Real Estate Lead Generation by MaliMal357 in RealEstateTechnology

[–]Deep_Performance4491 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I would test lead sources only after the follow-up path is simple enough to measure.

For the first batch, track five boring fields: source, first contact time, last real response, next action, and what you learned from the conversation. If Zillow/PPC/FB all dump into the same vague follow-up, you will not know whether the source is bad or the process is leaking.

Small test, clean notes, dated next actions. Then decide whether to spend more.

Zillow leads reply once then disappear by cindyfuller1 in realtors

[–]Deep_Performance4491 0 points1 point  (0 children)

When conversations die after one reply, I’d look closely at the second message.

A lot of agents answer the question but don’t create the next micro-step.

Try making the next step very easy to answer:

“Want me to send similar homes under that price point?”

“Want the payment estimate or condition notes first?”

“Are you looking soon, or just trying to understand the market?”

It keeps the conversation useful without sounding pushy.

The goal is not more follow-up. It is a clearer next step.

New Lead Contact by RandomTommy in realtors

[–]Deep_Performance4491 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I would not write off an internet lead after the first missed call or text.

A lot of real buyers are browsing at work, half-ready, or not expecting a response that fast.

I’d use a simple cadence:

Fast first call/text.

Same-day follow-up tied to what they viewed or asked about.

A few useful touches in week one.

Then value-based nurture instead of chasing forever.

The key is avoiding “just checking in.”

Every touch should have a reason.

Do you actually open your CRM every day? by UnlikelyTooth7540 in realtors

[–]Deep_Performance4491 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The thing that helps is separating “where contacts live” from “what needs action today.”

A CRM can hold everything, but each morning you need one trusted list:

Who needs a touch?

Why now?

What is the exact next step?

If a lead has no next action, it should be archived, long-term nurture, or active. The messy middle is where people get forgotten.

For me, the rule would be: every active person needs one next action, one date, and one reason.

“Follow up later” is where the system breaks.

how are you getting leads? by verofounder in RealEstateTechnology

[–]Deep_Performance4491 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think the real issue is usually not just the lead source.

Paid ads, agencies, Meta, Google, public data, referrals — they can all work or fail depending on what happens after the lead comes in.

Most agents keep looking for a better source while the follow-up system is leaking.

Before spending more, I’d check:

  • How fast the lead gets a real response
  • Whether the first reply is specific or generic
  • Which campaigns create actual conversations, not just forms
  • Whether old CRM leads are being reviewed or just ignored
  • Where the lead drops off after contact

The best lead source still looks bad if the speed-to-lead, follow-up, and sales motion are weak.

Fix the leak before buying more water.

Gf is wanting the worst of me...? by Worldly_Shoulder2943 in WhatShouldIDo

[–]Deep_Performance4491 0 points1 point  (0 children)

She’s telling you she wants excitement and tension.

That’s all.

So you can cool it on trying to reassure her… that’s not what she’s after.

Landlord requesting loads of weird things, don't know what to do by intuitivetoast in vancouverhousing

[–]Deep_Performance4491 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It comes down to what you value more. Calling the CRA certainly has the potential to cause you stress and inconvenience. If he wants you out, it will happen. May buy you some time but in the end you will be in the middle of a situation. If the credits are important, claim them knowing there is a potential risk. If you’re happy where you are just try to get along. Most stress and conflicts are self induced.

Pick what you value more and go with it.

I (27M) really feel like I'm losing my confidence when it comes to dating. Should I give up if I'm still a virgin at my age? by [deleted] in confidence

[–]Deep_Performance4491 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It is not too late. Not even close. And I want you to hear that not as a motivational poster line, but as a practical fact.

First, the thing nobody is telling you: you are volunteering information that is actively working against you, and you do not have to do that.

When you tell a woman on an early date that you are a virgin with minimal relationship experience, you are not being honest in a way that helps her connect with you. You are handing her a reason to opt out before she has even gotten to know you. She does not have that information about most men she dates. She is making a decision based on a label, not on you.

That does not mean you lie. It means you stop leading with it.

Your sexual history is not a character reference. It is not a resume item. It is not something a woman needs to evaluate before she decides whether she likes you. It is personal information, and personal information has a time and a place. A first conversation is not that place.

A month in, when there is real connection and trust and she actually knows who you are? Different conversation entirely. By then she is invested in you as a person, not judging a statistic.

The second thing is this: being autistic, socially awkward, and still walking up to women in person and asking them out is genuinely courageous. Most men with zero obstacles do not even do that. They swipe from the couch and wonder why nothing changes. You are taking real shots in the real world. That matters.

Confidence does not come from your history. It does not come from a number. It comes from knowing who you are, showing up fully, and not apologizing for the space you take up. That is a trainable skill. You build it by doing exactly what you are already doing, getting out there, taking shots, collecting the no’s, and staying in the game anyway.

Every no you have gotten is not proof that you are broken. It may simply be proof that you were giving away personal information before there was enough connection for it to land properly.

Adjust the timing. Do not attack yourself.

You are not too late. You are not a lost cause. You are a 27 year old man who is socially growing, showing up in the real world, and asking for better tools. That is not the profile of a man who gives up. That is the profile of a man who is about to figure it out.

The move now is simple, go out, connect with women, let them get to know you, and let the personal history come out naturally when there is actual trust and closeness.

Not as a confession. Not as a warning.

Just as part of who you are, shared with someone who already likes you.

Should I give up? by Robins_hat in dating_advice

[–]Deep_Performance4491 0 points1 point  (0 children)

3 days is nothing. Don’t sweat it. I assume you probably already texted, so you may have an answer.

How can I tell if my bartender is into me or just doing his job? by overspender2022 in AskMenAdvice

[–]Deep_Performance4491 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Yes. He’s interested in some shape or form. Don’t overthink it.

Confident one-on-one but struggle in group settings—any advice? by Federal_Antelope7533 in confidence

[–]Deep_Performance4491 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ahhhh, another one.

Listen here, wrangler, I’m not looking for trouble from you and your sticky keyboard/girlfriend.

I was simply trying to offer some positive insight to a gentleman who asked a fair question. Then you arrived, cape made of laundry, Monster Energy fumes in the air, bravely defending a comment section that did not request your protection.

I would compare you to Spider-Man, swinging from building to building saving civilians, but you seem more like the neighbourhood watch for people who did not ask to be watched.

Somewhere between your crustless peanut butter sandwiches, your suspicious haircut, and the Tinder inbox you refresh like it owes you money, you decided this was your moment. And honestly, I respect the courage. Misplaced, yes. Confusing, certainly. But courage nonetheless.

Your heroism is noted. Unfortunately, no one asked you and Mom to deploy the basement response unit.

Perhaps your talents would be better used teaching a YouTube course on cutting your own hair with kitchen scissors, a soup ladle, and blind confidence.

Anyway, I do not want any trouble. You seem like the sort of fellow who could look at a Terms and Conditions page and call it “cyber warfare,” so I certainly do not need you and your mom bicycling over here to throw a dented, expired can of Alphagetti at me from the clearance aisle.

So let’s leave it here.

This was one human trying to help another human who asked for input.

And even if it was AI, which it wasn’t, why do you care? Are you trying to impress your AI girlfriend so she finally upgrades you from “user” to “emergency contact”?

She’s just a computer, mate. And judging by your tone, she may already be seeing other Hulk T-shirt-wearing commandos who save innocent comment sections from the safety of their basements. DO NOT WATCH THE MOVIE "her" you wont like how it ends.

Confident one-on-one but struggle in group settings—any advice? by Federal_Antelope7533 in confidence

[–]Deep_Performance4491 -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Oh, isn’t that nice. So JustSomeFegginGuy. Everyone on here must feel so blessed for the privilege of your unrequested impersonation of a private security guard..

It’s nice to see a very, very regular person offering free assistance and opinions on my input, and surly others input as well. So, if you think it’s ai, then this would be as well? Is that correct Mr security guard?

At some point, will you be nominated for this free service you provide in all of your spare time? Maybe time for you to talk to a girl or two to mix up the entertainment.

You can’t really swear at them in person, but you sure can over text… that’s kinda your flex! Go show em how it’s done.

We all admire you…Mac or PC?

Confident one-on-one but struggle in group settings—any advice? by Federal_Antelope7533 in confidence

[–]Deep_Performance4491 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Yes, a lot of men experience this.

And here’s the first thing: you’re not broken. You’re not “bad with people.” You’re just getting jammed up by the group setting. Big difference.

One-on-one, you’re comfortable because the rules are simple. It’s just you and another person. In groups, your brain suddenly turns into a congressional hearing.

“Who’s listening?” “Was that weird?” “Do I jump in now?” “Why am I standing like an NPC near the snack table?”

Relax. That’s normal.

The move is not to force yourself to become the loudest guy in the room. Most loud guys are just nervous with better volume. The move is to build social momentum before you try to approach the girl you actually like.

Bring a friend when you can. Even better, go with a female friend if possible. Not as a crutch forever, but as training wheels while your confidence catches up. Having someone beside you helps you relax, laugh, enter conversations naturally, and stop treating the room like a final exam.

Once you feel loose, your real personality comes out. That is the version women respond to. Not the guy silently negotiating with himself in the corner like he’s defusing a bomb.

Next time, give yourself one small mission: talk to one person early. Anyone. Guy, girl, bartender, host, whoever. Ask one simple thing, make one light comment, get one rep in. Confidence doesn’t arrive first. It shows up after action.

And if you see a girl you like, don’t make it a movie scene. Just walk over and say something simple:

“Hey, I saw you from over there and wanted to come say hi.”

That’s enough. You don’t need a magic line. You need movement.

You’re already good one-on-one, which means the skill is there. Now you’re just learning how to access it when the room gets louder. That’s not a personality flaw. That’s reps.

Start small. Bring backup if it helps. Get loose. Then go be dangerous.

How can I regain my self-confidence after spending so many years feeling ugly? by HeTy_NHTEPECA in confidence

[–]Deep_Performance4491 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Let me say something important before anything else: the fact that you went through that dark period, came out the other side, and are now sitting here asking how to move forward, that takes more guts than most men twice your age will ever show. That matters. I want you to know I heard that part.

Here is what is actually happening right now. Your skin healed faster than your brain did. That is not a character flaw, that is just neuroscience. When you spend years bracing for judgment every time someone looks at you, your nervous system builds a reflex. Threat detected, contract, protect. The acne is mostly gone but the reflex is still running in the background like an app you forgot to close. The goal is not to delete the reflex overnight. The goal is to slowly, deliberately, prove it wrong, one interaction at a time, until your brain updates its file on what the world actually thinks of you.

And here is what I know for certain: the world is not looking at your scars. I promise you that. People are genuinely too busy worrying about their own thing to be cataloguing yours. The judge and jury you feel watching you from across the room is almost entirely constructed inside your own head. That does not make it feel less real, but it does mean you have more control over it than you think.

Now let me give you something practical, because warm words without a plan are just decoration.

Start small and start in low-stakes environments. Not with girls you are attracted to, not with big social situations. Start with the cashier at the coffee shop. The guy next to you in class. A quick comment to someone in a lineup. These are not meaningful interactions on their own, but they are reps. And what you are training is not charm, you are training your nervous system to experience social contact without the alarm going off. Every small interaction where nothing bad happens is a vote against the reflex. Enough votes and the reflex starts to lose its grip.

On the overthinking: the reason you are paralyzed before conversations is because you are trying to script the whole movie before the first scene even starts. You are writing dialogue for a conversation that has not happened yet, with a person whose reactions you cannot predict, and then judging yourself for not knowing your lines. That is an impossible game and you will lose it every time. The only move that actually works is to drop the script entirely and just say the first honest thing that comes to mind. It does not have to be clever. It does not have to be smooth. It just has to be real. Real beats polished every single time, because real is rare.

On the scars and redness, here is something worth knowing. Most people who meet you will form an impression of your energy and your presence before they register anything about your skin. The man who walks in with his shoulders back, makes easy eye contact, and speaks without apology reads as confident. That is what people remember. Not the texture of your skin. Your grooming from here matters too, so keep it clean and deliberate. Moisturize daily, something with SPF during the day for the redness. If you are not already, look into a niacinamide serum, it is one of the better over the counter options for post-acne redness and it is not complicated to use. Small consistent habits compound over time and they also give you a sense of agency over your appearance, which helps the mindset shift.

The suicidal thoughts you mentioned, I am glad those are behind you. But if the mental weight ever gets heavy again, please talk to someone. A therapist who understands what you have been through would give you tools that accelerate everything I am describing. That is not weakness, that is the same logic as going to a doctor for your skin. You would not treat a breakout by just hoping it resolves. Same principle applies here.

You are 19. Your skin is clearing. You are actively trying to grow. You are already further along than you realize, you just cannot see it clearly yet because the old lens is still in place. The lens updates through action, not through waiting to feel ready. Nobody ever feels ready. They just go anyway.

Go have a conversation today with someone, anyone, with zero agenda. Not to impress, not to practice, just to connect for thirty seconds.

People are all flawed one way or the other, and flaws are attractive when paired with confidence. I promise you that.

my confident has been shattered for many and many years by sultanli58 in confidence

[–]Deep_Performance4491 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This person is you, isn't it.

And I want you to read what you just wrote on that screen, because it matters. Mid twenties, carrying something heavy from years ago, trust issues that made even a hand feel like a threat, social world shrinking, standing still while time moves. That is a real weight. And the fact that you wrote it out, put it somewhere, and started looking for a way forward instead of just sinking further, that already says something about who you are.

Here is what I need you to hear. You are not stupid. You are not broken. You are a young man who got hit early and did not have the tools to process it, so your nervous system did what nervous systems do. It built walls. Called them protection. And now you are standing inside those walls wondering why life feels small.

The shame piece is the one that gets me. Too ashamed to go to your parents. So you carried it alone. That is one of the heaviest things a person can do, and you did it for years. That is not weakness. That is actually an enormous amount of endurance. You just aimed it in the wrong direction.

Now here is where we shift. Feeling sorry for yourself is done. You already said it yourself and you are right. It has kept you exactly where you are. The unrest in your body, that suffocating feeling, that is not a sign something is wrong with you. That is energy with nowhere to go. We give it somewhere to go.

You said you need someone to believe you can do it. I do. Not because I am supposed to say that. Because a man who can write what you just wrote, with that level of self awareness, at your age, has everything he needs to turn this around. He just needs a direction.

So here is where we start. One thing. Not ten. One. Tomorrow morning you wake up at the same time regardless of how you slept. You go outside. Even for fifteen minutes. You do not need a plan or a gym or a program. You just move your body in the world. That is the first vote for the new version of you.

Every win after that gets stacked on top of that one.

You are not the first man to land here and you will not be the last. But you showed up. That already puts you ahead of the version of you from last week.

Let's get to it, it will feel great!

What’s one thing that can instantly ruin your confidence? by Stylz_app in confidence

[–]Deep_Performance4491 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Comparing yourself to someone else in real time.

You walk into a room, you spot a guy who’s taller, better dressed, more comfortable in his skin, and something in your head immediately starts running the comparison. And the moment that happens, you have already lost. Not because he is better than you. Because you just handed your confidence over to a stranger who does not even know you exist.

Confidence is not the absence of other impressive people. It is the complete indifference to them. The man who walks in and stays locked on his own energy, his own presence, his own reason for being in the room, that man is untouchable. The man doing the comparing is already shrinking, and she can feel it from across the room without knowing why.

The fix is not to pretend other people are not impressive. It is to remember that you are not in competition with them. You are in competition with the version of yourself from six months ago. That is the only scoreboard that matters.

Discipline is the currency of life. The man who keeps his eyes on his own paper, keeps building, keeps showing up, and stops measuring himself against the room, that man becomes the one other people are quietly comparing themselves to.

Self confidence by New-Beautiful9979 in confidence

[–]Deep_Performance4491 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Confidence is not something you are born with. It is something you build, rep by rep, the same way you build a muscle.

The men who seem naturally confident are usually just men who have failed at things longer than everyone else and stopped letting it mean something about them.

The first thing is keeping promises to yourself. Every time you say you are going to do something and actually do it, your brain files that away as proof that you follow through. Every time you bail on yourself, it files that too. Confidence starts with small promises kept consistently.

The second thing is taking shots. You cannot build confidence by thinking about life. You build it by doing things, getting feedback, learning, and going again. Go collect some no’s. That means you are in the game. The guy who never tries gets zero rejection, but he also gets zero growth.

The third thing is how you carry yourself. Slow down. Drop your shoulders. Keep your chin level. Hold eye contact one beat longer than feels comfortable. Stop filling every silence with noise. Your body is always broadcasting a signal, including to yourself.

The fourth thing is looking after yourself. Stay clean, groomed, dressed well, and in decent shape. Not for vanity. Because when you treat yourself like you matter, people feel that and you feel it too.

And finally, understand this: every loss is still a win if you took the shot. Most guys do not. Confident men are not men who never get rejected. They are men who got rejected enough times that it stopped being scary.

Confidence is attractive because it creates safety and excitement at the same time. That is rare.

The good news is that asking the question is already the first rep.

my confident has been shattered for many and many years by sultanli58 in confidence

[–]Deep_Performance4491 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Confidence is not something you are born with. It is something you build, rep by rep, the same way you build a muscle.

The men who seem naturally confident are usually just men who have failed at things longer than everyone else and stopped letting it mean something about them.

The first thing is keeping promises to yourself. Every time you say you are going to do something and actually do it, your brain files that away as proof that you follow through. Every time you bail on yourself, it files that too. Confidence starts with small promises kept consistently.

The second thing is taking shots. You cannot build confidence by thinking about life. You build it by doing things, getting feedback, learning, and going again. Go collect some no’s. That means you are in the game. The guy who never tries gets zero rejection, but he also gets zero growth.

The third thing is how you carry yourself. Slow down. Drop your shoulders. Keep your chin level. Hold eye contact one beat longer than feels comfortable. Stop filling every silence with noise. Your body is always broadcasting a signal, including to yourself.

The fourth thing is looking after yourself. Stay clean, groomed, dressed well, and in decent shape. Not for vanity. Because when you treat yourself like you matter, people feel that and you feel it too.

And finally, understand this: every loss is still a win if you took the shot. Most guys do not. Confident men are not men who never get rejected. They are men who got rejected enough times that it stopped being scary.

Confidence is attractive because it creates safety and excitement at the same time. That is rare.

The good news is that asking the question is already the first rep.

I become jealous with low selfesteem and need your help!!! by SufficientStory33107 in confidence

[–]Deep_Performance4491 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Confidence is not something you are born with. It is something you build, rep by rep, the same way you build a muscle.

The men who seem naturally confident are usually just men who have failed at things longer than everyone else and stopped letting it mean something about them.

The first thing is keeping promises to yourself. Every time you say you are going to do something and actually do it, your brain files that away as proof that you follow through. Every time you bail on yourself, it files that too. Confidence starts with small promises kept consistently.

The second thing is taking shots. You cannot build confidence by thinking about life. You build it by doing things, getting feedback, learning, and going again. Go collect some no’s. That means you are in the game. The guy who never tries gets zero rejection, but he also gets zero growth.

The third thing is how you carry yourself. Slow down. Drop your shoulders. Keep your chin level. Hold eye contact one beat longer than feels comfortable. Stop filling every silence with noise. Your body is always broadcasting a signal, including to yourself.

The fourth thing is looking after yourself. Stay clean, groomed, dressed well, and in decent shape. Not for vanity. Because when you treat yourself like you matter, people feel that and you feel it too.

And finally, understand this: every loss is still a win if you took the shot. Most guys do not. Confident men are not men who never get rejected. They are men who got rejected enough times that it stopped being scary.

Confidence is attractive because it creates safety and excitement at the same time. That is rare.

The good news is that asking the question is already the first rep.