Take Flight Weekly | Jim Miller

Jim Miller

Jim Miller is a success mentor and life coach who guides top real estate brokers from around the country while managing 2.3B+ in sales production as Designated Managing Broker with Jameson Sotheby’s International Realty in Chicago, Illinois. He is also recognized as a top real estate coach to top Sotheby's International Realty brokers in 35 luxury markets.

  1. 6d ago

    #332: The Price of a Client Relationship You Let Go Cold

    Summary In 2013, I made a decision that on paper looked like career suicide. I moved into leadership at Jameson Sotheby's and agreed to wind down my personal real estate business. My strategy was to cut my Top 150 in half, push the bottom 50% down to fringe, and go all in on the 68 people who mattered most. I was concerned my production would suffer. The opposite happened. 2014, 2015, and 2016 were some of the best brokerage years I ever had. This episode is about why, and it is the real start of Pillar 3, CRM and Relationship Management. The heart of this episode is the referral tree. Your platinum clients are the seed and the trunk. They introduce you to the person, who introduces you to the next person, who becomes three more branches. Picture ten or fifteen of those trees, nurtured over years, and you start to see why I still know I had exactly 68 clients. I know that number the way you know your own kids' birthdays, because I looked at it every single day. That daily attention is the entire reason my business doubled four times in five years. A CRM organizes the relationship. It does not make the call. You cannot automate thoughtfulness. Listen for more details. Chapters 00:00 Introduction to the importance of CRM and relationship management 01:00 The value of CRM in generating millions in revenue 01:59 Categories of clients: platinum, gold, silver, fringe 02:57 Jim's personal story and business growth through CRM 03:59 The law of compensation and serving more clients 04:56 Creating a top 100 client list for business success 05:59 The importance of staying top of mind with clients 06:58 The referral tree concept and its significance 08:06 The impact of relationship nurturing on business growth 09:04 Starting with platinum clients and personalized communication 10:03 Practical steps to build and maintain your CRM 11:14 The cost of neglecting CRM and relationship strategies 12:14 Creating momentum through consistent client engagement 12:54 Expanding your client base through relationship management 14:09 The importance of regular CRM audits and pruning 15:08 Jim's final advice and encouragement for listeners 16:11 Closing remarks and next steps for building your CRM Resources The Go-Giver by Bob Burg   Jim Miller - Instagram - @askjimmiller

    #332: The Price of a Client Relationship You Let Go Cold
  2. Jun 28

    #331: Q3 Effort. Q1 Results

    Summary June was a month of reflection on Take Flight, a mid-year audit of what the first two quarters delivered and where the cracks are hiding. Episode 331 closes that arc and turns toward the second half of the year. Jim opens on the farmer's logic that runs underneath everything he teaches. You plant in the spring and harvest in the fall, which means the work you do right now lands six to nine months out, not on next month's paycheck. Real estate is not a business of selling properties. It is a business of building relationships and compounding them over a long career. Borrowing the structure of Brian Moran's The 12 Week Year, Jim frames this moment as Week 13, the point where you celebrate the wins, count the near misses as learning, and plan the quarter ahead. He is candid that Q3 is a trap. You are tired, the year has been long, and the pull to pump the brakes is real. His answer is not to grind harder. It is to be intentional and surgical, taking one project per week and knocking it out, whether that is a couple of hours, thirty minutes, or a single phone call you have been avoiding. The quarter's teaching focus is Pillar 3 of Take Flight, CRM and Relationship Management. Jim makes the case that this is where all real success comes from. Your income is the number of people you serve times the level at which you serve them, and you cannot afford to lose people from your network because they are so hard to replace. 85%-90% of most advisors' business comes from their network, which is why offline marketing, reputation and relationships, outperforms any digital tactic over time. Across Q3 he will get detailed on building a Top 100, setting cadences for platinum, gold, silver, and fringe contacts, and retaining the network while expanding it. Jim closes with the question he puts to every client. Are you interested in being great, or are you committed to it. He points listeners back to the June episodes, 327 through 330, and to episode 254, Think Like a Farmer, as the groundwork for the season ahead. The challenge is simple and singular. This week, name the projects that need to get done in Q3 and commit to running them one at a time. Do the heavy lifting now so your network is in real shape heading into Q4 and Q1. Chapters 00:00 Introduction to Take Flight Weekly 02:54 Reflecting on Q1 and Q2 Results 05:48 Preparing for Q3: The Trap Quarter 09:06 The Importance of CRM and Relationship Management 11:49 Commitment to Success and Building Your Network Ask Jim Miller - Email List - mailto:Jim@askjimmiller.com Instagram:  @askjimmiller

    #331: Q3 Effort. Q1 Results
  3. Jun 7

    #328: It's Time to Start Thinking about Q3

    Summary Jim shares a change he made a year ago that reframed his whole year. He moved his vision cycle off January first and onto July first. The reason started personal, tied to his daughters and a three-year path, but it exposed a better way to run a vision cycle for most real estate markets. January is a no fly zone, with no momentum coming out of the holidays. Starting the cycle where the season actually turns puts the heavy lifting in Q3 and Q4, where it belongs, and turns June into a true review month. Jim connects this to last week's message on the basics. The advisors truly winning know what works, build SOPs around it, and run it consistently. The ones without momentum chase everything except the network. A vision cycle is how the basics get rebuilt and reinforced, one quarter at a time. This episode is the bridge from reflection into action. June to review, July to set the cycle, Q3 and Q4 to do the work that makes trapped become free. Inside this episode: 1.     Why it's hard to build real momentum in January, and what to use instead. 2.     How to pick a vision cycle start date that fits your season. 3.     Using June as the review month, the 13th week in 12 Week Year terms. 4.     The quarterly rebuild rhythm. Tear apart, put back together, let it run. 5.     How the basics and the network sit underneath the whole cycle. This is your coaching session. Chapters 00:00 Reflections on June and Personal Milestones 10:14 The Importance of Vision and Planning 20:13 Operational Excellence and Business Growth 24:01 Philosophical Insights and Future Directions Resources Find me on Instagram at @askjimmiller 12 Week Year by Brian P. Moran - https://www.amazon.com/12-Week-Year-Focus-Execution-Discipline/dp/1118509234 Traction by Gino Wickman - https://www.amazon.com/Traction-Get-Grip-Entrepreneurial-Operating/dp/1936661837 EOS (Entrepreneurial Operating System) - https://www.eosworldwide.com/

    #328: It's Time to Start Thinking about Q3
  4. May 17

    #326: If I had to Rebuild my CRM, I Would Do This!

    Summary Five tries. Five abandoned attempts. If that sounds familiar, this episode is for you. Episode 326 of Take Flight Weekly is built for the roughly 90% of real estate brokers, agents, and advisors who have tried to build a CRM and never gotten one off the ground. The episode opens with a moment from earlier this month at a leadership event for top advisors. At the event, Jim got tapped on the shoulder by a advisor with the same question he hears from his clients constantly: I've tried five times, how do you do it? The answer is a full teaching session, and Jim names the real obstacle in the first few minutes. The CRM is just the technology. The mindset is what gets in the way. From there, he walks through a complete 13-week rebuild plan that runs on a simple spreadsheet, requires no perfect platform, and produces a clean Top 100 contact list by the end of September. The system is two names a day, ten names a week. No Saturday-afternoon import marathons. No more starting over. Inside the episode, Jim breaks down the 15 columns every CRM spreadsheet needs, from contact rank through neighborhood or building, source of origination, last touch, next touch, and three customizable tag fields. He covers where to mine the names from, including MLS sold data, your phone, your email marketing list, school rosters, and vendor partners. He stays CRM-agnostic on the platform question, because the right tool is always the one you'll actually use. By the end, listeners have a system, a 13-week runway, and the one decision that determines whether any of it gets built. This is Pillar 3 of the Take Flight coaching framework, CRM and Relationship Management, and Jim makes the case that this pillar sits at the foundation of every successful real estate business he has built or coached. The episode closes on the only question that matters for anyone who has been stuck: are you committed, or are you interested? The answer shows up in what you do this week, not what you say. This is a longer teaching episode worth bookmarking and re-listening. There will be no Episode 327 over Memorial Day weekend; the next episode drops May 31, 2026. Chapters 00:00 Introduction to CRM Challenges 02:54 The Importance of Mindset in CRM Implementation 06:00 Starting Your CRM: The Spreadsheet Approach 09:07 Building Your Contact List: Key Columns to Include 11:57 Organizing Your Contacts: Strategies for Success 14:53 Commitment to CRM: The Path Forward Resources Jim Miller on Instagram - @askjimmiller Email Jim Miller - mailto:jim@askjimmiller.com

    #326: If I had to Rebuild my CRM, I Would Do This!
  5. May 10

    #325: The Math that Created Take Flight

    Summary In this episode, Jim kicks off a new pillar of the Take Flight framework: CRM and Relationship Management. He explains why, in an AI‑accelerated world, your network is more valuable than ever. “We are moving at light speed when it comes to technology… If you use it the right way to support your business, it is exciting.” Jim shares the story of how a 2011 conversation with CEO Chris Feurer sparked the very first Take Flight class and how doubling down on building a real database transformed his business. You’ll learn: Why the future workforce splits into two groups — tech operators and high‑touch professionalsWhy real estate advisors must master relationships to stay competitiveThe true capacity of a human advisor: your Top 100The math that drives predictable growth:“Your income equals the number of people you serve times the value you deliver.”Jim challenges you to make this the summer you finally build, nurture, and protect your network — before the stakes get even higher.    Takeaways Building and maintaining a database is crucial for long-term success.The ideal network size for effective relationship management is around 100 people.Consistent engagement with your network yields 85-90% of your business. Using AI and technology enhances efficiency but personal relationships remain vital.Focusing on a smaller, high-quality network improves performance and results. Chapters 00:00 Introduction to Take Flight and CRM 07:08 The Importance of Technology in CRM 13:01 Building and Nurturing Your Network 21:09 Commitment to Relationship Management Resources The Go-Giver by Bob Burg - https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00A7U7U4Q Claude Cowork AI Platform - https://claude.ai/ Jim Miller's Website - https://jimmiller.com/ Follow Jim Miller on Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/askjimmiller/

    #325:  The Math that Created Take Flight
5
out of 5
58 Ratings

About

Jim Miller is a success mentor and life coach who guides top real estate brokers from around the country while managing 2.3B+ in sales production as Designated Managing Broker with Jameson Sotheby’s International Realty in Chicago, Illinois. He is also recognized as a top real estate coach to top Sotheby's International Realty brokers in 35 luxury markets.

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