Most people hire a real estate agent. My clients hire a strategist who happens to have a license.
If you're here, you probably already know you need more than someone who can open a lockbox and write an offer.
Sound familiar?
You've done your research. You know roughly what you want. But something about the standard process feels off — the agent who talks too much and listens too little, the lender who looks at your tax returns and goes quiet, the property that looked perfect until someone mentioned the insurance situation in that neighborhood. My clients are athletes, musicians, entertainers, founders, executives, veterans, and investors. Some have irregular income. Some have privacy requirements. Some are relocating from another market on a compressed timeline. Some just want to actually understand what they're buying before they sign anything. The common thread isn't industry or income level. It's that they've outgrown the average real estate experience — and they want someone who operates differently.
Here's what working together actually looks like.
I start every conversation by actually listening — to where you are, what you're trying to build, and what's made this feel complicated so far. Then I show you the math. Not a vague promise of "good investment potential" — the actual numbers, modeled out, so you can make a decision with clarity. I'll tell you things other agents won't. Which neighborhoods have insurance problems. Which properties have more upside than their price suggests. Which deals to walk away from and exactly why. My job isn't to get you into a transaction. It's to get you into the right one. I work with a small number of clients at a time so that every single one gets my full attention. That's not a pitch — it's just how this works at the level it needs to.