The Real Podcast
The least salesy person in the room often creates the most trust. That was one of the biggest takeaways from my conversation with Lindsay Dunlap. In this episode of The REAL Podcast™, Lindsay shares her perspective on real estate, open houses, client relationships, professional reputation, and what it actually means to build long-term trust in a business that often rewards pressure, urgency, and performance. One of the things I appreciated most is the way Lindsay thinks about connection. She is not trying to "capture" people. She is trying to make them feel comfortable enough to connect. No pressure. No chasing. No jumping on people the second they walk through the door. Just welcome them. Give them useful information. Respect the fact that they may already have an agent. Let the conversation breathe. Simple. But not common. Because the person walking through the door may not become a client right away. Maybe never. But they will remember how they felt. They'll remember the respect. The ease. The knowledge. The lack of pressure. That is the part most agents overlook. Being salesy might create urgency. But being trusted creates memory. And memory is what compounds. This conversation is about more than open houses. It is about the way trust is built over time — through presence, honesty, communication, patience, and the ability to make people feel steady in high-pressure moments. A conversation with Lindsay Dunlap on trust, reputation, luxury without ego, and why the least salesy person in the room may be the one people remember most. —David A. Moya Brand Architect | Authority Strategist
97 episodios
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