Engagement SR-024 · AI Opportunity Assessment · July 2026
AI Opportunity
Assessment.
The actual document a Sageridge client receives after their discovery call. This one is built for a fictional company so we can show the format and the depth in full. The way we take a business apart to its workflows, and put it back together, is exactly how we work.
Read this first
Northway Realty Group is a fictional company created to show the format and depth of a Sageridge assessment. Every name and number is an illustrative estimate with the math shown, not a real client result. The workflows and the pain behind them are real: they are drawn, anonymized, from actual owner conversations. Your report would be built from your business, your tools, and your numbers.
Money is leaking in a few familiar places.
Northway is winning. The team closes around 120 deals a year and the phone keeps ringing. But the growth has quietly turned the owner into the operations department, and money is slipping out in three familiar places: leads that go cold before anyone answers, a database full of past clients no one has time to work, and an owner still building the weekly numbers by hand and reading email drafts in bed.
The biggest single opportunity is speed to lead. The team pays for a healthy volume of online leads, but the first reply often lands hours later, after a faster agent has already started the conversation. In a business where the first responder usually wins, that delay is expensive.
This does not call for a big, risky system. It calls for one AI coworker, Sage, that works inside the tools the team already uses (Follow Up Boss, Gmail, and texting), drafts the first touch the moment a lead lands, works the old database in the background, and posts the weekly numbers. Sage drafts; an agent approves. Nothing new for the team to learn. Over time, the same approach lifts the operational weight off the owner: the morning brief, the intelligent meeting agenda, the year-end value report.
Recommended first move: a focused engagement that trains the team, then launches Speed-to-Lead first, typically within a few weeks, and adds the other workflows as separate, proven steps. The math for every figure above is in section 11.
What these workflows are worth.
Two honest notes before the numbers. First, these are ranges built from the owner’s own figures in the interview, not industry benchmarks. Second, we looked at a focused set of workflows on purpose. There are smaller opportunities too (section 14), but these are where the money and the owner’s time are going. Team enablement carries no line item because it is the multiplier on everything else, not a workflow of its own.
What we looked at, and what we set aside.
A 60-minute conversation cannot map an entire business, and it should not try to. We focused on the workflows the owner named as the most painful and the most repeated, and we deliberately left some things alone. Setting them aside is part of the value: we are not going to recommend automating something that should stay in a person’s hands.
In focus
- Speed to lead (new online inquiries)
- Database reactivation (past clients and sphere)
- Weekly pipeline and numbers
- The owner’s daily brief and inbox triage
- Client meeting prep and intelligent agendas
- Getting the whole team consistent on AI
Set aside for now, on purpose
- Listing pricing and CMA judgment (stays with your agents)
- Contract and compliance decisions (kept human, given real estate regulation)
- Fair-housing-sensitive outreach (stays neutral and agent-approved)
- Paid ad budget and channel decisions
- A full transaction-management overhaul (worth revisiting later, section 9)
Everything routes through one person.
Here is Northway the way we found it, from the interview and the prep form.
Past contacts never re-enter the flow. They sit cold while the team works new leads only. Note: Northway does not use Slack or Teams, and does not need to. Sage works inside Follow Up Boss, Gmail, and texting. There is no new chat tool to adopt.
Train, Deploy, Transform.
Every Sageridge engagement runs on the same three-part frame. It is how we sequence the work so the first win pays for the next, and so nothing gets automated before the team is ready for it. Each finding in this report is tagged with the track it belongs to.
Train
Get the whole team fluent.Right now AI at Northway is a few people using Claude on their own. We fix that first: a short, practical enablement so the team works the same way, in one voice, alongside the coworker we deploy. You are salespeople, not implementers, and you should not have to become them.
Deploy
Put a coworker to work.We stand up Sage inside the tools you already use and give it real jobs, end to end: catch every lead in minutes, keep the database warm, post the weekly numbers. It drafts; an agent approves. One job goes live, proves itself, and earns the next.
Transform
Get the owner out of the weeds.Once the front end is trusted, we tie the tools into one operating system and lift the operational weight off the owner: the morning brief, urgent-email triage, intelligent meeting agendas, the year-end value report. This is the part that gives the owner their calendar back.
Every opportunity below is tagged Train Deploy or Transform so you can see where it fits.
Meet Sage, one coworker inside the tools you already use.
Instead of bolting on more real estate software, we recommend one AI coworker, Sage, that works where your team already lives. Think of Sage as a tireless inside-sales teammate who drafts the first reply the moment a lead lands, keeps the database warm, and never lets a lead sit, but who only sends once an agent says go.
Watches for new leads, drafts replies and follow-ups, logs everything, surfaces the contacts worth a personal touch.
Drafts the first touch and nurture messages in your voice, for an agent to approve and send. No client hears from a bot.
Hot leads ping the assigned agent right away. Everything else lands in one short daily review, not another inbox.
- Reads, summarizes, and drafts first. Sage does not message a client on its own.
- Connects to the tools you already pay for, so there is nothing new for agents to learn.
- Every send waits for a one-tap approval from the assigned agent.
- Starts with one job, proves it, then earns the next. That is the Deploy track in practice.
“New Zillow lead, Jordan, 3-bed in Maple Grove. Draft reply ready: ‘Hi Jordan, saw you’re interested in the 3-bed on Maple Grove. I can send three similar listings and set a quick call. What time works?’”
Workflow deep dives.
Each workflow follows the same rhythm: where it is today, where it leaks, what changes with Sage, and what it is worth. This is the part that shows the work, how we take each process apart and rebuild it.
Speed to Lead
DeployStart hereA buyer fills out a Zillow or website form at 8:10pm. It lands in Follow Up Boss, but the assigned agent is showing homes or off the clock, so the first reply goes out the next morning. By then the buyer has already spoken with two other agents. In the owner’s words, the leads you pay for have low ROI, so working them is “the last thing I go touch.”
You estimated around 60 new online leads a month and meaningful monthly spend to get them. In real estate, the first agent to respond usually wins the conversation. Every hour of delay quietly lowers the return on every lead dollar you spend. If you don’t answer, they simply call the next agent.
The moment a lead arrives, Sage:
- Drafts a warm, specific first reply that names the property and the area.
- Texts the assigned agent the draft for a one-tap send, so first contact goes out in minutes, even after hours, instead of the next morning.
- Logs the lead and the touch in Follow Up Boss, and sets the next follow-up so nothing slips.
- Falls back to the inside-sales agent if the assigned agent does not respond quickly, and helps convert the lead into a booked appointment.
“Draft to Jordan is ready. Tap to send or edit. I’ll set a follow-up for tomorrow either way.”
Database Reactivation
DeployNorthway has thousands of past leads and sphere contacts in Follow Up Boss. Almost none are being worked. The owner keeps an A/B/C tiering by hand, a reminder to touch the A’s every couple of weeks, and admits “that’s all manual.” Everyone knows the next deal is probably already in the database. And the market data? “We have all this data and nobody’s doing anything with it.”
A database that large, sitting cold, is the single most common source of found money for a real estate team. Right now it is producing close to nothing, and the manual tiering only covers the handful of contacts the owner can hold in their head.
Sage works the database in the background:
- Segments contacts by stage and last activity, so the tiering runs itself.
- Drafts personalized check-ins that reference the contact’s history and neighborhood.
- Surfaces the contacts most worth a personal call for an agent to approve and send.
- Turns the data you already sit on into a steady, warm outbound motion.
“Hi Sam, it’s been about a year since we looked together. Rates and inventory have shifted, want an updated read on your neighborhood?”
Weekly Pipeline & Numbers
DeployEvery week the owner pulls numbers from Follow Up Boss and Dotloop to see where things stand: new leads, appointments set, response times, under contract, projected closings. It takes a couple of hours and it is never quite current. It is the real estate version of what one owner said about billing: “right now it’s multi steps,” when it should be one.
That is roughly 2 to 3 hours a week of the highest-value person on the team, spent assembling a report instead of coaching agents or winning listings.
Every Monday morning, Sage posts a one-page summary to the team:
- New leads by source, speed-to-lead times, appointments set, and pipeline stage counts.
- The database contacts it flagged for follow-up that week.
- Deals under contract and projected closings, where the transaction system connects.
- The owner reads it instead of building it, with far better visibility into where leads are leaking.
The Owner’s Daily Brief & Inbox Triage
TransformThe owner is the operations department. As they put it, the calendar “doesn’t even let me breathe,” and email is where they become the bottleneck: drafts get read “on my phone in bed.” Genuinely urgent messages sit in the same pile as everything else until the late-night scroll.
The owner’s attention is the scarcest resource on the team, and it is being spent triaging an inbox at 11pm instead of leading the business. Urgent things wait hours because nothing separates them from the noise.
Once the front end is trusted, Sage moves upstream (the Transform track):
- Watches the inbox and flags what is genuinely urgent the moment it lands, instead of it waiting for the evening.
- Drafts replies in the owner’s voice, held for a one-tap approval.
- Assembles a short morning brief, today’s calendar, what needs a decision, who is waiting, where the pipeline moved, ready before the first coffee.
- Prints it, if the owner is the kind who likes to walk in and pick it up.
“3 things need you today: a counter-offer on Elm St expires at noon, the Hendersons are waiting on a callback, and 2 new leads came in overnight (drafted).”
Client Meeting Prep & Intelligent Agendas
TransformPrep for listing and buyer consults is done by hand the night before, if at all. Agendas are “just an update,” not a strategy. One owner put the bar exactly: “I want to walk into a meeting where the agendas are done, but they’re intelligent. A strategy meeting, not just an update. That’s how we differentiate.”
The difference between an update and a strategy meeting is the difference between a client who renews and refers and one who drifts. Doing it by hand means it often does not happen, and the value the team actually delivers goes unseen.
Sage turns the CRM into meeting leverage (the Transform track):
- Pulls history, open items, and the client’s situation from Follow Up Boss into an intelligent agenda per meeting.
- Captures action items back into the CRM afterward, so nothing is dropped.
- Over the year, assembles a value report: here is everything we did for you, the kind that makes a client say “they did a lot more than I thought.”
Getting the Whole Team on the Same AI
TrainA few people on the team use Claude or ChatGPT on their own; most do not. There is no shared way of working and no consistent voice. As the owner said, “we are salespeople, not implementers,” and plugging AI into the business “is not how my brain works, connecting all those dots.”
AI used in silos is a hobby, not leverage. The team stays “ten years behind,” and every coworker you deploy is only as good as the team’s ability to work alongside it. This is the foundation the Deploy and Transform work stands on.
The Train track is short and practical:
- A hands-on enablement for the whole team on how to work with Sage.
- A shared prompt and template playbook, written in Northway’s voice.
- The owner’s own tools, so the person who bought the leads can actually work them.
- No one has to become the AI expert. That is our job, not yours.
Impact against effort, at a glance.
Every opportunity, scored on business impact, effort to stand up, and risk, then sequenced. We prefer boring, useful wins over flashy AI, and we recommend one primary next step plus options.
| Opportunity | Track | Impact | Effort | When |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Speed to Lead | Deploy | High | Low | Start here |
| Team Enablement | Train | Multiplier | Low | Phase 1 |
| Weekly Pipeline & Numbers | Deploy | Med–High | Low | Phase 1 |
| Database Reactivation | Deploy | High | Med | Phase 1, approved |
| Owner’s Daily Brief & Triage | Transform | High | Med | Phase 2 |
| Meeting Prep & Agendas | Transform | Medium | Med | Phase 2 |
| Year-end Value Report | Transform | Medium | Low | Optional |
| Automated CMA / pricing | Human | High | – | Not yet |
Impact and effort are illustrative, sized for a business of this shape. Your real assessment is scored on your numbers.
A roadmap, not a calendar.
We don’t boil the ocean. The first build ships in a few weeks and helps pay for the next. Each phase is live and trusted before the next one starts.
Train + first coworker
- Enable the team, then stand up Sage in Follow Up Boss, Gmail, and texting
- Launch Speed-to-Lead first, typically within a few weeks
- Add Weekly Numbers, then Database Reactivation, as separate proven steps
Transform the owner’s week
- The daily brief and urgent-email triage go live
- Intelligent meeting agendas pull straight from the CRM
- Transaction milestone updates, drafted for the coordinator to approve
Depth + stewardship
- The year-end client value report and post-closing referral asks
- Tie the stack into one operating system
- We monitor, retrain, and add as the work evolves
What “launch Speed-to-Lead” actually means.
Before anything goes live, we finalize a coworker charter and a workflow card with you. This is a preview of both, so you can see exactly how tightly the job is scoped.
Coworker Charter · Sage
Draft first replies and follow-ups, alert the assigned agent, log activity and set next steps, draft database check-ins, post the weekly summary.
Sending to a client without agent approval, giving pricing or CMA opinions, making contract or compliance statements, touching anything regulated.
Workflow Card · Speed to Lead
Acceptance tests before launch
- A normal after-hours lead gets a drafted reply to the agent promptly.
- A duplicate is flagged, not double-created.
- Sage never quotes a price or makes a CMA claim.
- An unresponsive agent triggers the inside-sales fallback.
- Opt-out requests are honored immediately.
The math, shown.
We mark estimates as estimates. The point is not the exact figure, it is that the value of solving these workflows is many times the cost of solving them. A single recovered commission more than covers the work.
| Workflow | Assumption | Estimated / yr |
|---|---|---|
| Speed to Lead | 2 to 3 added closings/year, $8,000 average commission to the team | $16k–$24k |
| Database Reactivation | 1 to 2 added closings/year from existing contacts, $8,000 average | $8k–$16k |
| Weekly Pipeline & Numbers | 2.5 owner hours/week at $120/hour, 50 weeks | ~$15k |
| Owner’s Daily Brief & Triage | 3 owner hours/week at $120/hour, 50 weeks | ~$18k |
| Meeting Prep & Agendas | ~1 hour/week saved plus a modest retention proxy | ~$6k |
| Team Enablement | The multiplier on all of the above, not scored as a line | – |
| Combined | Across the scored workflows, illustrative | ~$63k–$79k |
These are estimates, built from the numbers given in the interview, not benchmarks or promises.
Clear boundaries, by design.
Sage will
- Read your CRM and email, summarize, and draft.
- Send drafts to the assigned agent for a one-tap approval.
- Keep client data inside the tools you already use.
- Log every send and action so it is reviewable.
Sage will never
- Message a client without an agent’s approval.
- Give a price, a CMA, or contract or compliance advice.
- Make fair-housing-sensitive judgments; outreach stays neutral.
- Touch payroll, commissions, or anything regulated.
Data handling
A short list to launch.
Connection access to Follow Up Boss and your lead sources.
30 minutes to approve Sage’s reply templates, tone, and routing rules.
Agreement on who is the assigned agent and the inside-sales fallback.
One named owner to approve boundaries.
That is it to launch Speed-to-Lead. The other workflows follow as separate steps once it is proven. No new app for your agents.
Three honest options.
How we ranked these, and what else we noticed.
Every opportunity was scored on business impact, how often it happens, whether the sources are ready, how clear the workflow is, whether existing tools can do it safely, how reviewable the output is, the data risk, and how much upkeep it needs.
Smaller things we noticed (not prioritized)
- Lead-source tags in Follow Up Boss are inconsistent, which makes return-on-spend hard to read. A quick cleanup would sharpen the weekly numbers.
- Several agents use personal texting for clients, so history is not captured in the CRM. Routing texts through Follow Up Boss would fix that even before AI.
- The website IDX form asks for very little, so leads arrive thin. Two more fields would help Sage personalize.
- Past-client closing anniversaries are not tracked, an easy, high-return touch to add later.
This is a sample. Yours would run on your business.
The real assessment maps your workflows, your tools, and your team, then hands you this exact document, built for you. It starts with a free, no-pressure call.
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