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The One Daily Habit That Could Put Six Figures In A Real Estate Pro’s Pocket

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A lot of real estate agents overcomplicate their business. The answer can be simpler and more lucrative than most realize. Whether you’re a brand-new agent or a 20-year veteran, the single most important driver of your real estate business comes down to this: Talk to people.

Not the latest CRM. Not your social media strategy. Not your drip campaign sequence. Just conversations — real ones, every single day — with buyers and sellers in your market.

It sounds almost too simple in an industry obsessed with technology and lead generation tools. But the data, and the math, (and my 35+ years teaching this) tell a compelling story.

The six-figure prospecting formula

Here is what one disciplined hour of daily prospecting, five days a week, actually looks like on paper:

  • 1 hour/day prospecting × 5 days a week = 5 hours
  • 5 hours × 4 weeks = 20 hours per month
  • 1 appointment per hour = 20 listing appointments
  • 20 appointments = 5 listings
  • 5 listings = 3 listings sold
  • $10,000 average commission × 3 = $30,000/month
  • $30,000 × 12 months = $360,000 annually

One hour a day. That’s the entire investment. In a housing market where agents are agonizing over interest rate uncertainty and tightening inventory, the lever that moves the needle most isn’texternal — it’s behavioral.

Why agents stall — and how to break through

Fear of the phone is one of the most pervasive and least-discussed obstacles in real estate. On coaching calls, it comes up constantly: agents who have spent hours crafting the perfect script, chosen the perfect time of day and still haven’t dialed.

The honest truth? There is no perfect time. There is no perfect script. The only way to get better at prospecting is to prospect. Every conversation — even an awkward one — sharpens your skills and edges you closer to a transaction.

For agents who tend to procrastinate, the fix is straightforward: block the first hour of every morning for calls, before anything else competes for attention. For agents who perform better later in the day, use that window. Either way, protect the time.

Who to call — and what to say

A common mistake is overcomplicating the contact list. The best prospects are often the closest ones:

  • Sphere of influence: Friends and family already trust you. A check-in call asking how you can help is low-pressure and frequently surfaces referrals.
  • Past clients: The market has shifted. A Neighborhood Market Report showing current home values is a legitimate reason to reconnect — and a demonstration of value.
  • FSBOs: Sellers attempting to navigate offers and contracts alone need professional representation now more than ever, especially in complex deal environments.
  • Expireds: A listing that didn’t sell is a seller who still wants to sell. Many of your competitors have already moved on. You haven’t.
  • Renters: With affordability pressures reshaping buyer timelines, renters represent a pipeline of future clients who may be closer to ready than they think.
  • Open house leads: If you don’t have current listings, offer to host an open house for a colleague. The leads belong to you.

Track it — even imperfectly

Tracking does not need to be sophisticated. A simple two-column chart labeled “Buyer” and “Seller” — with a checkmark after each real estate conversation — is enough to create accountability and momentum.

Even a single checkmark at the end of the day means the business moved forward. That matters more than the size of the contact list or the sophistication of the follow-up sequence.

The 30-day commitment

The proposal is simple: commit for the next 30 days to talking to at least one buyer and one seller every single day about real estate. Not sending emails. Not posting on Instagram. Talking.

Thirty days is long enough to build a habit, generate real pipeline and see measurable results. It is short enough that the commitment feels achievable, even for the most time-pressed agent.

In a market where agents are searching for an edge, the most durable competitive advantage is the simplest one: showing up for the conversations every day, without exception.

Ready? Pick your start day.

Don’t wait for Monday. Don’t wait for the new month. Don’t wait until your database is “organized.” Pick a day — today if you can — and make it Day 1. Write it down. Tell someone. Make it real.

One conversation today. One tomorrow. Thirty days from now, you won’t recognize your pipeline.

Your next level is one conversation away. Go make it.

Darryl Davis, CSP, has spoken to, trained, and coached more than 600,000 real estate professionals around the globe. He is a bestselling author for McGraw-Hill Publishing, and his book, How to Become a Power Agent in Real Estate, tops Amazon’s charts for most sold book to real estate agents.

This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of HousingWire’s editorial department and its owners.

To contact the editor responsible for this piece: tracey@hwmedia.com