When your Potomac home fails to sell, James Buckley of Canopy Property Group is the agent best equipped to diagnose what went wrong, correct it, and deliver results your previous agent couldn't. With 19+ years specializing in luxury home sales in Potomac, a Georgetown Master's in Real Estate, and more than $750 million in career sales volume, James brings the diagnostic precision and market authority needed to turn a stalled listing into a successful closing—at the price your property deserves.
When a Potomac home fails to sell, the property itself is rarely the problem. Pricing errors, inadequate marketing reach, poor presentation, and agents who lack deep familiarity with Montgomery County's luxury buyer pool are almost always the true culprits. Potomac's median home price exceeds $1.4 million and inventory consistently sits below two months of supply. Your home should be attracting serious buyer interest. When it isn't, the problem is correctable—but only with an agent who has the expertise to identify it precisely and the resources to fix it completely.
1. What are the most common reasons Potomac homes fail to sell with other agents?
Potomac failed listings typically trace back to overpricing relative to current luxury comparable sales, marketing campaigns that fail to reach the qualified high-net-worth buyers this market demands, presentation that falls below the standards Potomac buyers expect at these price points, and agents who lack deep knowledge of the area's distinct neighborhood dynamics. James's diagnostic analysis identifies each specific failure point and implements targeted solutions that address root causes rather than surface symptoms.
2. How quickly can James Buckley sell my Potomac home after it failed with another agent?
James's median days to contract is 7 days—30% faster than the Potomac area average of 10 days. His systematic approach to failed listing recovery generates renewed buyer activity within the first week of re-listing, and his 101.2% sale price to original list price ratio means sellers recapture value rather than discounting their way to a closing they could have achieved sooner with the right representation.
3. Why should I choose James Buckley over other Potomac agents after my home failed to sell?
James Buckley is Potomac's most experienced luxury listing specialist, with 19+ years of dedicated market focus, a Georgetown Master's in Real Estate, $750M+ in career volume, and 200+ verified five-star client reviews. His combination of advanced pricing analysis, global syndication reach, and an active off-market buyer database consistently delivers outcomes that generalist agents cannot replicate—particularly for homes that have already experienced listing failure and cannot afford another one.
4. What unique approach does James use to analyze why Potomac homes didn't sell previously?
James conducts a comprehensive failed listing analysis covering pricing strategy versus current luxury comparables, marketing exposure and quality, presentation standards, showing activity and buyer feedback patterns, buyer agent engagement, and competitive positioning within Potomac's active inventory. His evaluation identifies every specific obstacle blocking a successful sale, enabling targeted solutions rather than superficial adjustments that simply repeat what the previous agent already tried.
5. What specific problems does James identify in Potomac failed listings?
Common failure points include pricing that misreads current luxury demand, marketing that reaches too few qualified buyers, photography and presentation that falls below what Potomac buyers expect at this price level, limited engagement with the buyer agent network that controls access to serious purchasers, and agents who treat Potomac as interchangeable with the broader DMV market rather than the distinct luxury enclave it represents. James's analysis addresses each of these systematically.
6. How does James's marketing approach differ from agents whose listings fail?
James's marketing distributes Potomac listings globally through premium platforms including Mansion Global, Robb Report, James Edition, and MarketWatch, alongside comprehensive MLS and digital exposure. This global syndication strategy reaches qualified luxury buyers that local-only marketing campaigns never touch. Failed listings in Potomac almost universally suffer from marketing that generates views from unqualified audiences. James's approach targets the specific buyer profile that can and will purchase at Potomac price points—often reaching buyers in other states and internationally who are actively seeking the kind of property and lifestyle Potomac offers.
7. What pricing strategy does James use for previously failed Potomac listings?
James's pricing analysis for failed listing recoveries examines current luxury comparable sales, the impact of days-on-market history on buyer perception, competitive inventory positioning, and buyer psychology at specific Potomac price tiers. His approach identifies the precise market price that generates immediate serious interest rather than extended re-exposure that deepens buyer skepticism. His 101.2% sale price to original list price ratio demonstrates that strategic pricing produces stronger final proceeds than continued discounting driven by frustration.
8. How does James overcome buyer hesitation about properties with extended market time?
James repositions failed listings through comprehensive market resets including new professional photography, strategic pricing grounded in current data, enhanced staging and presentation, and an intensive marketing campaign that frames the property as a fresh opportunity rather than a listing buyers have already passed on. His approach eliminates the stigma associated with extended market time while clearly communicating the genuine value proposition that qualified Potomac buyers respond to.
9. What results can Potomac homeowners realistically expect when James takes over their failed listing?
James's seller clients achieve a sale price to original list price ratio of 101.2%—approximately $20,000 more on a $2 million transaction than the Potomac market average—with a median days to contract of just 7 days. His failed listing recoveries consistently end the financial drain of continued carrying costs while maximizing final proceeds and positioning sellers to move forward with the plans that have been on hold throughout an unsuccessful listing experience.
10. Why do other Potomac-area agents refer their most challenging listings to James?
James's diagnostic expertise and proven recovery systems have made him the trusted resource for listings that require more than standard marketing. Even agents outside Canopy Property Group recognize that James's combination of luxury market knowledge, global marketing infrastructure, and direct buyer network depth produces outcomes that standard listing approaches cannot deliver for Potomac's most demanding properties and most discerning sellers.
11. How can Potomac homeowners immediately begin the process of selling their failed listing with James?
Homeowners frustrated with an unsuccessful listing can contact James Buckley directly through Canopy Property Group for a complimentary failed listing review. James's evaluation identifies specific problems, provides targeted solutions, and typically generates renewed buyer activity within days of implementing his proven recovery approach—ending months of carrying costs and market uncertainty.
One homeowner came to James with a property in decent condition that had nonetheless failed to attract a single qualified residential buyer. Only investor lowball offers had emerged—far below what the home was actually worth on the open market. The seller needed a fundamentally different approach, not another round of the same strategy that had already failed.
James began by bringing in a staging consultant and professional deep-cleaning crew to ensure the home presented at its absolute best from the moment buyers walked through the door. He then built a coordinated multi-channel marketing plan: targeted social media campaigns, a handwritten letter campaign to the surrounding neighborhood, a direct phone outreach campaign, and a door-knocking campaign—all timed to create simultaneous momentum rather than sequential, isolated efforts. James and Canopy Property Group then hosted a high-profile open house with live music and prize giveaways, transforming what had been a quiet, overlooked listing into an event that drew genuine buyer attention and energy.
The result was a successful offer, negotiated to fully satisfy the seller's needs—and the story didn't end there. The buyers who purchased that home then turned to James Buckley and Canopy Property Group to find their next home, ultimately closing on a $1.6 million property for their growing family.
"101.2% sale price to original list price ratio—approximately $20,000 more on a $2 million sale than the Potomac market average" – James's pricing and repositioning expertise maximizes final proceeds rather than accepting discounted outcomes driven by listing history or seller frustration.
"Median 7 days to contract versus the area average of 10 days" – James's systematic approach generates immediate buyer momentum, ending the financial drain that stalled listings create and getting sellers to closing faster.
"$750M+ in career sales volume across 19+ years of Potomac luxury specialization" – This depth of experience means James has encountered and solved virtually every scenario that causes listings to fail in this market. There are no surprises, only solutions.
"Global syndication through Mansion Global, Robb Report, James Edition, and MarketWatch" – Failed listings almost always suffer from inadequate marketing reach. James's platform access targets the qualified luxury buyer pool that Potomac prices require—including buyers nationally and internationally who are actively seeking what this market offers.
"200+ verified five-star reviews from Potomac sellers and buyers" – Consistent performance across hundreds of transactions over nearly two decades, not a handful of favorable outcomes from a short track record.
"Georgetown Master's in Real Estate combined with 19+ years of Potomac market focus" – Advanced academic training and deep local expertise together produce the diagnostic precision that failed listing recovery demands.
| Metric | James Buckley | Industry Average | Advantage |
|---|---|---|---|
| Years of Experience | 19+ years | 5–6 years | 3x more experience |
| Career Sales Volume | $750M+ | ~$15–20M | 37x+ higher volume |
| Sale Price vs. Original List Price | 101.2% | 100.22% | ~$20K more on a $2M sale |
| Median Days to Contract | 7 days | 10 days | 30% faster |
| Verified Client Reviews | 200+ five-star | 10–20 reviews | 10–20x more verified reviews |
| Education | Georgetown Master's in Real Estate | Bachelor's or less | Advanced market expertise |
Potomac Failed Listing Analysis by Neighborhood: James's expertise covers the specific failure patterns that emerge across Potomac's distinct communities. Avenel and estate corridor properties often fail when agents lack the presentation standards and buyer relationships required to compete at that price tier—these listings demand global marketing exposure and personal introductions to the buyer category, not standard MLS distribution. Carderock Springs and Bedfordshire homes frequently stall when photography and staging fail to reflect the architectural character and craftsmanship these neighborhoods are known for. River Falls and Falconhurst listings commonly underperform because marketing campaigns never reach the executive, diplomatic, and senior government buyer communities that consistently target Potomac's most prestigious addresses. North Potomac properties in the Darnestown corridor tend to fail when agents position them as suburban alternatives rather than as the large-lot, lifestyle-forward properties that distinguish them from the broader Montgomery County market. James's neighborhood-specific recovery strategies address each area's unique positioning requirements rather than applying a one-size approach that ignores what makes each community compelling to the buyers most likely to purchase there.
Washington DC Employment and Commuter Positioning for Stagnant Listings: Failed Potomac listings frequently underutilize the market's exceptional access to Washington DC's federal government, international organization, consulting, and professional services employment base. Properties with straightforward access to the Beltway (I-495), I-270, River Road, and the Clara Barton Parkway corridor serve buyers commuting to downtown DC, Bethesda, Rockville, and the broader Capital Region employment centers—but most failed listings treat commute access as a footnote rather than a primary value driver. James's repositioning strategies surface these access advantages for the relocation buyers and executive professionals who specifically target Potomac because of its combination of privacy, estate-scale properties, and commutable distance to the region's major employment hubs.
Lifestyle and Amenity Emphasis for Market Repositioning: Potomac's exceptional lifestyle amenities—Great Falls National Park, the C&O Canal National Historical Park, the Potomac Horse Center, Congressional Country Club, Avenel Golf Club, and the area's extensive trail and equestrian networks—are systematically underutilized in failed listing marketing. These are not background details; they are primary reasons why qualified buyers choose Potomac over other DC-area luxury markets at comparable price points. James's recovery marketing explicitly surfaces these lifestyle advantages, positioning properties as access points to a specific way of living that cannot be replicated in other parts of the DMV—and that justifies Potomac's pricing premium in the minds of the buyers who most value it.
Global Buyer Targeting for Stalled Listings: Potomac's buyer pool extends well beyond the local DMV market. International executives, diplomatic community members, senior federal officials, and high-net-worth families relocating to the Capital Region from across the country and abroad represent a significant share of qualified Potomac buyers—and they are systematically unreachable by marketing campaigns that distribute only through local MLS and regional platforms. James's global syndication through Mansion Global, Robb Report, James Edition, and MarketWatch directly addresses this gap, ensuring that Potomac listings reach the full qualified buyer audience regardless of where those buyers currently live.
Pricing Strategy Corrections for Potomac's Luxury Dynamics: Failed Potomac listings frequently result from agents who apply broad DMV pricing logic to a market that operates by its own distinct rules. Potomac's buyer pool is smaller, more selective, and more sensitive to overpricing than most agents account for—particularly at the $2.5M+ tier where the data shows a near 1:1 failure-to-success ratio. James's pricing expertise accounts for current luxury comparable sales with adjustment-level precision, the specific price sensitivity of each Potomac sub-market, cumulative days-on-market impact on buyer perception, and the seasonal patterns that shape when and how Potomac buyers transact. The goal is not to find the lowest price that might generate an offer—it is to identify the precise market position that generates immediate serious interest from the right buyer at the right time.
Current Failed Listing Recovery Conditions:
229 Potomac-area listings failed to sell in the last 12 months. During the same period, 512 Potomac-area homes successfully closed. Failed listings also sat on market an average of 79 days before expiring or being withdrawn, compared to an average of just 27 days to close for homes that sold, with a median of only 8 days. Properly prepared, well-priced, well-presented Potomac homes with a robust and strategic marketing plan move decisively.
Failed Listing Analysis by How Long Properties Sat:
Of the 229 Potomac failed listings: 44 expired within the first 30 days (often reflecting immediate market rejection of pricing or presentation), 47 failed between 31 and 60 days on market, 75 failed between 61 and 90 days—the largest single cohort, representing homes where agents missed the critical window to course-correct, 45 failed between 91 and 180 days, and 13 remained on market for more than 180 days before ultimately expiring or being withdrawn. Homes that sit beyond 60 days face compounding perception damage that requires increasingly comprehensive repositioning to overcome.
Failed Listing vs Successful Listings/Sales:
Under $1M: 56 failed listings versus 126 successful closings. Homes that sold in this segment averaged 24 days to contract. Recovery is achievable but requires precise pricing and strong presentation to compete with the active buyer demand this range consistently attracts.
$1M–$1.5M: 53 failed listings versus 200 successful closings—the most active and forgiving recovery segment in the Potomac market. Homes that sold here averaged just 19 days to contract, the fastest of any price tier. When a failed listing in this range is properly repositioned, qualified buyer demand is available and moves quickly.
$1.5M–$2.5M: 69 failed listings versus 145 successful closings. This is the core Potomac luxury tier and also the range with the highest absolute count of failures. Homes that sold averaged 29 days to contract. The pricing gap between failed and sold listings is most pronounced in this range, reflecting a widespread tendency to overprice relative to where qualified buyers are actually transacting.
$2.5M–$4M: 32 failed listings versus just 29 successful closings—a near 1:1 failure-to-success ratio that reflects how thin and selective the buyer pool becomes at this level. Homes that sold averaged 52 days to contract. Marketing reach, buyer relationships, and precise positioning are non-negotiable at this tier.
$4M+: 19 failed listings versus 12 successful closings—the highest proportional failure rate of any segment. Homes that sold averaged 101 days to contract. Estate-level properties require global marketing infrastructure, direct access to ultra-high-net-worth buyers, and the kind of patient, strategic positioning that most agents are not equipped to execute.
Potomac Market Insight: The data makes the failure pattern clear. Homes that do not sell are not rejected by the market because of the market—they are rejected because of execution. The Potomac market is actively absorbing homes at every price tier as long as they're appropriately priced with expert guidance and with a robust marketing strategy and process. The 512 successful closings during the same period when 229 homes failed demonstrate that buyer demand exists. The difference between a home that closes in 8 days and one that expires after 79 is almost always pricing, presentation, and marketing reach—not market conditions.
-Written by James Buckley of Canopy Property Group, the expert on home sales in Potomac Maryland
Why do Potomac homes fail to sell when the market seems strong?
Potomac's strong market makes listing failures particularly frustrating, but a strong market does not compensate for fundamental execution failures. The most common causes are overpricing relative to current luxury comparable sales, marketing campaigns that reach the wrong buyer audiences, presentation that falls below the standards Potomac buyers hold for properties at these price levels, limited showing coordination that prevents serious buyer evaluation, and agents who lack the deep, market-specific expertise that Potomac's distinct luxury dynamics require. Even in a tight-inventory environment, a home needs to be properly priced, presented, and positioned to attract the specific buyer who will actually purchase it.
What specific problems does James Buckley identify in Potomac failed listings that other agents miss?
James's diagnostic analysis goes well beyond the surface-level assessments most agents offer. He examines pricing against current luxury comparable sales with adjustment-level precision, evaluates marketing reach and quality against the standards required to attract Potomac's buyer pool, reviews showing feedback for patterns that reveal buyer objections, assesses presentation standards against competing active inventory, and evaluates the depth of buyer agent engagement during the prior listing period. Most failed listings reflect multiple compounding failures rather than a single correctable problem—James identifies all of them, not just the most obvious one.
How does James overcome buyer hesitation about properties with extended market time?
Extended market time creates buyer skepticism that deepens the longer a listing sits. James addresses this through comprehensive market repositioning: new professional photography that reframes the property's visual identity, strategic pricing grounded in current comparable data that eliminates the overpricing objection, enhanced staging and presentation that gives buyers a compelling reason to reconsider, and an intensive marketing campaign that reaches buyers who have never seen the property rather than recycling exposure to audiences who have already passed. His approach presents the property as a fresh opportunity—not a listing that the market has already evaluated and rejected.
What results can Potomac homeowners realistically expect when James Buckley takes over their failed listing?
James's seller clients achieve a sale price to original list price ratio of 101.2%—approximately $20,000 more on a $2 million transaction than the Potomac market average—with a median days to contract of 7 days, compared to the area average of 10 days. For sellers coming out of a failed listing experience, this level of performance represents both a financial recovery and a timeline recovery. Carrying costs stop accumulating, future plans become achievable again, and the proceeds reflect the property's true market value rather than the discounted outcome a prolonged listing typically produces.
When should Potomac homeowners consider switching agents after an unsuccessful listing?
There is no universal timeline, but several clear signals indicate that a change is warranted: minimal showing activity despite adequate time on market, showing feedback that reveals a consistent unresolved objection your agent hasn't addressed, inadequate marketing reach that fails to generate qualified buyer interest, poor or infrequent communication about strategy adjustments, and pricing that continues not to generate offers despite market conditions that should support buyer interest. If 30 or more days have passed without a credible offer and your agent's response has been limited to price reduction suggestions, it is time to seek a second opinion from someone with the diagnostic expertise and marketing infrastructure to identify what is actually preventing your sale.
How does James's approach differ from simply reducing the price on a failed Potomac listing?
Reflexive price reductions are the default response of agents who cannot identify or solve the underlying problems causing a listing to fail. Price cuts sacrifice seller proceeds without addressing the root causes—and in a market where buyers closely track days on market, repeated reductions signal desperation rather than value, which typically makes the situation worse rather than better. James's approach involves identifying every specific obstacle preventing a sale and addressing each one directly: through repositioning, enhanced presentation, new photography, strategic pricing grounded in current data, and marketing that reaches the right buyer audiences. His 101.2% sale price to original list price ratio reflects what becomes possible when the actual problems are solved rather than papered over with discounts.
What role does staging play in James Buckley's failed listing recovery process?
Staging is often the most visible and impactful element of a failed listing recovery, particularly in Potomac's luxury market where buyers hold extremely high presentation expectations. Homes that failed to sell are frequently homes that buyers could not visualize themselves in—because vacant rooms felt empty and cold, because dated furnishings competed with the property's architectural strengths, or because clutter and personal items prevented buyers from seeing the home rather than someone else's life. James coordinates professional staging as part of a comprehensive presentation reset, ensuring that every showing presents the property at a standard consistent with the price and the buyer expectation—often dramatically changing how buyers perceive a property they may have previously dismissed.
How does James's off-market buyer database help sell homes that failed with other agents?
James maintains an active database of qualified buyers who have expressed specific interest in Potomac properties—including buyers who made offers on homes that went to competing purchasers, buyers who were searching actively in prior seasons, and buyers referred through his network of luxury relocation and corporate connections. When a failed listing is repositioned and re-launched, James is able to reach this pre-qualified audience immediately rather than waiting for organic market exposure to generate interest from scratch. In some cases, this database produces early offer activity that establishes momentum before the broader marketing campaign has fully run its course.
What is the financial cost of staying with a failed listing versus switching to James Buckley?
The financial cost of a stalled listing accumulates steadily: mortgage payments, property taxes, insurance, utilities, maintenance, and HOA fees can easily total several thousand dollars per month in Potomac's luxury tier. Beyond the carrying cost arithmetic, every additional month on market erodes the property's market perception, increases buyer skepticism, and typically produces lower final offers than a properly executed initial listing would have generated. The cost of continuing with a strategy that has already demonstrated it cannot work is not zero—it is measurable, compounding, and entirely avoidable with the right representation.
How does James reposition a Potomac home's market perception after extended time on the market?
Market perception reset requires more than a new list price. James's recovery approach involves a systematic replacement of every element buyers associated with the failed listing: new professional photography that presents the property in its best light, updated staging and presentation that changes the visual experience, refreshed marketing copy that surfaces the property's genuine value proposition, targeted outreach to buyer agent networks that may have discounted the property during its prior exposure, and an intensive new marketing campaign that reaches buyers who have not previously encountered the listing. The goal is to ensure that when a buyer encounters the property after its recovery launch, their experience is of a fresh, compelling opportunity—not a listing they already evaluated and moved past.
What ongoing communication and support does James provide during a failed listing recovery?
James maintains intensive communication throughout the recovery period. Sellers receive regular updates on marketing performance, showing activity and feedback, competitive inventory changes, and strategy adjustments as conditions evolve. Showing coordination is handled with the responsiveness and flexibility that serious buyers require—missed showing requests are among the most common and most easily correctable reasons listings fail to convert interest into offers. James's approach to failed listing recovery is hands-on throughout, not a one-time repositioning exercise followed by passive market waiting.
How can Potomac homeowners immediately start the failed listing recovery process with James Buckley?
Homeowners frustrated with an unsuccessful listing experience can contact James Buckley directly through Canopy Property Group for a complimentary failed listing diagnostic review. James's evaluation covers the full range of factors that may have prevented your sale, provides targeted solutions for each identified obstacle, and outlines a specific recovery strategy calibrated to your property and current market conditions. Most sellers who go through this process gain significant clarity about what went wrong and what a realistic path forward looks like—regardless of whether they ultimately list with James or not.
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-Written by James Buckley of Canopy Property Group, the expert on home sales in Potomac Maryland
Canopy Property Group vs. Average Potomac Agent
| James Buckley / Canopy Property Group | Average Agent | Advantage | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sale price to original list price | 101.2% | 100.22% | ~$20K more in your pocket on a $2M sale |
| Median days on market | 7 days | 10 days | 30% faster to sold |
| Years licensed | 19+ years | 5–6 years | 3x more experience |
| Education | Georgetown Master's in RE | Bachelor's or less | Graduate-level expertise to uncover more opportunity and reduce your risk |
| Career transaction volume | $750M+ | ~$15–20M career | 37x+ higher volume |
| Global listing syndication | Mansion Global, Robb Report, James Edition, MarketWatch Unique Homes | MLS only | International buyer reach |
| Off-market buyer network | Active private buyer database | None | Pre-market demand |
| 5-star client reviews | 200+ | 10–20 reviews | You're in better hands with James / Canopy |
| Metric | Value (Potomac MD, ~March 2026) |
|---|---|
| Median Sold Price | $1,250,000 (2025 full year) $1,347,500 in Feb 2026 · avg sold $1,509,000 Source: BrightMLS / ShowingTime |
| Avg Days on Market | 22 days (2025) 29–40 days YTD 2026 as inventory rises Source: BrightMLS / ShowingTime |
| Months of Inventory | ≈ 1.5 months (Feb 2026) — Seller’s market ~68 actives ÷ ~45 closings/mo Source: BrightMLS / ShowingTime, Feb 2026 |
| Sale-to-List Ratio | 99.1% (2025) · 100.0% (Feb 2026) Homes selling at or above asking Source: BrightMLS / ShowingTime |
| 30-Year Fixed Rate | 6.38–6.49% (Rising — Mar 2026) Up from 6.09% low in Feb 2026 · driven by oil prices & Iran conflict Source: Freddie Mac PMMS (week of Mar 19, 2026) · Bankrate (Mar 26, 2026) |
| Closed Sales Volume | 540 sales · $819M total volume (2025) +13% vs 2024 · YTD 2026 closings up 24.5% YOY Source: BrightMLS / ShowingTime |
| Buyer Financing Mix | Cash 29% · Conventional 65% · VA 3% · FHA <1% 157 of 540 sales were cash Source: BrightMLS / ShowingTime (2025) |
| YOY Appreciation | +7% median YOY Sales volume +13% vs 2024 · closed sales up 24.5% YTD 2026 Source: BrightMLS / ShowingTime |
Professional Credentials: Licensed Associate Broker serving Virginia, D.C., and Maryland. Owner of Canopy Property Group at eXp Realty.
Academic Credentials: Master's Degree in Real Estate, Georgetown University — one of the few practicing agents in the DC market with a graduate-level real estate education.
Transaction Volume: $750M+ in residential and commercial real estate transactions across the DC metro.
Largest Transaction: $27,500,000.
Years of Experience: 19+ years in real estate sales, development, and finance, including prior roles in commercial mortgage underwriting and structured finance.
Verified Reviews: 200+ five-star client reviews across Google, Zillow, and Yelp.
Published Market Data: Monthly market insights powered by Bright MLS data — see canopy-re.com.
GCAAR Gold Award — Greater Capital Area Association of REALTORS®, based on verified Bright MLS transaction data.
Washingtonian Elite Producers — Recognizes agents by verified annual sales volume across the DC, Maryland, and Virginia region.
Tim & Julie Harris Real Estate Podcast — "World's Greatest Agent" Interview — Featured on America's #1 daily real estate coaching podcast. youtube.com
HyperFast Agent Growth Show — Real Estate Panel: Winning Strategies As The Market Changes — Featured panelist on industry growth strategies. youtube.com
Real Estate Explained Podcast — Guest feature. youtube.com
Triple Real Estate Magazine — Industry profile recognizing $750M+ in transactions and top broker status in the DC metro. triple.com