Let’s have a "real talk" moment.
Most of you think you’re in the sales business. You think your job starts when a lead hits your CRM or when you meet a buyer at a front door.
You are wrong.
You are in the trust business. And right now, you are losing the trust battle before it even starts.
Zillow just made a move that should have every real estate professional in the country sitting up in their chair. They didn't just add a new filter to their search map. They launched a full-scale, AI-powered home-buying guide inside the NotebookLM platform (here’s the direct link: https://notebooklm.google.com/notebook/b3fd7608-7daa-48ef-8b35-88e9df63c73f).
We’re talking 40+ resources, structured, interactive, and powered by AI.
While you’re busy posting "Just Listed" graphics that nobody cares about, Zillow is building a digital fortress around the education phase of the buyer journey. They are giving buyers the ability to chat with content, listen to audio overviews, and get personalized answers to their "dumb" questions without ever talking to a human.
Here’s the hard truth: If a buyer learns the ropes from Zillow, they belong to Zillow.
By the time they call you, their opinions are formed. Their expectations are set. Their trust is anchored somewhere else. You aren't their advisor; you’re just the "tour guide" who has the keys to the house.
If you’re entering the relationship at the showing stage, you’re playing defense. And in this market, defense doesn't pay the bills.
Let’s get to work and figure out how to take the lead back.
What it is: This is about shifting from "Lead Gen" to "Education Gen." It’s the process of creating a structured, searchable library of your local expertise that lives where the buyer is searching, online and in AI-driven environments.
Why it matters: Zillow is national. They are wide, but they are shallow. They can tell a buyer about national mortgage trends, but they can’t tell them why the foundation issues on the east side of town are a dealbreaker or how the new school rezoning is going to impact resale value on 4th Street.
Precision wins: When you provide local precision, you create a high ROI of time. You stop answering the same five questions a hundred times and start letting your content do the heavy lifting for you. This is how you lead yourself first and scale your influence.
The 15-Minute How-To: The FAQ Matrix in NotebookLM
You don't need 40 resources today. You need five that actually move the needle.
This is how you build your own "Local AI Hub"—just like Zillow did.
But with local precision.
Your neighborhoods. Your objections. Your contracts. Your playbook.
Zillow understands something that most agents ignore: The education phase is the most vulnerable point in the buyer journey.
Buyers are scared. They don't want to be "sold" to, but they desperately want to be informed.
They are researching mortgage basics, down payments, and credit scores at 11:00 PM in their pajamas. Zillow is right there with them, providing a "safe" AI environment to explore.
This is the "Lighthouse Strategy" in action.
Instead of chasing the buyer, you become the beacon. When the buyer feels supported by the information you provide, trust begins forming before a transaction is even on the horizon.
If you want to compete, you have to stop being a "doer" and start being a "designer." You need to design an education system that captures attention during the early curiosity stage.
National portals provide general education. You provide local clarity.
Stop worrying about AI replacing you. AI doesn't have a heartbeat. It hasn't sat across a kitchen table from a crying seller.
AI is simply the delivery vehicle for your expertise.
The question isn't "Will AI take my job?" The question is "Is my expertise positioned to be recommended by AI?"
If you don't have structured, searchable guidance available online, you don't exist to the AI-driven buyer. You need to make your expertise conversational.
The Bigger Strategy Shift:
The Lesson: The Commodity Trap
If you do exactly what every other agent does, you are a commodity. Commodities are traded based on price (commission). Advisors are hired based on value (expertise).
If you are absent during the learning phase, you are choosing to be a commodity. You are waiting for the buyer to get "educated" by a portal and then hoping they pick you to open the door. That is a losing strategy.
As Jim Rohn used to say: "Don't wish it were easier, wish you were better."
Being "better" in 2026 means being the clearest, most structured voice in your market. It’s about systems setting you free from the grind of constant chasing.
The Question:
If a buyer spent 10 hours researching their home purchase this month, how many of those hours were spent with YOUR content?
If the answer is zero, you aren't an advisor. You’re a passenger.
"Focus is a matter of deciding what things you are NOT going to do." , Steve Jobs
This week, say "no" to random social media posting. Say "yes" to building one piece of structured, educational authority that Zillow can’t touch.
Let’s get to work.
: Don Jacks