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Why Being Fully Present Improves Trust Between Real Estate Agents and Clients

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Date:
28 Aug 2025
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The real estate industry’s traditional focus on sales scripts and closing techniques may be undermining the very relationships agents seek to build, according to one industry leader who argues that authentic presence, not persuasion tactics, is the key to sustainable success.

Aaron Hendon, Managing Broker at Christine & Company, says the science of human connection reveals why some agents consistently outperform others, regardless of their sales training or market knowledge.

“Human beings have mirror neurons where we can pick up on what the other person’s intentions are in a way that we don’t even recognize. It’s below conscious,” Hendon explains. “Clients instantly sense whether you’re authentically present or just waiting to make your next point.”

The Pressure Problem

According to Hendon, the industry’s emphasis on “hustle culture” has created a self-defeating cycle where agents rely on pressure to drive performance.

“When you say you work better under pressure, what you’re really saying is ‘I’ve never learned how to produce results in any other way,'” Hendon observes. “No one would consciously choose to work while frantic and upset versus calm and present, yet that’s exactly what we’re doing.”

This pressure-driven approach, he argues, manifests as what industry insiders call “commission breath” – the subtle but palpable anxiety about closing the deal that clients can detect.

The Mindfulness Solution

Through his company’s training program, Hendon teaches agents how to develop genuine presence through daily mindfulness practice. The results have been dramatic.

“We had an agent who was meditating one morning and had a random thought about receiving commercial referrals from a specific team,” Hendon shares. “Four hours later, she got a text from a broker on that exact team, someone she’d never met, sending her a commercial referral. No ask, no prompt, just pure alignment.”

While such outcomes might seem coincidental, Hendon argues they represent a deeper shift in how agents engage with their market. “It’s not about luck, it’s about creating the conditions for opportunities to emerge naturally through authentic presence.”

The Science of Connection

Research supports Hendon’s approach. Studies from Harvard, Stanford, and the Mayo Clinic have demonstrated how mindfulness practices physically alter brain structure, enhancing areas responsible for empathy, focus, and emotional regulation.

“When you’re truly present with clients, you pick up subtle cues you’d otherwise miss,” Hendon explains. “You hear what they’re actually saying, not just what fits your pre-planned response.”

Transforming Client Relationships

The impact on client interactions goes beyond just better listening. Agents in Hendon’s program report fundamental shifts in how they approach relationships.

“Instead of trying to control the conversation or push toward a close, they’re able to truly serve the client’s needs,” Hendon says. “Paradoxically, this less aggressive approach leads to more consistent success.”

A New Model for Success

Hendon emphasizes that this approach requires a different kind of commitment than traditional sales training. “You can’t fake presence,” he notes. “It comes from consistent practice, just like any other skill.”

The good news, according to Hendon, is that meaningful results don’t require hours of daily meditation. “Just five minutes of focused breathing before a client meeting can dramatically shift the quality of that interaction,” he says.

Looking Forward

As the real estate industry continues to evolve, Hendon believes the ability to create authentic connections will become increasingly valuable.

“Technology can handle transactions, but it can’t replace genuine human connection,” he concludes. “The agents who master presence will always have an edge, because clients ultimately choose to work with people they trust, and trust comes from authentic presence, not sales techniques.”