Micro-Behaviors and Big Accomplishments

by | Nov 25, 2024

As a manager, your success is measured by your big accomplishments.

These are both important business metrics (e.g., adding $10M in production to your office via recruiting) and relational objectives (e.g., my office is a place where agents can share openly and be vulnerable).

These big accomplishments don’t just materialize out of thin air.

They are the result of dozens of small actions each contributing to the objective.

Organizational consultants often call these micro-behaviors and advise managers to put their focus on these behaviors instead of the end result.

Why? Because behavioral change is incredibly difficult—both for you and for those you manage.

Setting and keeping a recruiting time block in your schedule is a good example of business metric micro-behavior.

A relational example could be starting each of your one-on-ones with a short personal time asking what’s going on in the lives of your agents.

Perhaps the person who told us to “not sweat the small stuff” was wrong.

When attempting to grow your office or team, it’s the small stuff that makes the big accomplishments possible.

 

 

The Simple Psychology of Real Estate Recruiting [2nd Edition]

Unlock the secrets of effective real estate recruiting. Revised to include actionable frameworks for sharper execution and to help you turn psychological theory into a repeatable recruiting system.

The Library Effect

The Library Effect

The Library Effect is something you can easily apply to recruiting, and it’s one of the reasons that accountability groups are so effective.

Just getting together with other hiring managers and recruiting for a set period of time each week will short-circuit many of your recruiting excuses.