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How real estate teams work (and what new agents need to know)

February 05, 2026 5 min read views
How real estate teams work (and what new agents need to know)

When you first get your license, it’s exciting, but it’s also disorienting. You’re suddenly “in business,” yet you don’t quite feel like a business owner. You passed the test, but now the real game begins.

Here’s what I’ve learned over the years: most new agents don’t struggle because they lack drive. They struggle because they lack structure, repetition and real-world coaching. That’s why teams exist.

Why teams exist

Real estate school teaches you how not to get sued. It doesn’t teach you how to succeed.

You learn this business by getting in the game: showing homes, writing offers, negotiating and solving real problems with real clients. In my experience, the fastest way to shorten that learning curve is to work alongside people who already know how to do it well.

Teams put you into real transactions sooner, with coaching and a safety net built in.

How real estate teams work

A real estate team isn’t just a group of agents working together. It’s a business inside the business, where different people handle different roles, so learning happens faster and production becomes more consistent. For many new agents, a good team is the fastest on-ramp into real-world experience.

The core roles on a team

Most strong teams follow a similar structure.

The team leader sets the vision, builds the systems and develops the people. Their real job isn’t selling homes; it’s creating an environment where others can win.

The listing partner works with sellers, pricing homes, marketing listings and negotiating contracts. Listings are the engine that drives the team.

Buyer’s agents, where most new agents start, focus on showing homes, writing offers and negotiating on behalf of buyers. On many teams, leads are provided so new agents can focus on learning instead of surviving.

The transaction coordinator handles contracts, deadlines and communication once a deal is under contract, quietly saving deals and preventing costly mistakes.

And marketing and admin support handle signs, listings, scheduling and backend systems so agents can stay focused on revenue-producing work.

Each role exists so no one has to do everything alone.

What life on a team looks like

Strong teams run on rhythm and accountability. They hold regular meetings, daily huddles, to review numbers, set priorities, role-play conversations and solve problems together. Everyone knows their role and how success is measured.

Support is built into the culture. When someone falls behind, the team steps in. Accountability isn’t punishment; it’s simply agreed-upon standards that help everyone grow faster. In that kind of environment, skill, confidence and income tend to rise together.

Why team agents often earn more — even on a lower split

This confuses a lot of new agents: How do I make more money while giving up part of my commission?

Because team agents usually aren’t paying for marketing, admin, transaction coordination and often aren’t paying for leads. Nearly all of their time goes into the activities that actually create income: talking to clients, showing homes, writing offers and negotiating.

They may earn less per deal, but they usually close more deals, more consistently, with far less burnout.

Why culture is the deal-breaker

Every team has a culture. Some feel like social clubs: fun, friendly, but light on standards. Others emphasize production, coaching, tracking and accountability.

In my experience, careers grow fastest where expectations are clear and performance is measured.

Before joining a team, ask the following:

  • Can I sit in on a team meeting?
  • How do you train new agents?
  • How is performance tracked?
  • What does accountability look like here?

What a team does will always matter more than what it promises.

Is a team right for every new agent?

Not for everyone, but for many, it’s the fastest path to confidence and competence.

A team is a good fit if you want coaching, structure, shared momentum and support with operations. If you strongly prefer total independence from day one and resist accountability, a team may feel restrictive.

There’s no right or wrong. It all comes down to fit.

The bottom line

Here’s what I truly believe after years in the business: Real estate is not a game most people master alone.

Real estate teams exist because they speed up learning, stabilize income, improve service, reduce costly mistakes and create balance. A strong team doesn’t just help you close deals, it teaches you how to build a real business with real structure behind it.

As a new agent, your job isn’t to be fully independent on Day 1. Your job is to get good at the game. And for many agents, a well-run team is the fastest way to do exactly that.

Verl Workman is the founder and CEO of Workman Success Systems and author of Raving Referrals for Real Estate Agents. Connect with him on LinkedIn or Instagram.

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