Forget building fast. Build strong, brokerage president Lori Muller writes. Because the ceiling in real estate isn’t determined by the market — it’s determined by discipline.
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The real estate industry in 2026 isn’t the one I started in.
Commission conversations are louder. Consumers are more informed. Technology is faster. Attention spans are shorter. The noise is constant.
But here’s what hasn’t changed: opportunity.
If I were starting over today as a brand-new real estate agent, knowing what I know now after decades in sales, leadership and brokerage ownership, I wouldn’t chase trends. I’d build fundamentals. And I’d take the time to build them the right way from Day 1.
What new agents should do now
1. Put skills over lead generation
I would start by obsessing over skill development before I ever obsess over lead generation.
Most new agents worry about where their next lead is coming from. But leads aren’t the issue — conversion is. In 2026, consumers can Google market data, watch videos about the buying process and research neighborhoods on their own. What they can’t Google is confidence, negotiation mastery and calm leadership under pressure.
When I began my sales career, I practiced every night. I role-played objections. I refined scripts. I studied negotiation. I worked long days not because I had to, but because I understood that skill creates confidence — and confidence creates consistency.
If I were new today, I’d treat skill-building like a second job. Because the agents who win in this market won’t be the loudest. They’ll be the most competent.
2. Focus on relationship-building, not likes
I would focus more on relationships than on building a social media persona.
Social media is a powerful tool, but it’s not a business model. Visibility is not the same as viability. If I were starting in 2026, I would absolutely show up online — but I would not confuse likes with loyalty.
This business still runs on trust.
- I would prioritize real conversations over curated content.
- I would call people instead of just reacting to their stories.
- I would meet for coffee.
- I would host small gatherings.
- I would build a true database, not just a follower count.
Five meaningful conversations a day will outperform five polished posts every time. The goal isn’t to look successful; it’s to become indispensable.
3. Choose brokerage support over splits
I would choose my brokerage based on support, not just splits.
The industry talks endlessly about commission structures. But if I were brand new, I wouldn’t be asking, “What’s my split?” I’d be asking, “Who is going to make me better?”
One hundred percent of zero is still zero. A high split doesn’t compensate for weak training, poor onboarding or lack of mentorship. Early in your career, proximity matters more than percentage.
I would look for leadership that challenges me, systems that help me convert and operational support that allows me to focus on revenue-producing activities. The right environment can compress years of trial and error into months of accelerated growth.
4. Be the CEO of your business
I would structure my business like a CEO from Day 1.
Too many new agents treat real estate like a hustle instead of a company. In 2026, that approach won’t survive. Even if my business were small, I would operate with structure. I’d commit to using a CRM daily. I’d time-block prospecting. I’d define a niche or farm. I’d track my finances. I’d build a 36-month vision instead of living in 30-day survival mode.
I resisted systems early in my career, even something as simple as transitioning from a written planner to digital tools. But inefficiency costs opportunity. Systems don’t restrict growth — they create it. Structure isn’t corporate; it’s freeing. If I were new today, I’d act like a business owner long before I felt like one.
5. Commit to 3 years of relentless focus
Finally, I would commit to three years of relentless focus.
This is the part most people don’t want to hear. If I were starting in 2026, I would put blinders on for three years. No comparison. No entitlement. No distraction. Just consistent work.
The first three years in real estate are about planting, not harvesting. Too many agents leave during planting season because they don’t see immediate results. But I’ve watched this industry for decades, and I can tell you with certainty: If you stay consistent — sharpening skills, building relationships and protecting your mindset — your business begins to compound.
Markets shift. Headlines change. Commission models evolve. But habits compound.
If I were starting over in 2026, I wouldn’t try to build fast. I’d build strong. Because the ceiling in this business isn’t determined by the market — it’s determined by discipline.
And opportunity still belongs to those willing to earn it.
Lori Muller is the president of Fathom Realty in Appleton, Wisconsin. Connect with her on Facebook or LinkedIn.
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