Real estate agents

How real estate agents use AI agents

Real estate runs on two things you never have enough of: time and follow-up. A listing needs copy for the MLS, the portals, a flyer, and three social posts. A new lead needs a reply in minutes, then a nudge in three days, then another next week. A pricing conversation needs comps you pulled by hand across a dozen tabs. None of it is hard. All of it eats the hours you should spend in front of clients.

An AI agent is good at exactly this kind of work: high-volume, repetitive, and built on facts you already know. The difference from a plain chatbot is that this agent can search the live web for current comps and neighborhood data, do exact math for net-sheet and commission figures, and remember your market and your voice so you are not re-explaining yourself every time.

Set your market facts once in Memory, then the prompts below turn an afternoon of busywork into a few minutes of review. You stay the agent. The robot does the typing.

Open the Agent9 min read

Capabilities this leans on

Web search Calculator Image generation Memory Scheduled tasks Connections

Set up Memory once

Do this first. Every prompt below gets sharper because the agent already knows your market and how you sound.

Remember these facts about my real estate business: I'm a residential agent serving Austin, TX, focused on East Austin and Mueller, price band roughly $400k to $900k. My brand voice is warm, straight-talking, and never hypey. My typical buyer is a first-time or move-up family; my typical seller has owned 5 to 10 years. My brokerage is [Name], commission split standard, and I always disclose that I'm a licensed agent.

1.Write a listing that actually sells the place

Give it the facts; get MLS copy, portal copy, and social in one pass.

Write an MLS listing description for a 3 bed / 2 bath, 1,820 sqft single-story in Mueller, built 2016, with a renovated kitchen, xeriscaped yard, and a 2-minute walk to the lake park. Under 1,000 characters, warm but not hypey, fair-housing compliant (no language about buyer demographics).

Now give me a punchier 280-character version for Zillow and Realtor.com, and three Instagram captions with a clear call to action and relevant hashtags.

Write the email I'd send to my buyer list announcing this listing, under 120 words, one CTA to book a showing.

What you get: A full copy set for one listing, in your voice, ready to paste into the MLS, portals, email, and social.

2.Build a comparative market analysis with live comps

Web search pulls current comps; the calculator does the net math.

Search for recently sold 3 bed homes in Mueller, Austin in the last 90 days, and list each with sold price, square footage, price per square foot, and sale date.

From those comps, what's the average and median price per square foot, and what list price would you suggest for a 1,820 sqft home in good condition? Show your reasoning.

Build a seller net sheet: list price $625,000, 5.5% total commission, $9,500 estimated closing costs, $312,000 mortgage payoff. What does the seller walk away with?

What you get: A defensible pricing range and a clean net sheet you can walk a seller through, without a dozen browser tabs.

3.Never drop a lead again

Draft the whole follow-up sequence the moment a lead comes in.

A buyer lead came in from Zillow asking about the Mueller listing. Draft a warm reply under 80 words that answers their question, offers two showing times this week, and asks what else they're looking for.

Write a 4-touch follow-up sequence for a buyer lead who went quiet: a same-day text, a day-3 email with two more listings, a day-7 check-in, and a day-14 'still looking?' note. Keep each short and human.

Turn that sequence into a reusable Skill called 'Buyer lead follow-up' so I can run it on any new lead.

What you get: A ready-to-send sequence and a saved Skill you can fire on every future lead in one click.

4.Market the open house

Copy, a flyer concept, and a posting schedule from one brief.

Write the copy for an open house this Saturday 1 to 3pm at the Mueller listing: a Facebook event description, a neighbor 'just listed' postcard under 50 words, and a text I can send my sphere.

Generate a clean, modern open house flyer concept image: bright single-story home, 'Open Saturday 1-3', warm and inviting, space for photo and details.

Give me a 3-day social posting plan leading up to it, with the exact caption for each post.

What you get: Everything you need to fill an open house, drafted in minutes instead of the night before.

5.Brief yourself on a neighborhood or a buyer's question

Live search turns 'I'll look into it' into an answer on the spot.

Search for the current state of the East Austin housing market: inventory, median days on market, and price trend over the last 6 months. Give me a 5-bullet summary I can text a client.

A buyer asked about schools near the Mueller listing. Search for the assigned elementary, middle, and high schools and their ratings, and write a neutral, factual summary (no steering language).

What you get: Fast, sourced answers you can pass to a client the same hour they ask.

6.Put the recurring work on autopilot

Scheduled tasks and a connected phone keep it running without you.

Every Monday at 8am, search for new 3 bed listings in Mueller and East Austin under $700k and send me a short digest so I can spot comps and opportunities.

(From Telegram) Quick net sheet: $540k sale, 5.5% commission, $7k closing, $280k payoff. What does the seller net?

What you get: A weekly market digest that writes itself, and a CMA in your pocket you can run from a showing.

Run your first prompt

Open the Agent, paste any prompt above, and change the details to fit your business.