Scroll through social media in real estate today and a clear pattern emerges.
Top producers talk openly about sacrificing nights, weekends and vacations. Celebrity agents proudly share how they prioritize work over all else. And when your feed is full of daily content from people building in public, the implication becomes clear, even if no one says it outright: The way to win is to work harder, be more available and never slow down.
TAKE THE INMAN INTEL INDEX SURVEY
In an industry that already operates outside traditional hours, that message carries real weight. Real estate agents don’t just work long hours; they work unusual ones. Client needs can dictate nights and weekends. Availability is table stakes. When success is defined narrowly around visibility, volume or production, it quietly pushes everything else to the margins.
What’s interesting is that many of the most accomplished business leaders outside of real estate have been questioning that model. Over the past few years, a number of them have been articulating a broader, more durable definition of success. And many of those conversations have coalesced around one book and one author.

Sahil Bloom
Sahil Bloom’s New York Times bestseller The Five Types of Wealth is grounded in hundreds of interviews and extensive, science-based research spanning psychology, performance and behavioral economics. It has been praised publicly by leaders like Tim Cook, who called it “a powerful call to action to think deeply about what lights you up — and a guide for how to build a life of meaning and purpose.”
Billionaire investor Bill Ackman has said the book “will cause you to make positive changes in your life.” It certainly did for me.
What makes the framework compelling is that it doesn’t argue against ambition. It does, however, challenge your “scoreboard” for success.
Bloom outlines five types of wealth:
- Financial wealth: Having enough money to meet your needs, create optionality and reduce stress, without letting the pursuit of more crowd out everything else.
- Time wealth: Control over how you spend your days, including the freedom to be present for what matters most, even in a demanding career.
- Social wealth: Deep, meaningful relationships that compound over time rather than erode from neglect.
- Physical wealth: Health, energy and vitality (the foundation that makes sustained performance possible).
- Mental wealth: Clarity, purpose and peace of mind, rather than constant cognitive overload.
None of these requires a perfect balance. The point is intentionality. In a profession like real estate, where time is fragmented and demands are constant, what you don’t design deliberately tends to get decided for you.
I was introduced to Sahil Bloom early last year through a mutual friend. I had followed his writing, but spending more time in his orbit made it immediately clear why his ideas resonate so strongly with high performers. He isn’t offering productivity hacks. He’s offering a clear framework to make better tradeoffs.
One idea that stuck with me is his belief that doing one hard thing consistently makes other hard things easier. Discipline compounds. That insight showed up first in my physical health. I committed to more sleep, a better diet and more regular exercise. Those changes created clarity, which carried into how I work.
I became more disciplined about how I spend my time, more intentional about which problems actually require my attention, and more comfortable trusting my team to manage more. Letting go of constant involvement strengthened our systems and empowered the people around me.
All of this made my ambition more sustainable.
That’s why Bloom felt like such a natural fit for the Inman community and why I’m bringing him to the Inman stage. His ideas translate cleanly to agents and team leaders navigating a demanding (and turbulent) industry. They challenge the assumption that financial success must come at the expense of other types of wealth.
At Inman Connect New York on Feb. 4, I’ll be sitting down with Sahil Bloom for a live conversation about what a broader definition of success looks like in real estate today. The interview will also be recorded and released as part of my Playmakers podcast.
Real estate will always reward effort. The next generation of leaders will decide what else it rewards and what kind of lives they’re building along the way.
Register for Inman Connect New York, taking place next week on Feb. 3-5, to hear Sahil Bloom and other top real estate leaders share insights on growth, leadership and the next wave shaping the industry.
Andrew Flachner is President and CEO at RealScout.