Join our FREE personalized newsletter for news, trends, and insights that matter to everyone in America

Newsletter
New

Culture Is Not A Perk. It Is The New Engine Of Mortgage Growth

Card image cap

In the mortgage industry, we love to talk about technology, market cycles, and rate movement, but there is one topic that still gets treated like a soft skill even though it determines almost every outcome — culture.

Culture is not a perk. It is not a slogan on a wall. It is the operating system that powers customer acquisition, team performance, recruiting, and long-term growth. And at a time when the fastest growing share of new mortgages comes from first-time buyers and diverse or emerging market segments, culture is no longer optional. It is the strategy.

I learned about culture’s role in trust building long before I had a title. I grew up in a low-income community where people survived by leaning on one another. My grandfather took me to the barbershop every week, even though he was bald. I used to joke that he went for the gossip, not the haircut. What I did not understand then was that the barbershop was a community institution of trust. People traded advice, shared opportunities, and helped one another navigate life. It was trust in action. It was community. It was culture. That simple environment shaped the way I lead today.

Trust is the only thing that can cut through fear, complexity, and industry jargon. And as the market evolves, trust is increasingly the first thing first-time buyers are looking for. Today’s borrower, especially the emerging homebuyer, is walking into the market with real concerns. Rising costs, confusing guidelines, cultural barriers, past financial trauma, and years of hearing that homeownership is not for them. This group does not want marketing. They want guidance. They want someone who speaks plainly, listens without judgment, and meets them where they are, in the barber or beauty shop, at the pulpit, and at the corner store.

This is where inclusive leadership, culture building, and market outreach collide. Not as separate ideas, but as one strategy. Inclusion happens when people know they belong, they are respected, and they can speak honestly without punishment. When truth surfaces, it becomes fuel for growth and innovation. Innovation does not come from people who are scared. It comes from people who feel seen and trusted.

Team composition matters. Representation matters. Communication style matters. If your staff does not resemble your market, you are competing with one hand tied behind your back. When borrowers see someone who understands their story or hear someone who communicates in their language, the whole experience changes. Fear drops. Confidence rises. Suddenly, the homeownership dream feels possible.

Inclusive leadership is not an HR trend. It is a customer acquisition strategy. You can buy marketing, leads, and even talent. You cannot buy culture. Culture is the unseen engine behind every number you brag about. It decides how your team reacts when the pressure hits. It decides whether your best people become recruiters or flight risks.

At Southern Bancorp, we built a mortgage team grounded in this philosophy. This was not accidental. It was intentional, and it changed everything. We train cultural fluency in underwriting. We train effective communication that makes sense to the communities we serve. And we encourage our staff to stay connected to their local institutions of trust —barbershops, churches, community centers, and corner stores. These are not marketing channels. They are places where people tell the truth about their fears and hopes, where business happens as a byproduct of trust.

Here is what happens when you build culture first and lead with education as your marketing tool. Loan officers get warm introductions from trusted community partners, not cold leads. Processors receive cleaner files because borrowers understand the rules of engagement and process. Leaders spend less time firefighting and more time coaching. Teams collaborate more naturally because everyone believes in the mission. And customers show up educated, prepared, and confident, which raises both production and performance.

This type of alignment is not magic. It is culture building that starts with respect and builds trust on the ground and online. The data proves it. Companies with inclusive teams and strong cultures grow faster and outperform competitors. Belonging builds speed. It builds creativity. It keeps people engaged long after the applause fades. When people feel safe, they take smart risks. They share better ideas. They build something worth staying for. That kind of ROI shows up in both your margins and your mission.

As leaders, we cannot afford to keep treating culture as an afterthought. Culture is the new competitive advantage. It is what allows a team to navigate complex borrowers, uncertain markets, and shifting regulations. It is also what allows a community to trust you enough to let you guide them through one of the biggest financial decisions of their life.

If we want to grow, we must be willing to lead differently. Start where trust already lives. Build teams that mirror the market. Teach with clarity. Follow up with personalization. Listen before trying to sell. Finally, hold culture with the same seriousness you hold production.

Because in today’s market, culture is not part of the business. Culture is the business.

Jeremy Davis is….
This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of HousingWire’s editorial department and its owners. To contact the editor responsible for this piece: zeb@hwmedia.com.