Everyone Asks 'What Should I Use AI For?' Wrong Question.
I hear this every week. Agents come to the AI Acceleration workshop and their first question is: "Where do I start?"
They've read the articles. They know 68% of Realtors have used AI tools. They've seen the demos. They've downloaded ChatGPT. And then they sit there staring at a blank prompt box with no idea what to type.
The problem isn't AI. The problem is the question. "What should I use AI for?" has a thousand answers. That's why it paralyzes you.
Better question: what do you hate doing?
That question has three answers. Maybe five. And one of them is your first AI win.
The Hate List Exercise
McKinsey found that generative AI can automate 60-70% of the work activities that absorb employees' time. Sixty to seventy percent. But you don't need to automate 60% of your work. You need to automate one thing.
Here's the exercise. Takes two minutes.
Write down three tasks you did this week that you hated doing. Tasks that required zero emotional intelligence. The kind of work that makes you wonder why you got into this business.
Updating CRM notes after showings. Writing the same follow-up email for the fifth time. Pulling comp data into a spreadsheet. Formatting a market report. Cleaning up transaction files.
Now circle the one that took the most time.
That's your first AI pilot.
Not your whole AI strategy. Not a transformation roadmap. One task. One pilot. 66% of Realtors say they adopt new technology primarily to save time. Start with the task that wastes the most of it.
Try It Right Now
THE HATE LIST EXERCISE — 2 MINUTES Grab a pen. Or open your notes app. Do this now. 1. Write 3 tasks you did this week that you hated doing and that required ZERO emotional intelligence. Task 1: ____________________ Task 2: ____________________ Task 3: ____________________ 2. Circle the one that took the most time. 3. Run it through the Pilot Selection Filter: [ ] High Frequency — Does this happen every day or every week? [ ] Low Risk — If AI messes it up, does anyone get sued? [ ] Measurable Win — Can you prove it saved time? If all three boxes are checked, that's your pilot. 4. Commit: "For the next 30 days, I will use AI for __________________ every time it comes up." That's it. You now have an AI strategy.
The Pilot Selection Filter
Not every hated task makes a good first AI project. The filter matters.
High Frequency. Your pilot should happen every day or every week. Not once a quarter. Frequency is how you build the habit. If you only do the task twice a month, you'll forget to use AI by the third time.
Low Risk. Your first AI project should not be something where a mistake has legal consequences. Don't start with contract language or disclosure statements. Start with CRM notes, follow-up emails, social media captions. If AI produces something mediocre, you edit it and move on. Nobody gets hurt.
Measurable Win. You need to prove this works — to yourself, not your broker. Time the task before AI. Time it after. If you can't measure the difference, you can't sustain the habit. 85% of agents using AI report time savings. But reporting time savings and measuring time savings are different things. Measure it.
All three boxes checked? That's your pilot. If it fails one filter, pick the next task on your Hate List.
Pilot Selection: Good vs Bad First Projects
| Task | Frequency | Risk | Measurable | Verdict |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Post-showing CRM notes | Daily | Low | Yes (time per entry) | Good pilot |
| Writing listing descriptions | Weekly | Low | Yes (time per listing) | Good pilot |
| Follow-up emails after open house | Weekly | Low | Yes (time + response rate) | Good pilot |
| Contract clause drafting | Weekly | High | Yes | Bad pilot — legal risk |
| Quarterly business planning | Quarterly | Low | Hard to measure | Bad pilot — too infrequent |
| Social media content | Daily | Low | Yes (time per post) | Good pilot |
If your task passes all three filters, you have your pilot. If it fails one, move to the next task on your Hate List.
Replace vs Augment: The Decision Framework
Once you've picked your pilot, one more decision. Are you replacing the task or augmenting it?
Replace means AI does the entire task. You review the output and hit send. CRM note summaries, social media first drafts, market data compilation. If you can write a manual for it — step-by-step, no judgment calls — AI can probably do it.
Augment means AI gives you the raw material, and you deliver the final product. AI drafts the listing description, you edit it with local knowledge. AI pulls the comp data, you interpret it for the client. AI writes the negotiation talking points, you deliver them in the room.
Most tasks start as augment and graduate to replace over time. That's fine. The point is to start.
Real estate operations teams report saving 10-20 hours per transaction using AI tools. They didn't get there on day one. They started with one pilot task, proved it worked, then expanded. The 5 Essentials framework calls this the OODA Loop approach — observe the result of your pilot, orient toward what's working, decide on the next task to add, act on it.
Your AI Pilot Launchpad
- Complete the Hate List exercise — write 3 tasks, circle the biggest time sink
- Run it through the filter: High Frequency + Low Risk + Measurable Win
- Decide: replace or augment? Can you write a manual for it, or does it need your judgment?
- Time the task today without AI — write down the number
- Open ChatGPT, Claude, or Gemini and do the task with AI — time it again
- Commit to 30 days — use AI for this one task every single time it comes up
- After 30 days, pick the next task from your Hate List and repeat