The LO Down Mortgage Podcast

31 No's, Then She Said Yes - The LO Down w/ Monica Bowman

29 min · 3. juni 2026
episode 31 No's, Then She Said Yes - The LO Down w/ Monica Bowman cover

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Nearly 4 Decades. One Rule. Zero Shortcuts. Monica Bowman started in finance at 19, managing a branch of middle-aged men while she was still in college. Law school was the plan. Mortgage was the calling. In this episode, Monica breaks down what it actually takes to build a reputation so strong that real estate agents tell buyers they don't even need a pre-approval letter. Spoiler: it is not grinding harder. It is keeping your word with a ruthlessness most people only talk about. She closes loans that other loan officers have already walked away from. The record so far: a couple who had been declined 31 times over five years. Monica closes it. Because that is what she does. You will also hear how she survived a company acquisition with seven clients in contract simultaneously, sick on a Sunday night, learning a brand new system while crying through 14-hour days, and still delivered everything on time. This episode is not a highlight reel. It is a masterclass in what happens when you treat your craft like a profession worth studying, your clients like family worth protecting, and your word like the only currency that actually compounds. If you are a loan officer trying to figure out what separates the good from the ones everyone calls first, this is the one to watch. New episodes of The LO Down drop every week. Subscribe so you never miss a conversation that actually moves the needle.

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Alle episoder

108 Episoder

episode Mayor, Mortgage Boss & $5M/Month: How He Did It - The LO Down w/ Chet Mann cover

Mayor, Mortgage Boss & $5M/Month: How He Did It - The LO Down w/ Chet Mann

What does a $5 million/month mortgage producer, an elected mayor, and a dad who almost lost his son have in common? The same guy. And he's giving you the playbook. Chet Mann built one of the most productive mortgage businesses in the Carolinas — not by grinding 60 hours a week, but by obsessing over systems until the whole thing could run without him. The $60 Million Production Engine isn't a motivational poster. It's a day-by-day, cylinder-by-cylinder framework that tells you and your team exactly what to do Monday through Friday — until it gets boring. And boring, as Chet says, is the goal. But here's what most LOs miss: the systems aren't just for volume. They're insurance. When Chet's son was on home dialysis three nights a week waiting for a kidney transplant, when his cousin was fighting stage four cancer, when his family was reeling — the business didn't fall apart. Because the process held. His A-players held. The structure he'd built for years activated exactly when he needed it most. This episode is a masterclass in: * Why people buy you, not your company — and why most LOs are too afraid to say it * How a mayoral listening tour translates directly to better real estate agent relationships * The one leadership principle that separates $3M/month producers from $5M/month ones (hint: it starts with letting go) * Why 7s are the enemy — and what your team rating should actually look like Chet isn't here to hype you up. He's here to hand you the map he wished someone gave him 15 years ago. If you're serious about building a mortgage business that scales, survives, and actually means something — this is the episode.

I går32 min
episode She Ordered Bailey's on the Rocks & Niched Down, Now She's Unstoppable- The LO Down w/ Erin Hamilton cover

She Ordered Bailey's on the Rocks & Niched Down, Now She's Unstoppable- The LO Down w/ Erin Hamilton

She Stumbled Into Mortgage at a Christmas Party. 23 Years Later, She's Just Getting Started. Erin Hamilton didn't plan this career. She ordered Bailey's on the rocks, met a woman who saw something in her, and the rest is 23 years of building, grinding, and figuring it out the hard way. Here's what makes her story worth your time: she was doing a lot — builder tours, open houses, broker tours, working nights, no assistant, a toddler at home — and still felt like someone was holding her ankle underwater. Sound familiar? The shift happened when she got in a room where every single person had support staff. Not the big teams. Not the mega-producers. Everyone. That was the wake-up call. Now she's got her team locked in, and she went all in on one thing: the Buy Now, Sell Later bridge product. The result? A 36% increase in production in a single year. One product. One consistent message. Every Thursday on broker tour. That's it. She's not selling rates. She's not selling fluff. She's solving a specific problem better than anyone in her market — in-house product, faster speed, and a bridge fee that came in at $11K when her closest competitor quoted $42K on the same deal. And here's the part most LOs miss: she still feels like she's only at 30% capacity. With a nearly four-year-old at home, a husband with an unpredictable schedule, and a deliberately protected life — she's building this thing on her terms. The takeaway: stop trying to be everything to everyone. Find the one problem you solve better than anybody. Get in rooms that show you what's possible. And for the love of all things — stop manifesting and go do it.

5. juni 202630 min
episode He Sells Customer Service, Not Rates — Here's Why It Works - The LO Down w/ Alex Turner cover

He Sells Customer Service, Not Rates — Here's Why It Works - The LO Down w/ Alex Turner

From Yoga Mats to $30M: How Alex Turner Figured Out What Actually Builds a Mortgage Business Most loan officers are out here competing on rates, chasing every lead, and wondering why they're exhausted and stuck. Alex Turner said forget that. Fresh out of college, no sales experience, caddying and teaching yoga just to survive — Alex had every reason to play it safe. Instead, he made a decision: he would only compete on customer service and communication. Not rates. Not products. Service. That bet paid off. He saw the refi wave coming to an end while everyone else was celebrating, moved to a new company six to eight months before the market shifted, relocated to a less saturated market (total accident, total win), and built what could be the largest mortgage operation in his city. Here's the part most LOs miss: Alex doesn't just talk about service — he operationalizes it. He spends more time on a pre-approval than most LOs spend on a closed deal, because he'd rather catch a problem at 8am on a Tuesday than destroy a referral relationship on closing day. And his team? He's got a processor who works weekends by choice, loses sleep over files that don't close, and treats every deal like it's personal. The outcome: agents know an Alex Turner pre-approval means the deal closes. The lesson he leaves you with: stop chasing people who don't value what you bring. Find the agents who get it, serve the hell out of them, and let everyone else go. This is how you go from broke and lost to $30M. Not hacks. Not tricks. Just clarity, commitment, and customer service that hits different.

4. juni 202628 min
episode The In-Person Advantage No One Talks About - The LO Down w/ Bryant Delgado cover

The In-Person Advantage No One Talks About - The LO Down w/ Bryant Delgado

Most loan officers are out here chasing the next app, the next platform, the next "hack" — while Bryant Delgado is driving to client apartments and closing 100+ units a year doing it. Bryant didn't stumble into mortgage. He came up through loss mitigation, processing, and underwriting — and one cold call to a high-earning LO flipped the switch. Within three months, he quit. No safety net. Just conviction. Here's what separates him: while everyone's debating DMs vs. cold calls, Bryant's team is showing up in person because that's what his market demands. 90% Hispanic clientele. Low tech adoption. High trust threshold. You either meet people where they are, or you lose them to someone who will. He built a fully bilingual team — not conversational, fluent — mostly through warm referrals and past clients. He runs a P&L branch because he thinks like an operator, not just a producer. He invests his revenue back into referral partner relationships. And he's got a Shark Tank pitch ready for an ITIN product the industry is too afraid to build. The lesson? Bryant didn't win by being everywhere. He won by being exactly where his community needed him — in person, in their language, and in it for the long haul. If you're a loan officer asking whether the grind is worth it — Bryant's answer is simple: trust your gut and move forward. That's the whole thing. Stop waiting. Start showing up.

3. juni 202624 min
episode Free Ice Cream and $500k in Equity - The LO Down w/ Greg Anderson cover

Free Ice Cream and $500k in Equity - The LO Down w/ Greg Anderson

Greg Anderson almost got fired in 2005 for refusing to put people in bad loans. Twenty-one years later he's in the top 500 loan officers in the country and building toward a business that runs without him. That is not a coincidence. While other top producers were buying the fancy cars and over-leveraging during the boom years, Greg was living on a county employee's budget, quietly investing in index funds, and helping neighbors buy homes they could actually afford. When the crash came, his peers lost everything. His business grew. Here is what Greg figured out that most loan officers never do: when you go to work to help people instead of make money, the money stacks up anyway — and eventually you reach a point where you do not need any single client, partner, or deal badly enough to compromise how you operate. He calls it the handover phase now. The goal is to come to the office only when he feels like it. But the real gold in this episode is how Greg built the relationships that got him there — not with lead capture forms and follow-up sequences, but with a Ben and Jerry's truck, a school he attended as a kid, and 700 scoops of ice cream on the last day of school. No ask. No form. Just showing up for the community that made him. If you think community presence is a soft strategy, this episode will change your mind. And if you have ever wondered what it looks like to build a business where you truly do not need anyone, Greg is living proof it is possible — and it starts a lot earlier than most people think.

3. juni 202629 min