For decades, title representatives, loan officers, and insurance professionals have bought data platforms, loaded them with MLS transactions and agent histories, and then largely ignored them. The problem, according to Mike Simon, CEO of AgentBrief, is not the quality of the data—it is that data alone does not tell a professional what to do next.
“Data is the raw information,” Simon says. “A signal is the specific thing that tells you to act right now.” Simon spent 30 years inside the real estate services industry before building AgentBrief, a real-time MLS intelligence platform available in select markets to settlement service professionals. The platform sends hourly push notifications directly to a user’s phone when an agent they are following lists a property, changes a price, or schedules an open house.
The tools that came before AgentBrief, Simon argues, were built around a workflow that does not exist in practice. They assume a professional will sit down with a dashboard, review agent activity, identify opportunities, craft outreach, and execute consistently. In reality, most professionals are juggling pipelines, compliance, and existing transactions. A dashboard that requires 30 minutes of daily review often gets opened twice and then forgotten. “People buy technology thinking it will solve all their problems,” Simon says. “Then it becomes too cumbersome to use. They get discouraged.”
Timing is the critical factor. A notification that an agent just listed a property is valuable; the same notification delivered four days later is nearly worthless. “If you don’t find out about things first, you really are last,” Simon says. Real estate agents make referral decisions while transactions are moving. By the time most settlement service professionals have cold information, the agent has already heard from someone else. AgentBrief monitors MLS activity every hour and delivers alerts at the moment an opportunity opens, shrinking the response window.
The platform also addresses a related problem: verifying an agent’s actual transaction volume. Simon describes a common scenario where a professional spends months cultivating a relationship with an agent who claims to do a hundred transactions a year, only to find the history does not match. “You can literally turn your back, type in an agent’s name on your phone, and see whether they’re actually doing business,” he says. The data has always existed, but the ability to check it in real time during a conversation has not.
AgentBrief organizes its features around five functions: find, follow, monitor, alert, engage. Each feature serves one purpose. Most data platforms stop at the first function: surfacing information. The user must then figure out which agents to track, set up external tools to monitor activity, create alerts, and manage outreach separately. Each step is a friction point where professionals drop off. The result, Simon says, is a tech stack that is “nominally comprehensive and practically useless.”
The professionals who adopt real-time MLS signal earliest are building referral relationships with the most active agents before those agents have a preferred vendor. That structural advantage compounds. “We made data accessible, gave it good timing, and gave people a tool they could actually use,” Simon says. “If you go in with something so convoluted that people get discouraged, they stop using it. The problem does not go away. You just become another tool they tried.”
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