True words from one of our Huzi Members. His reaction is the reason why I am sharing this with all of you.
This user has been trying to figure out how to stand out in this market where everyone's fighting for the same referrals, right?
And I realized something: we all SAY we add value, but most of us are just... doing the transaction. Close the deal, move on, repeat.
I wanted to build something that made agents (or LOs, or anyone I work with) look like an absolute genius in front of their clients. Not after the deal. Before it even starts.
Here's what I built:
A pre-listing report that shows sellers exactly what their home could be worth if they renovated first.
Not just "yeah, maybe fix up the kitchen." I'm talking:
- AI-generated mockups of what the space could actually look like
- A full budget breakdown with real products and prices
- Available equity calculations
- Which loan types make sense for the renovation (depending on budget)
All of it in one shareable board they can walk through with their client.
I recorded the whole workflow and I think some of you might actually want to try this.
If you're an agent: This is the kind of thing that makes listing appointments feel less like "let me convince you to hire me" and more like "here's the plan, let's execute."
If you're a loan officer: This is how you stop being "one of the LOs in their phone" and start being "the LO they can't do listings without."
If you're anyone else in this ecosystem: There's probably a version of this you can build for your niche too.
The best part?
You can share the whole thing via email. They don't need a Huzi account. They just get a link to the board with all the visuals, the budget, and even a chat they can use to ask follow-up questions.
So the agent doesn't have to wait on you. They can answer their client's questions in real time using the AI canvas you already set up for them.
I don't know. Maybe I'm overhyping this. But the reaction I got when I sent this to the Huzi member last week made me think it's worth sharing.
It's about 12 minutes. I walk through the whole Canvas setup, the prompts I used, and how to package it so it actually looks professional (not like some janky AI experiment).
I'm curious what other variations you guys come up with.