Read Today’s Top Story: Miami-Dade home sales increase again

0
0
0

Artificial intelligence will not replace real estate agents — it will divide them

by Allan Dalton

Just as roughly 20% of agents control 80% of the industry’s production, a relatively small group will adopt AI strategically and separate themselves dramatically from the rest of the field.

Artificial intelligence will not replace real estate agents. It will divide them.

One group of agents will use AI primarily for its generative power — to generate work. Marketing copy. Emails. Property descriptions. CMAs. Lead generation. Video scripts. These tools will unquestionably make them more efficient. They will also make them increasingly interchangeable.

The other group will use AI very differently. They will rely on analytic AI to interpret data, uncover patterns and deliver meaningful insights that guide client decision-making. This distinction will accelerate an already widening divide between transactional agents and relational consultants.

I hope that divide grows.

Because as I write this, I am — along with Anthony Lamacchia — preparing to launch the Certified Real Estate Consultant credential, online course and professional network. We are betting the ranch on a familiar outcome: Just as roughly 20% of agents control 80% of the industry’s production, a relatively small group will adopt AI strategically and separate themselves dramatically from the rest of the field.

I have seen this movie before.

When I was CEO of Realtor.com, a small percentage of Realtors invested meaningfully in the platform, while the majority used the site only at the lowest level of its utility. Those who committed didn’t double their productivity — they quadrupled it, and more. The same pattern is emerging again, this time driven by AI.

In my recent book on artificial intelligence, I referenced research I conducted with AI itself. Setting aside its ingratiating and occasionally flattering tone, the system surfaced several blunt and, I believe, unavoidable conclusions:

First, if real estate agents do not learn to use AI as a core resource during in-home consultations, they will not survive long-term. At best, their influence and productivity will shrink materially — mirroring what happened to travel agents and traditional life insurance salespeople.

Second, American households collectively hold approximately $40 trillion in home equity, alongside roughly $60 trillion in financial assets. For those financial assets, consumers seek out professionals who intentionally redefined themselves — moving from stockbrokers and insurance salespeople to wealth managers, financial planners and certified financial planners.

Third, for the $40 trillion in home equity — the largest asset most families will ever own — homeowners are effectively discouraged from seeking professional guidance during the 10-plus years when they are not transacting. Why? Because our industry messaging rarely extends beyond:

  • “When you’re ready to buy or sell, call me.”
  • “List with me and start packing.”
  • “Everything Betty touches turns to sold.”

None of this has anything to do with home equity strategy, maintenance planning or long-term real estate decision-making.

Ironically, real estate agents send out exponentially more thank-you notes than they receive. I was under the impression that gratitude flows to the person who delivers the value.

Fourth, unless top agents intentionally follow the path taken by former stockbrokers and insurance agents — who evolved into “clients-for-life” professionals with new titles, training and expectations — there will be no meaningful divide at all. Everyone will be in the same boat.

And that boat may already be taking on water.

I am betting on the best and brightest in our industry to evolve — to use AI not to automate relationships away, but to make real estate more human, not less.

Because if consumers increasingly turn to Zillow, Realtor.com and Homes.com for transactional data — and to AI for real estate asset management advice — the industry will continue to normalize a phrase uniquely its own: “my past client.”

Real estate does not suffer from an image problem. It suffers from a value void.

We are impeccably branded. Perfectly photoshopped. Exceptionally dressed. AI now helps us write glowing self-reviews. Parking garages overflow with luxury cars. And yet, ours may be the only profession targeted by a class-action lawsuit centered on whether individual practitioners genuinely negotiate their fees.

That tells us something.

Too many consumers view real estate transactions as fee-inflated events designed to subsidize an inefficient system. That perception will not change through better marketing. It will only change through demonstrable, consultative value.

AI presents an opportunity to reverse this narrative. Used properly during home consulting visits, it can position agents as indispensable advisors — unlocking more referrals, deeper trust and lifelong client relationships.

Confucius wrote, “All wisdom begins by properly naming things.” When names are wrong, undertakings fail.

Real estate professionals deserve titles and personal brands that reflect true expertise — sophisticated skills, deep knowledge and earned wisdom. If two transactional industries successfully evolved into trusted advisory professions, there is no reason ours cannot do the same.

This transformation — from one-time transaction facilitator to lifelong home asset consultant — is not theoretical. It is achievable.

Allan Dalton is the co-founder of the Certified Real Estate Consultant course and network and former CEO of Realtor.com.

Read More Related to This Post

Join the conversation

[gravityform id="3" title="true" description="false" ajax="true"]