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Description

Summary

This conversation highlights Trina Brown's leadership journey, production resurgence, and philosophy on relationship-driven growth within the mortgage business. A long-tenured industry veteran and Movement Mortgage leader, Trina recounts building a high-performing team through strategic partnerships, disciplined boundaries, and consistent execution. After stepping away from personal production for five years, she returned intentionally—motivated by a desire to lead by example, regain fulfillment, and prove that fundamentals still work.

Her return to production delivered immediate results: nearly $12M in six months, achieved through simple, repeatable actions—calling agents, leaning into shared passions, and prioritizing genuine relationships over transactional conversations. The discussion reinforces that growth does not require complexity, but rather consistency, authenticity, and clarity of purpose. Trina also underscores the importance of being coachable, using available company resources, protecting team culture, and aligning daily work with personal values. Her story serves as both inspiration and a practical blueprint for sustainable success.


5 Key Takeaways

  1. Back to Basics Still Wins
    Consistent calls, in‑person meetings, and relationship-building—not market commentary or product talk—drove results. Trina's success reinforces that fundamentals outperform complexity, even in challenging markets.

  2. Shared Passions Create Powerful Differentiation
    Leveraging personal interests (in Trina's case, the horse community) created authentic connection points and opened doors to entirely new referral partners. Every LO has a "lane"—the key is owning it.

  3. Leadership Requires Leading From the Front
    Trina returned to production to model the behaviors she expects from her team. Credibility, energy, and culture all improved when leadership aligned words with actions.

  4. Boundaries and ROI Matter in Partnerships
    Successful agent alliances require showing up consistently, honoring commitments, protecting boundaries, and ensuring investments deliver real ROI. Not all partnerships are worth keeping.

  5. Coachability, Consistency, and Heart Drive Long-Term Success
    Growth came from being coachable, committing to daily habits (no zero days), and leading with authenticity. Fulfillment and performance increased when work aligned with purpose and enjoyment.