us who we are. -
Think Better With Edward de Bono’s SIX THINKING HATS
Transforming our mindset around meetings can be as simple as putting on a different hat. Edward de Bono’s Six Thinking Hats makes just this argument. The Six Thinking Hats are directions that we can channel our thinking into when approaching a situation. -
Optimize Your Team With The 30-60-90
When the market shifts, everything needs to be re-evaluated and optimized: budgets, lead generation strategies, and even organizational charts. A challenging market is the time to do more with less. You need to be purposeful with your people. -
The Importance Of Asking Great Questions
The older we are, the more there is to know and the more questions we need to ask. Our lives are directly impacted by the questions we ask — or fail to ask.
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False Confidence, Education, And The Dunning-Kruger Effect
In 1995 a man named McArthur Wheeler was convinced that lemon juice was not only a good drink mix, but that it also could be used to make someone invisible to video cameras