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The real estate โ€˜Moneyballโ€™: How Dion Besser turned metrics into momentum

As founder of Melbourne agency Besser & Co, Dion Besser has built a high-performing team by borrowing a strategy from a baseball movie: define the role, measure the output, and focus on the numbers that matter.

While many in real estate chase visibility, charisma, and headline-making results, Dion Besser has taken a very different route. As founder of Melbourne agency Besser & Co, heโ€™s engineered a high-performing business not around personality, but precisionโ€”driven by structure, numbers, and a no-nonsense approach to performance. The unexpected catalyst? A baseball movie.

Moneyball, the Brad Pitt-led biopic about the Oakland Aโ€™s and their statistical revolution, might seem like an unlikely business playbook, but for Dion, it has become more than just entertainment. Itโ€™s a philosophy. Itโ€™s strategy. And most importantly, itโ€™s working.

After 16 years in the game, Dion says the last year has been among the most successful of his career.

His business doubled its GCI, not through flashy reinventions or superstar recruits, but by embracing focus, clarity and the untapped power of specialisation.

โ€œWe actually doubled our GCI in the last 12 months. And I think the reason for that is just focus,โ€ he says. โ€œIโ€™ve got some really, really good people supporting me now. And that freed me up to really focus on just being a real estate agent, listing and selling. Thatโ€™s the start and end point.โ€

While many real estate leaders still search for that elusive million-dollar agentโ€”the one who can prospect, list, negotiate and manage the back-endโ€”Dion has gone the other way.

Heโ€™s building a team like the Oakland Aโ€™s did: identifying people with specific strengths, and putting them in roles where they can execute those strengths repeatedly and effectively. No expectation that everyone can do everything. No pressure to be the โ€˜next big thingโ€™.

โ€œAll real estate agents are trying to look for that next big superstar. The person who can do a million in GCI, the next partner-directorโ€ฆ but Iโ€™ve stopped banging my head against the brick wall looking for that,โ€ he says. โ€œIโ€™ve been working on building a strong team with great attitude, people who are really good at one or two things.โ€

Moneyball movie poster. Image: Film Vault

The idea crystallised during a flight back from Bali. Watching Moneyball yet again, (“I think I’ve watched it a dozen time now”) he drew the parallels in real estate.

In the film, the Aโ€™s identified undervalued players based not on hype, but on cold, clean stats. They didnโ€™t need all-rounders; they needed men who could get on base. They built a record-breaking team from the spare parts others overlooked.

โ€œIโ€™ve loved that movie for years, but it really hit me a couple of months ago and I thought: I could do that here. I could apply the same thing to business.โ€

Dion’s version of the system starts with stripping emotion out of performance. Sales agents arenโ€™t evaluated on perceived potential or style, but on measurable output. How many calls did they make? How many appointments did they book?

One of his team members, George, isnโ€™t asked to sell. Not yet. His job is to prospectโ€”just that. Repetition, clarity, accountability. Build the muscle before moving to the next phase.

โ€œWhatโ€™s the one thing youโ€™re going to do your entire career as a real estate agent? Prospect. Thatโ€™s it. You might not always sell, you might not always list, but youโ€™ll always need to prospect. So Iโ€™ve got George doing just that. The hardest thing. Over and over and over again until it becomes second nature.โ€

This methodical approach isnโ€™t limited to sales. Dion applies it to every role in the business, even marketing and admin, where performance metrics are tied to tangible outcomes.

โ€œWith admin, the KPI might be attention to detail. Like, how many mistakes are on the brochure that Iโ€™ve had to fix before it goes to the vendor? Itโ€™s not about being harsh, itโ€™s about knowing what result youโ€™re trying to achieve and measuring it.โ€

When complaints spiked in his property management division, the solution wasnโ€™t to run workshops on customer service. It was to categorise every complaint, count them, and focus on the categories creating the most disruption.

โ€œWe categorised all the complaints, figured out how many we were getting in each area, and then worked on reducing the ones that came up the most. It wasnโ€™t about guessingโ€”it was about understanding the numbers.โ€

This analytical framework has also reshaped the way he handles growth and reward. Performance reviews are grounded in numbers – just as salary expectations are.

โ€œA pay rise is a numberโ€”$5,000, $10,000 more. So why shouldnโ€™t performance be a number too? More properties, fewer complaints, more closed calls. Whatever the role, thereโ€™s a number that defines success.โ€

That doesnโ€™t mean the business is cold or robotic. In fact, Dionโ€™s culture statement, recently printed and mounted on the office wall, reflects a clear ethos of cohesion and mutual support.

โ€œWeโ€™ve got this line up now: Stronger together. Solving, supporting, and succeeding. Itโ€™s not just for the team; itโ€™s how I want us to treat our clients too. We work with them. Itโ€™s a team effort.โ€

He admits it took time to let go of the idea that everyone needs to be good at everything. But now that the model is working, thereโ€™s no turning back.

โ€œItโ€™s about making people feel valued for what theyโ€™re actually good at – not making them feel inadequate because they canโ€™t do four other things.โ€

And in a business where hype often overshadows process, Dionโ€™s Moneyball approach has brought both calm and clarity.

โ€œThereโ€™s a lot of smoke and mirrors in real estate. You hear about young guns doing a hundred listings in a year … but how many did they really list? How many leads were just handed to them? I donโ€™t want smoke and mirrors. I want real data.โ€

Heโ€™s still refining elements, particularly how to measure creative roles or project delivery, but the momentum is real. The team knows whatโ€™s expected. And most importantly, they know why it matters.

โ€œIf you donโ€™t have a target, you donโ€™t know what to aim for. Itโ€™s as simple as that.โ€

In an industry often driven by gut feel and bravado, Dion has built something quieter and stronger: a team where performance is clear, progress is measurable, and everyone has a role worth mastering.

And heโ€™s done it without the Hollywood budget.

โ€œJust donโ€™t put a picture of me next to Brad Pitt,โ€ he jokes. โ€œThatโ€™s not gonna do me any favours.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.