Elite Agent

The three habits that separate top agents from the rest: consistency, accountability and momentum

In real estate, success isnโ€™t about luck, itโ€™s built through habits, structure and discipline. REMAX sales negotiator and team leader Brett White believes the agents who win long term do three things better than most: stay consistent, stay accountable and keep their momentum.

As a sales negotiator, business owner and team leader, Brett White has spent more than two decades testing what truly drives success in real estate.

The REMAX Extreme veteran, who began his career in sales and marketing before building an award-winning mortgage brokerage, eventually turned his focus to property sales, where he found his stride.

Today, he heads the Brett White Team in Currambine, Western Australia, a consistently high-performing group regularly featured among the top ranks of both the Australian and global REMAX network.

His message to agents looking to emulate that success is simple but uncompromising: โ€œDream big, move fast.โ€

Brettโ€™s career has been built on curiosity, education and a willingness to refine and reinvent his approach.

He believes there is no single formula for success in real estate, no universal playbook to follow.

Instead, achievement comes from a commitment to doing the work consistently, purposefully and with discipline.

โ€œWe need to look at where we are now, what our processes are and how are theyโ€™re serving us,โ€ he says.

โ€œWeโ€™re not given a blueprint on what we need to do to get to where we want to be. We need to be constantly tweaking our own best practices to ensure we are working the best we can be.โ€

The foundations of a high-performing week

Brett has seen countless agents chase the next big thing, whether thatโ€™s a new CRM, marketing platform or strategy, only to lose sight of the basics that underpin long-term success.

He says the best-performing agents are rarely those doing something radically different; rather, they are the ones who maintain a steady rhythm of effective activity and hold themselves accountable to it.

โ€œWhat you do today is important, what you do tomorrow is important,โ€ he says.

โ€œLook beyond the ad hoc tasks that keep you โ€˜busyโ€™ and focus on what will move you forward in your career, your business.

“Look at where you are now and where you want to be in three, six, 12 monthsโ€™ time. What best practices can you implement now to get you there? Put the time and effort into that, and youโ€™ll see rewards down the track.โ€

Brett is also a firm believer that thereโ€™s always room for improvement, regardless of how long someone has been in the industry.

โ€œWherever you are now, in terms of your career and your business, we can all improve and do it better,โ€ he says.

For him, accountability begins with structure, and agents who rely on motivation alone, he says, will always struggle to build momentum.

โ€œHaving processes in place, and building a consistent structure to your working week automatically creates accountability ensuring tasks, especially those that build your database, your opportunities and your business, are being actioned.โ€

Discipline creates freedom

One of the paradoxes Brett talks about often is how discipline, something that sounds restrictive, actually enables freedom.

โ€œPutting in the hard work and remaining consistent through being disciplined, that creates freedom in the long run,โ€ he says.

โ€œIt sounds ironic, but the framework of discipline, if executed effectively, will allow you more freedom.โ€

For him, that freedom isnโ€™t about working less; itโ€™s about working with intention.

Discipline gives him the ability to switch off knowing that the important things are being handled; it also removes the stress and anxiety that can come from inconsistency.

โ€œWhen youโ€™ve built systems and habits that support your goals, you donโ€™t have to rely on willpower every day,โ€ he explains.

โ€œYou just follow the process. Thatโ€™s where freedom lies.โ€

He encourages agents to think of discipline not as a short-term push, but as a framework that supports their entire career: โ€œIf you want predictable results, you need predictable behaviour,โ€ he says.

The challenge and payoff of momentum

While consistency and accountability are essential, Brett says maintaining momentum is often where agents stumble.

Early enthusiasm can fade quickly when the workload builds, listings slow or personal motivation dips.

โ€œThe real test is staying in control of your schedule when the market gets tough or when life gets busy,โ€ he says.

โ€œThatโ€™s when your structure matters most.โ€

โ€œDo the work, get the structure and do the not so sexy stuff first and do it right,โ€ he says.

โ€œDo it repeatedly, because we are what we do in repetition.

“If our results arenโ€™t great enough, it just means weโ€™ve been doing the wrong actions over and over. Go back, re-evaluate and start to changeโ€ฆ and youโ€™ll see more success.โ€

Of course, he also acknowledges that burnout is common in real estate, particularly when agents rely on adrenaline and urgency to carry them through.

The antidote, he says, is steady forward movement: โ€œAt the heart of it, keep moving, keep progressing, keep learning and surround yourself with other people who are passionate about what youโ€™re doing.โ€

He adds that being part of a high-performing team helps maintain that momentum.

โ€œWhen youโ€™re surrounded by people who share your energy and drive, it lifts everyone. You hold each other accountable, you push each other to do better, and you celebrate the wins together.โ€

A career built on growth

After more than 20 years in the industry, Brettโ€™s focus remains on evolution, both his own and that of the people around him.

He continues to study the market closely, invest in professional development and look for better ways to serve clients.

He believes that in an industry that never sits still, staying curious and adaptable is key.

โ€œSuccess isnโ€™t static,โ€ he says.

โ€œYou canโ€™t reach a level and think youโ€™ve made it. Youโ€™ve got to keep learning, keep refining and keep improving. The moment you stop doing that, the market will move past you.โ€

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Catherine Nikas-Boulos

Catherine Nikas-Boulos is the Digital Editor at Elite Agent and has spent the last 20 years covering (and coveting) real estate around the country.