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Primary keyword: brokerage operating system Growth exposes the gaps in your firm’s operating model. Volume climbs, but margins swing. Lead flow increases, but response times degrade. Managers are busy, yet
Margins are compressing. Agent splits crept up in 2021–2022 and never reset. Lead costs rose while conversion softened. If your EBITDA feels stuck despite higher top-line volume, the issue isn’t
Margins compress when growth relies on hiring rather than throughput. If your top line is expanding but profit per agent is flat, you don’t have a recruiting problem—you have an
Top brokerages are not losing ground because of market cycles—they’re losing ground because their models aren’t calibrated for today’s cost of growth. Margin compression is structural: recruiting incentives are richer,
Dashboards are everywhere; decisive operating cadence is not. Most teams stare at dozens of numbers yet struggle to answer the only questions that matter: Are we creating sufficient future revenue?
Deal volume is volatile, margins are compressed, and too many teams are operating on a patchwork of tools loosely held together by meetings. Leaders feel it in missed forecasts, bloated
Margin compression isn’t theoretical. It’s your P&L. Rising splits, fragmented tech, and inconsistent field leadership create a slow bleed most operators misdiagnose as a market problem. It isn’t. It’s an
Margin compression isn’t a cycle problem. It’s a design problem. Split inflation, rising lead costs, and compliance exposure have forced a separation between firms that run true operating systems and
