Want to Fail at Recruiting?  Here’s How…

by | Jun 25, 2025

The great military strategist Sun Tzu once said:  All wars are won or lost before they are ever fought.

Recruiting is not war, but it does feel like a battle.

If you don’t have a plan, you will lose.

However, not all plans are created equal.

Successful recruiters spend time and effort creating and refining an effective strategy that plays to their unique strengths and increases their likelihood of success.

The second way to fail is inconsistent execution.

A plan that you suspend during difficult times isn’t really a plan—it’s just a good intention.

And many hiring managers don’t follow through on their good intentions when things get chaotic (and things are always chaotic).

For example, they set time blocks for proactive recruiting activities but let them be overrun by the urgency of agents who demand their attention.

As Tom Ferry frequently says:  You have to be smart enough to develop a plan and stupid enough to follow it.

 

 

 

 

 

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.

Agent Migration: Q1 Had Some Big Surprises

Agent Migration: Q1 Had Some Big Surprises

While there’s a lot to digest, it’s critical to apply these insights to your recruiting strategy in the months ahead. That’s one of the reasons we’ve partnered with Lone Wolf to host a live webinar covering the Q1 Agent Migration trends you need to understand to compete effectively. Industry veterans Mark Johnson and Kyle Hunter will lead the session, simplifying the data, prioritizing what matters most, and outlining clear, actionable steps you can take.

How to Get it Right by Being Wrong

How to Get it Right by Being Wrong

There are several well-documented strategies researchers have discovered, but the easiest one to implement quickly is using a structured interview process. Develop a common set of questions for your interviews and record the answers candidates provide (take notes). And then try to hold back judgment until after the interview and when you’ve had time to review your notes.

Doing Only the Things You Like Doing

Doing Only the Things You Like Doing

For most recruiters and hiring managers, recruiting is a complex, end-to-end process containing a bunch of the individual tasks all of which they’re not going to enjoy. Those who push through unpleasant tasks not only find success but also find more satisfaction in the parts of the recruiting process they do enjoy.