I was thinking today, we can overcomplicate this business.
We debate splits, technology stacks, lead generation, office footprint. And somewhere in all of that noise we forget the thing that actually holds a brokerage together. How people feel when they walk through your door.
Horst Schulze said it best. “Guests do not primarily want luxury. They want to feel like they are wanted and cared for.” That is it. That is the whole game. And he proved it by studying 400,000 guests at the Ritz-Carlton until the data was undeniable. When the first contact with a guest was excellent, a complaint never followed. When it was negative, a complaint always followed. Almost every time without exception.
He called his philosophy simple. Ladies and gentlemen serving ladies and gentlemen. Every person in that building, regardless of their role or their title, was expected to treat every other person with dignity. Full stop.
The brokerage firm I led, was built around that same belief. And I want to be direct about something. I never tolerated disrespect from an agent toward my staff. Not ever. Not from a top producer. Not from anyone. Production does not buy you the right to treat people poorly. Ladies and gentlemen serving ladies and gentlemen means it goes both ways. The moment you let one person erode that standard you have told your entire team what they are actually worth to you.
Onboarding Is Your Ten-Foot Rule
Schulze also created the ten-foot rule. Every employee, regardless of role, stops within ten feet of a guest, makes eye contact, and says welcome. Not hi. Welcome. Because hi puts two people on equal footing. Welcome tells someone you are there for them. Steve Jobs flew to Atlanta to learn this before he opened a single Apple Store and built it into every retail location. Apple Retail became one of the highest revenue per square foot operations in history. It started with a man obsessed with the first moment of human contact.
That first moment is your onboarding. The day an agent signs with your brokerage is your ten-foot moment. What do they feel walking in? Is there someone who makes them feel like they made the right call or do they get a packet, a login, and a good luck? I have seen brokerages spend thousands recruiting an agent and lose them inside 90 days because the onboarding experience told them they were just a number. Win that first moment and you build a foundation. Fumble it and you spend the next year trying to earn back trust you never fully established.
Retention Is a Daily Decision
Onboarding gets an agent in the door. Retention is what keeps them. And retention is not a program. It is a daily decision made by every manager and leader in your office.
At my firm we made one promise – and delivered it – to every agent. Broker and compliance support within one hour or less on weekdays and two hours on weekends. No exceptions. I monitored it personally every single week. That promise told our agents something no recruiting brochure ever could. When it matters we are here.
Schulze gave every Ritz-Carlton employee authority to spend up to $2,000 on the spot to resolve a guest complaint. In his final three years the full amount was used exactly once. The point was never the money. It was knowing someone had their back.
But get this, I have watched too many acquisitions go sideways because new ownership looked at the P&L and started trimming what they could not explain. When Schulze left, the new Ritz-Carlton leadership cut the escort standard, walking guests to their destination instead of pointing. The brand fell from number one in the world to number twenty-six. One cultural decision. I have seen the exact same collapse happen in brokerages after a sale closes. The thing that looked like overhead was the entire reason agents stayed. Culture is not a cost center. It is the moat.
Before you cut anything ask what it is actually paying for. Not just functionally but emotionally. Your agents have options every single day. They stay because of how your office makes them feel.
Ladies and gentlemen serving ladies and gentlemen. Protect that standard. Lead like it matters.
Because it is the whole business.
Win the day.






