Coffeez with Joe Shalaby - A.I. in Finances and Mortgages ft. Pavan Agarwal | Coffeez for Closers with Joe Shalaby Ep. 46
Episode Date: October 18, 2024Pavan Agarwal, CEO of Sun West Mortgage Company, leads with innovation and compassion. Under his leadership, Sun West has become a leader in the mortgage industry, pioneering technology to simplify th...e home-buying process and making homeownership accessible to all. Learn how Pavan's vision is shaping the future of mortgages by blending cutting-edge tech with a people-first approach.For More Check Out our Playlist: https://music.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLgPwyhl8CkXiM0cBtuY8A_6JS60FueLz3&si=0_2dnoPkYV6jcSGw Check Us Out on all Platforms!Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/coffeez-for-closers-with-joe-shalaby/id1726674707Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/2KkQWRqHSHcCK3TVfsRKUK?si=hjTnUOjFS5eTDxBjgf4RwQ&preview=noneAmazon: https://www.amazon.com/Coffeez-Closers-Joe-Shalaby/dp/B0CRYLQRW6 Coffeez and Closers Socials & WebsiteWebsite: https://coffeezforclosers.com/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/coffeezforclosers/TikTok: https://www.youtube.com/redirect?event=video_description&redir_token=QUFFLUhqbnU0T3RrLXdPbC1BR2NLc2lWcExqWklQaHlQUXxBQ3Jtc0tudi1GV2Zod3hRYzRhTkhONFBuMlptblNGSlJ1QzhpV0tzbHh5YThNR0R3Y2RnNnU5NV9ER3E5ZUhxMjdUUWp1UWo4MVl6Q2szeXo1cFh1OHNkYkxDR1F0MXZtMTZ6QnZoakdzSnJpVl9PcWZBOU9zZw&q=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.tiktok.com%2F%40coffeezforclosers&v=uXvk6LY9lS8Facebook: https://www.youtube.com/redirect?event=video_description&redir_token=QUFFLUhqa2pLZ2pMaUxmSTh4dy1qazMtdlBjX2pVN1AxQXxBQ3Jtc0tua2RUTUNsRmJob0RKWlVqeDhNaUN4US1rdlRvUG9Fdm5SNk1jU1pQNzNLQnVmUmtGMGtMYUViZ2pLMXJkOVJUci1kMk9DN2poTThVV2NFd0tISWdDMzNwOEZ2c3pVb09lbEhjemJHblRsS1RKdHZqbw&q=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.facebook.com%2Fpeople%2FCoffeez-for-Closers-with-Joe-Shalaby%2F61556355642488%2F&v=uXvk6LY9lS8 Joe Shalaby SocialsInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/josephshalaby/TikTok: https://www.youtube.com/redirect?event=video_description&redir_token=QUFFLUhqa3p6VlRzR1BWMkJQM1ZIaUdVZHhYVTYyak43QXxBQ3Jtc0tuUXVBOE1oZUJYTmZIZnNENUgxQkhjamk4RXJHb09MWU9OczJhLWpnX0JwN2pENzRhaV9NajJROW5nek1tQ1VvVE40ZFJuUUI2cnI0ajNKLXE4d1VMUUpkTGFHR0tGY0o5NUhnWnZnaXJoZXdEM0piaw&q=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.tiktok.com%2F%40josephshalaby&v=uXvk6LY9lS8Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/josephshalaby E Mortgage Capital Socials & WebsiteInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/emortgagecapital/Website: https://www.emortgagecapital.com/Twitter: https://twitter.com/Emortgagecap #1 Mortgage Company on Social on 🌎#1 Non Delegated Lender in the Country🌟#1 Broker in CANMLS #1416824"Mortgages Are What We Do Not Who We Are"™https://finance.yahoo.com/news/learn-why-e-mortgage-capital-192000740.htmlAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
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What's up, everybody, and welcome to another episode of Coffees for Closers.
Joining us today is a true pioneer in the artificial intelligence space.
As CEO of Selegance International and Sunwest Mortgage Company,
he has not only transformed financial services through technology, but also championed equality.
Under his leadership, Sun West has dramatically reduced loan decline rates for African-American applicants,
aligning them with national averages, a testament to his dedication to fair lending and equality.
But our guest's impact doesn't stop there.
His creation angel AI revolutionizes AI with the ability to make empathetic,
multi-million dollar decisions at lightning speed.
A first in the industry.
This combined with his engineering prowess,
boasting numerous patents in AI and blockchain,
sets them apart as a leader whose innovations are truly making a difference.
Join me in welcoming the one, the only CEO of Sunwess, Pavan Agarwal.
Thank you, Pavan, for joining us today.
Thank you, Joe.
It's an honor to be here.
We've been friends and business funders for years.
So thank you for having me on the show.
Yeah, I'm really truly blessed to have someone of your stature,
a person who really has impacted the mortgage industry,
a person I've been following since I entered the mortgage space.
And you've really been a mentor and someone who I've really aspired to follow.
So I thank you for coming to the show.
And we're going to make some magic happen today.
So I like to start the show with a little icebreaker just to get people introduced to who you are.
So the first thing I like to ask someone is, what's your morning routine?
what's your daily morning regimen?
That's a good question.
I'm usually up around seven.
And the first thing I do, I start,
while I'm brushing my teeth,
I'm posting, checking social media,
I'm posting, you know, my thoughts for the day.
And also I notify my team of this is what I'm going to do today.
This is what the plan is.
And then I get ready.
I actually have a couple of small dumbbells in my office,
and I have a little short workout routine.
And, you know, the idea is just to get the heart rate up for about 10, 15 minutes.
And that's pretty much all you need.
If you just do that every day, you can stay in decent shape.
There was a time in my life when I was like going to the gym hard with a trainer,
two hours, three hours a day, doing all the heavy weight lifting and all that.
And then I was like, you know what, I'm never going to be Iron Man or something like that.
Never going to be a bodybuilder.
And I kind of went off that phase and then just my trainer taught me this very simple, you know,
10 minute, 15 minute routine.
It's like, if you just do that and eat right, you're going to be in good shape forever.
I love it. I love it.
Now, you've been the CEO of Sunwest Mortgage Company.
How long Sunwes been around?
1980.
My dad started it in 1980.
And he met my dad once a couple years ago.
Sweet, man.
God rest his soul.
Yeah.
So, yeah, 1980, I've been working with him and my mom since the 70s, since we immigrated
the country.
So pretty much, you know, as typical immigrant family, everyone works together, right?
And you get to put food on the table somehow.
Same with our company here.
We're immigrants.
I came from Egypt.
My brother works here.
My sister works here.
My partner, his brother, his works here.
So it's very similar here at eMortgage Capital as well.
Yeah.
And when did you become CEO of SunWest?
2008, 2009, right after the big short.
The big short, nice.
And then Sun West, Sun West.
Sun West Mortgage Company, SunWest Bank.
So there's two variations, right?
No, well, there is a Sunwest bank.
That's not us.
That's a different company.
Okay.
That's Eric and Carson.
I know them well.
They're nice people.
He's actually running for the owner of Sunwest Bank.
He's actually running for Senate in Wisconsin on the Republican ticket.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
Solid guy.
Nice.
Yeah, Sun West's been, we do a lot of business with Sun West.
We've been working with you guys since we started the company.
And I don't even know if you checked.
I think we can both.
I think we're either number one or number two broker with Sun West in the whole country.
Yeah, I believe after we spoke last, I think we're number two for e-mortgage.
Okay.
Yeah, yeah.
You guys are our number two.
I think we're your number one.
I'm not sure.
Probably.
Yeah.
Probably.
So, but yeah, it's an honor.
It's an honor.
Now, I want to talk about, because everybody's talking about AI.
And Sun West has been on the cut.
cusp of artificial intelligence since before the word artificial intelligence was a trend.
And, you know, what, I have a couple questions because this is going to be a very AI-centric
conversation.
But first off, what inspired you in the very beginning to start an empathetic AI model
to help loan decision-making?
Well, it started from my dad.
because growing up, you know, since the 80s, he would tell me, look, this business is so simple, just to automate it, find ways of automating it.
So I've been writing code since I was a kid.
And, you know, the first AI program I wrote was back in 1985.
So really when no one was talking about AI other than, you know, other than the nerds like me.
So, you know, his vision was, hey, you, the mortgage business, it's all paperwork.
It's all calculations.
It's all, there's a patterns to everything.
He's like, there should be a way so that this could all be done by complete automation, right?
He didn't use the word AI, but I took it to mean AI.
And so after I wrote my first AI program,
It was just a small little, you know, little thing.
I don't even remember exactly what it did at this point now.
But the, you know, the bottom line, what I discovered is it takes lots of data.
You know, it takes lots of data, a lot of competing power.
And I said, okay, we don't have, we don't have the data.
We don't have the ability to store the data.
Back in those days, 10 megabyte hard drive cost $1,000.
Right.
So I said, well, at least let me at least put an architecture in place.
so that we could start collecting data and start planning for this.
And it always seemed like AI was just a couple years away.
So like one more, the next chip from Intel or the next hard drive will solve the problem.
So because of that, because it always seemed just around the corner,
I laid an architecture and a foundation so that we can continue to build on this.
And so that became part of our DNA.
of our engineering team since, you know, the last 40 years almost.
Wow.
So you guys are on the cusp of, you know, so many different technological platforms at SunWest.
You also created the platform, The Processor, to really streamline the processing at SunWest.
Talk to me a little bit about that.
Yeah, so it's just another way for people to understand Angel E.I.
So we created another brand called the processor.
So because the way Angel AI works is you, you as a loan officer, you don't have to, literally you don't have to do anything other than build a relationship with your customer.
And which is really the number one responsibility of a loan officer.
Doing like what we're doing right now, this interaction and looking into each other's eyes and understanding, you know, where we're coming from.
So if a loan officer can build that relationship and build that bond with his customer,
why should he be so stressed out over the paperwork, over the details, right?
So take, you know, Joe, I take your loan application.
I say, give me your W-2, paystubs, bank statements, you know, whatever,
and you pull those out, you give it to me.
I take my phone, take a picture or scan it on my Xerox machine or whatever,
drop it into Angel AI and then I'm done.
Yeah.
You know, more or less.
Angel AI will pull the rest of the missing documents.
It'll pull.
Yes, Angel AI will automatically read the documents,
scrape the data off it.
I'd complete the 1003.
Okay.
And if there are any,
and it would analyze documents,
let's say the bank statement had a large deposit,
then it would automatically tag that.
We need an explanation for this large deposit.
our resource of funds, right?
Or if there was, if the pasteub showed, you know,
variation in overtime that it's going to ask for a B-O-E or ask for more information on that.
So it looks at every single data point on the documents.
And because of that, it's, it also catches fraud, right?
Because it redos all the calculations.
So if someone tried to make up a W-2 or make up a, make up a paste-tub, right?
And, you know, numbers won't tie together properly.
Okay.
So it was very good at just catching compliance and fraud.
And it also figures out what's missing and what's needed.
And automatically, so literally it underwrites on the spot,
automatically adds all the conditions.
And then after that, we have a team that we call the Angelistas.
So as a large team, is this massive call center,
bilingual
agents that
will call your
customer and say
okay you know you gave me all your
documents thank you but this
the April bank statement
had a large deposit of $50,000
can you please explain what that's coming from
can you send us the backup information
so they're reaching out and having that kind of
human conversation so who calls them
these are these are
we have a call center in Port
Rico, so they're all bilingual.
Oh, nice.
Okay.
And they make the call.
They follow the instructions that the AI has generated, and they make the call, and they say,
and explain to the borrower, this is what is missing.
So each account, so each loan officer, basically, whether it's through our wholesale
channel, like with your loan officers, who gets assigned one dedicated angelista.
Yeah. Okay. And so they then reach out to the customer or if they need to reach out to the realtor or the title company, whoever, whatever document is needed, they reach out and they explain to that person. They follow. They basically, they're just, they're kind of like, hey, to say this, they're kind of like robots. They, they, they, the AI tells them what to do. They follow the instructions. They've been, they've been coached and trained really well. I don't know if you know Bill Pipes. I know.
He's like the, I'd argue the number one.
Some people would say he's number three behind Tom Ferry.
In my books, he's number one.
The number one real estate coach in the country.
And he's very good at coaching customer service teams.
So I hired him to coach the Angelistas.
So he coached them and he does a regular,
he coaches them every week on,
how to handle objections, how to communicate.
So they're very, very good on the phone with the customer.
They've been coached to have high level of emotional IQ, customer emotional IQ.
And so they're able to, because they don't have to think about what's being asked,
and they have to just focus on delivering the message because the thinking of what's being
asked and why is needed is been done by the AI.
and the AI gives them detailed, clear instructions of what they need and why they need it.
Wow.
Okay, so all they have to do is focus on understanding the customer, building their relationship with the customer,
and making sure the message is communicated across.
That just saves so much time, so much time for the LOs.
It's truly like an LO assistant.
Yeah, it is a complete LO assistant.
The processing, you know, the processor is the AI because within the hour, so the L.
So if you as an L.O.
Take the application.
Right.
And by taking the application, you don't even fill in a 10.03.
You just give me the documents.
The 10.03 gets filled from the documents.
Okay.
Wow.
So it completes your 1003.
It completes the 10L3 for you.
I don't, because me as an L.O, when I was in LO back in the 80s and 90s, right, I hated
to complete the 10L3.
I never did it.
Right.
I would talk, I would interview the borrower.
The first question is, so what do you want out of the time?
this transaction, right?
What do you hope to achieve?
And just build a relationship, understand what their goals are and, you know,
why they're buying this house and so forth.
And, and understand their background.
And based on that, I would ask them then for the documents, I need these documents.
Okay.
And I looked at the documents, they're complete or relatively complete.
And then my loan application was done.
And I would give it to an assistant, a processor,
in the back of the day,
and then I say,
okay, everything you need is in these documents,
go complete a 10-03 and go get the disclosures out.
I'm not going to waste my time,
complete 10-03 myself.
Right, there's no point.
So now, instead of giving to a human being
to read documents and complete a
10-03,
we give it to a computer that reads the documents,
completes a 10-03,
and you know, this accuracy is going to be 100%,
right? A human being can make a mistake.
But these OCR systems
and the cross-data validation
and stuff, it's, it's super accurate.
So within the hour of you taking those documents, dropping the AI, within the hour,
the 103 is completed, all the verifications are done, work number, you know, whatever, you know,
the 401 lookups, all that happens automatically.
So it's integrated with all the systems out there.
And your disclosures are sent automatically to the, to the customer.
So everything that, that, what normally an LOA or processor does is done with,
within the first hour.
That's awesome.
Yeah, it's a great time saver.
Yeah.
And when, you know, the thing is like people get so confused by it because they're like,
why is it free?
Right.
Because we have, we have, and we were talking about this earlier and before we
enter this, this, this, this podcast.
Like you were telling me, you have, you have CEOs from competing mortgage brokers,
right I mean competing not really competing but from other mortgage brokers that that
compete with the mortgage in the podcast with you right and we were just talking about there are no
competitors in this business where it should all be collegial and and work together the market
is so huge so same thing like I make the angel AI completely free and accessible to every
to company even even like you know whether you work for cross-country or or fairway or
freedom or whatever, you know, or movement, it doesn't matter to me.
If you're a loan officer, you can use it.
Are the angelises free to?
Or that's only if the loan comes to Sun West.
If the loan is submitted to Sun West, then the Angelises take over.
Right.
But there's something similar to Angelistas, which we can talk about in a minute.
But the point is, is that when, so we have loan officers from other mortgage banks, right,
who would never submit a loan to Sun West,
and that's okay.
They use it nonstop
because they'll, they,
they have literally stopped
reviewing income and assets anymore.
So they take an application, right?
And they'll just drop it into Angel
and let Angel tell it what the qualifying income is
and what, what is any problems or what the assets are.
And their loan is basically set up for them.
Wow.
So I've got L.O. is calling me and thanking me saying like you've saved me hours every day.
And I don't have to, you know, given where margins are and things are still compressed.
Like I was, I need another assistant, but I can't because I don't have the, I don't have the money to do it.
Money to do it.
And now I've got Angel and.
It's a free assistant.
Yes, yes.
It's free assistant.
It's the best assistant I ever had because.
He's accurate every time.
Exactly.
Exactly.
Yeah, LOs, make sure you get a free assistant with Angel AI.
So what are some of the biggest challenges that you face bringing Angel AI to life?
Oh, shoot, I mean, it's decade plus of work.
So AI is all about training, right?
And so we've been running, you know, loans through it constantly, nonstop.
And it learns a little bit of time.
and then it can make a mistake.
So in the early days, it would make a mistake,
and then a human being has to get involved and deal with it, right?
Just before we had the warranty.
So just all that constant learning and adjusting and tuning, right,
creates, you know, this, it's a big challenge.
There's a lot of work to do.
And that means that our mortgage process, right?
So the way Sun West is organized,
It's not organized like any other company because it's all centered around the AI.
So our people never worked in, I would say not never, but for a long time, I'm not working in a traditional way that you would normally expect processors and underwriters to function.
So they were always supporting the AI, and if the AI kicked out an exception, it did something correctly, and then their job was to go in and correct it.
So we had a very non-traditional workflow for last 10, 15 years.
So the challenge has been just running enough scenarios through.
So since 2018, when we officially launched Angel AI,
and a year later in 2019, we put in the warranty,
it's where we said, okay, I've done enough transactions through this.
We've tested this so much that it's, I'll say that if it got something wrong,
I'll eat that loan.
Okay.
That means if it got it wrong and let's say you got to do you approval when it shouldn't
have been approved because the income was wrong or whatever, I'll fund it anyways and I'll
balance sheet it.
Okay.
So since 2019 to today, I've had to balance sheet about four loans.
Four?
Yeah.
That's it?
That's it.
That's an amazing precision.
Yes.
Yes.
And we've, since 2018 to today, we've been done over 200,000.
transactions through Angel EA.
So every deal that SunWest does is ran through Angel AI.
Correct.
So how much of a cost savings has that been for SunWest?
Yeah, it's massive.
I mean, I think MBA put out something recently that like an average mortgage banker spends
about $13,000 per closed loan.
And I think that includes commissions.
So let's just say half of that is commissions.
So that's $6,000, $7,000 is the operating cost for an average mortgage banker.
okay per loan and and you know what the margins are these days that's yeah you're operating costs you're
already underwater forget the commissions right yeah right so uh you know the three years ago we were at about
300 bucks a closed loan and we've made it more efficient than that so we're under 200 probably
I haven't checked lately but my guess we'd be between 100 and 150 a closed loan
so it's all it costs you to close loan now yeah right I should be making more money with
son Wes.
Yeah.
Of course, then you have the
out of pockets
like credit reports and stuff.
I'm not including that.
Credit report these days is $100
a loan or something.
Vanium reissues,
rest than the other.
Right, right.
Well, are they more,
$100 or $100 or,
they're like $60 to $80.
Oh, whatever it is.
Yeah.
And it's not 100 yet.
Stop adding inflation to it.
We're not there yet.
It might be by the end of the year.
A 20% inflation rate.
Maybe.
So you've had such a vast background in so many different, you know, so many different professions.
You've been like expert engineer, mortgage professional, CEO, one of the largest mortgage bankers in the country.
With all that experience, like, what do you think some of the needed traits are for a mortgage CEO or a tech CEO in this environment and this rapidly?
changing environment. You know, that's a good question. I mean, we were talking about that.
Again, another thing we were talking about before the podcast started, which is our kids,
right? And, you know, we're talking about how kids these are making so much money because
they're on YouTube and whatever. And my son, 10 years old, and when he was 9, he went through
this YouTube phase and he made some money because he got some viral videos. And at 10,
he grew out of that phase. And now all he does is soccer and track and Ninja Warrior. I just
sports. And that's it. It's all you could think about.
and I would rather he's doing sports all day long than, you know, being a YouTube star.
Okay.
And because when you're doing sports, especially competitive sports like soccer, right, you are learning the real lessons of life, which is the real character, right?
Yeah.
When you get hit, right, and you lose or you win and knowing how to win gracefully and how to lose gracefully, how to take a hit.
and how to hit back and knowing what to hit back, you know,
understanding the boundaries of life,
understanding the boundaries of interpersonal relationships, right?
That you get with living your life and interacting with people like,
not virtually interacting, not in the metaverse, but real interacting.
Yeah.
And ultimately, all of life and all success pulls down to your ability
to build relationships and create connections, right?
And if you're fundamentally good at that,
and if you're fundamentally good at working with the culture
and the people around you and understanding cultures,
especially, you know, I'm fortunate enough to be an immigrant
where I have two cultures, right?
I have my Indian culture and my American culture.
And so, and I think that's an advantage to my kids
because now they grew up in multicultural environment.
So they're able to understand that not everyone is the same,
not everyone thinks the same way, right?
And similarly, you grew up in multiple cultures as well.
So when you have that kind of core understanding,
then if you want to be a YouTube star
or if you want to be a top loan investigator or a realtor
or a doctor or engineer or whatever, right,
you understand, you have a better, deeper understanding
of the nature of your customer.
There's always a customer.
And if you don't understand the customer,
like really understand them,
you're never going to be able to deliver a product
that means something to them.
So you're, how are you teaching your kids in this environment,
like how do you teach them to understand that sort of,
that philosophy of, you know, to be outside of sports,
you know, because you've got your one son, he's in sports.
Yeah, yeah.
Well, I think it's the kids learn the most by watching their parents.
So the most important thing is what I think the biggest lesson that the kids learn is to see how mom and dad treat each other.
So if the way mom and dad treat each other in front of them is the number one lesson.
And if you start with that and you focus on the proper, how to respect each other properly, right?
that 99% of what they need to learn, they've already learned right there.
So we start from that level.
And then, and then ultimately, you know, just, you know, like, I work a lot.
I, you know, it's, you know what it takes, run and build multiple businesses.
And I get them involved.
I show them what is dad doing, right?
Why is dad traveling so much?
And I'd like to take them with me wherever I travel as much as I can.
That's awesome.
Right?
So let them see for.
hand, let them have these experiences and see that, you know, money just doesn't fall out
of the sky that you got to work for, that you, and these are things you do and let them observe,
right? Let them be a part of your life. And automatically, they will learn the right values.
Yeah, because something me and you have the blessing of is like we grew up probably poor
because we immigrated. Yeah. You know, and one thing that our kids don't have the blessing of
is they're not poor.
So how do we make sure that they have that balance, you know,
to continue to maintain that same grit that we have?
Yeah.
And that's something that, you know, I'm always like asking everybody.
Everyone who comes on the show who has good kids, you know, well-raised kids, you know,
it's something that is a, my kids are younger.
They're all 10, 8, 3, 2.
So I want to make sure, you know, you just, that's, my wife likes to look at our kids.
She's like, she's like, that's my life's work.
Like, that's what I do for living.
It's like, that frees them.
And I'm like, I do this and I'm good at this.
And she does that.
You know, so, so any, and so she watches all the shows because she knows I always, I always hit you with parenting advice.
So, so, so, so that's awesome that you take your kids with you on, you know, to work, travel.
You know, they see you grinding.
They see you making it happen.
What are some of the struggles that your family faced immigrating from India?
Your dad had obviously a much greater barrier with language, like my dad.
So what are some of the challenges when he started the Sun West and what sort of issues did he face and how did he overcome them?
You know, maybe because I was just a kid back then.
I never saw anything as, I never saw the challenge.
I just saw it as, as fun, right, as excitement.
And, you know, like coming from the poverty we came from in India to America, right?
And the little things you take for granted when you come to America,
like Americans take for granted, which was like luxury for us.
So as far as I was concerned, we're kings, you know, like, this is great.
We're one bedroom apartment in the hood.
But it was like, wow.
You know.
It's amazing.
It's amazing, right?
So, so kind of having that childlike wonderment over, you know, how life, how good life is.
Yeah.
Right.
I didn't see the challenge.
Everything was always positive.
Yeah.
And I think that's probably one of the reasons why I'm an entrepreneur is because still,
I like to keep that same sense of wonderment and positive.
Positive mindset.
mindset about, you know, everything is so wonderful.
Yeah.
Right.
Certainly when I think back and look at where we were, you know, when I was, when I was
little to now, I was like, well, I live through that.
It doesn't matter what comes tomorrow, whatever, you know, whatever God is going to hit me
with tomorrow, I don't really matter.
Yeah.
Because I've already lived through that.
Yeah.
So.
I was talking to someone else on the podcast the other day and said, you know, as a CEO, like,
I could take a big beating.
Like, you could hit me with anything and I'll still smile at you.
You just can't hurt me.
Yeah.
You know, it doesn't matter what comes at us, but we're able to overcome tribulation.
And, you know, India, all very poor.
I'm from Cairo, Egypt, but I'm from this place called Helmait de Zetun, which is, like,
the poorest part of Cairo, because now Cairo, there's a lot of rich parts.
But, you know, I'm from like, so Egypt's considered a third world country, as is India.
but like there's certain parts of India and Egypt that should be considered six world countries.
They're like multiplied, you know, like exponentially worse.
You know, like I'm from those parts.
Or it's like really, really poor.
Like you're on the seventh floor, no elevator.
Yeah.
And a little one bedroom, you know, would, that the one bedroom is like half the size of the one bedroom's here.
They're like 200 square feet, right?
And no air conditioning, right?
So they're really poor.
So we're really.
now it's like it's just crazy to live in the environments that we live in now and then you know have you
ever taken your kids back to india yeah many times where but where you grew up um not where i grew up
my wife grew up uh in in in mumbai that's so they spent actually we were just there um last year
um over christmas uh so they get to see their their grandparents and cousins and so forth
nice what's their interpretation of how the lifestyle is there
Um, for them, they don't see any difference, right?
Because my, my wife's come from a wealthy family over there.
And, um, and, you know, it's like, and, you know, remember when I, when I left India in the
70s, right, when it was basically a socialist, um, country under, you know, almost Soviet occupation,
you could say, uh, wasn't exactly, uh, behind the iron curtain.
And so between then and now, I mean, it's, it's a different country.
Now it's opened up.
It's, it's a free economy.
And it's, you know, it's booming.
I love it.
I want to get back to the AI and ask you this question because this has been a big, like, debate in the, in the AI world.
And it's really like, what do you, what's your opinion on the balancing of innovation and ethical considerations, especially like,
in high-stake environments, like the mortgage environment,
where they have to make big decisions,
and you're balancing empathy with it as well.
Correct.
So I'll get back to the empathy.
That's a big topic onto itself.
But as far as the ethics of making these big decisions,
so I think it was the Federal Reserve last year,
or the FDIC satir circular, about almost exactly a year ago.
That said, it's okay to use AI to make.
lending decisions or banking decisions
or credit decisions
as long as
you
but you cannot use
you cannot use that
oh this is the AI decision as is
as the excuse
okay so you if you
you can use the AI to make a decision
but then you also have to be able to explain
how the AI made that decision
okay
so you have to be able to connect the dots
And that has to be a human doing that.
No, it doesn't, they didn't say it has to be human.
They just said the AI, it used to go to spit out, kind of like a receipt of how I came to this decision.
And so that's a, you know, traditional, like a neural network is very hard for a neural network.
It's impossible.
You can't, the way back propagation training works is you just, you can't explain how it made the decision.
It just, it learned, it sort of becomes intuitive.
and it says, okay, you know, turn right or turn left, it makes that decision.
If you ask it, how did you make the decision?
We'll see, here are my weights.
And that doesn't mean anything.
It's not understandable.
So if you, to basically, so they put the bar, by putting the bar there, that you have to be able to explain how you got to that decision.
So if the AI says, I'm going to approve Joe's loan, it has to also explain why it approved Joe's loan.
Okay.
that's a high bar.
Okay, and it's hard to do.
Okay, so the way we build Angel,
and it's not built off-the-shelf tools like large language models,
and I'm throwing our terms, which I don't want to confuse the audience,
but essentially that's the technology that's behind ChatGPT.
So it's not built on tools like that,
and it's a custom-built neural network.
we built from the ground up.
So because we were building it for mortgages and financial decisions,
for us to test it that is doing it right,
we had to build it from scratch to be able to spit out the reasoning for its decisions
along the way.
Okay, so when the FDIC came out with that rule,
we're like, okay, no problem.
We already had that covered.
Otherwise, there was no way for us to test our own product.
We had to write the code so that.
that it generated the logs automatically.
That's awesome.
Right.
So the ethical standard is, at least according to the FDIC,
that if you make a decision,
you'd better be able to explain why you made that decision.
Okay, you'd very well explain.
If you said that the credit is unsatisfactory,
you'd be able to explain why is it unsatisfactory.
Okay, if a human underwriter underwrites a loan file,
obviously they can explain why.
And their notes would have some of that written down,
depending on how good notes,
underwriter keeps but you could always question the underwriter there to explain why okay but uh out of the
box AIs can't do that unless you build it to do it okay so that's how we know that it
delivers the right decisions that's how we we audited ourselves right I mean apart from the 200,000
loan files that we have put through real loan file that we put through is like we run test cases
like tens of thousands of test cases every week through it.
So we have a test script that goes and runs, you know,
tens of thousands of scenarios and loan cases and so forth
to make sure that it's working correctly.
AI-generated test cases that you're just...
Well, it's sort of AI-generated.
I mean, we basically taking real loans from the past,
changing, you know, changing the data.
There's a whole process where we change the data around,
take all the PII out,
and that becomes a test data set that we run it through,
through an automated script.
So we're constantly testing the AI
to make sure that it doesn't go off the rails.
And I kind of, I think I know the answer to this one,
but if you look back on your career in all the success you had,
what do you think the most significant milestone
of your career has been thus far?
Getting married.
I mean, I got married young.
I was thinking it was 26.
And without her, I, I, nowhere, yeah.
It's like my wife is my backbone.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, that's awesome.
So that's the most, you know, hopefully she's listening to this.
You get some major kudos for that.
She knows how I feel.
There's no, no secret.
Yeah, yeah.
That's awesome.
Yeah, I, you know, I'm up there with you.
It's getting married has been, you know, insurmountable to my success.
Like, without my wife, I'd be nowhere.
It just, it just kept me grounded.
kept me thinking clearly, right? Because ultimately it's all about listening to your inner voice,
to God, whatever we want to call it, right? People, different cultures, different people call it different
things, but ultimately it's all about having that, tapping into that calmness inside you and saying,
okay, this is what I'm going to do next. Yeah. Okay, as opposed to reacting on the spot or being
driven by an emotion, whether the emotion is anger or, or, or,
or excitement, right? That's when the worst decisions are made. Yeah, you're absolutely right. And
that voice of reason, which often comes through your wife, is like the reason why you're able to
continue to excel. Yes. So what advice would you give to a young entrepreneur or innovator
who's basically like following in your footsteps? Oh, don't follow myself footsteps. I made so many
mistakes. But that's the thing. You're giving them advice now. Yeah. Take the time,
and I was given this advice and I didn't do it, you know, when I should have, but take the time
to really write down who you are, right? What do you really, what do you hope to accomplish,
the why? If you don't, if you don't write down your why and define,
it, okay, then you will be kind of floating around kind of fog and you'll get pushed in this
direction or that direction and the path will be long and difficult. So start with writing down
your why and what what you want your tombstone to say when you are 100, you know,
you're 100 years old and you're buried, what do you want that tombstones to say about you?
And then from that point forward, it doesn't matter what you're building, whether you're building microchips or perido chips.
It doesn't matter what your business is.
I'd stick to that fundamental.
And every decision, every relationship is that if it doesn't, it doesn't put you on a path towards that Y.
Don't do it.
Excellent advice.
Any relationship that you have around you, which is pulling you away from that Y or distracting you.
okay there's time to end those relationships you want to stick with the people that are going to
help you achieve that that future that goal awesome that's awesome advice awesome advice um
one question i have for you and this is an issue that i suffer with with my own company is
you know what are some of the challenges that you face with uh with mortgage
professionals right now implementing and more importantly adopting angel AI and how are you overcoming
those challenges um yeah so it's it's been an interesting interesting run last couple years uh with this
uh i've gone the you know what is that curve called the the four phases of grief or whatever it is
i've i've seen that across uh across mortgage uh professionals
Um, so initially it was, what is it?
I've heard of it.
Um, it sounds like BS.
Yeah.
Right.
So complete denial, right?
And then they listen to it.
They may play with it a little bit.
And then it's kind of like, um, still don't believe it.
Oh, well, they're starting to believe it.
Now they're starting to poke at it.
Like they're saying, well, it doesn't do this and doesn't do that or whatever.
Like it's, it's almost like an anger kind of response.
Right.
Um, and.
And then, you know, I would say right now, we're kind of at a point where people are either just ignoring it.
I get a lot of loan office.
Like, I don't want to have anything to do with this.
Right.
They're so threatened by it.
Like, this is going to take away my job, but this is going to take away my future or whatever.
I don't want to have anything at all to do with it.
And then we have another side, which are looking at this saying, oh, my God, this is helping me so much.
This is revolutionizing my business.
I could do so much more business now.
So now we're kind of, you know, the split is happening where you have one group which
does one have anything to do with it because I want to hear about it.
And another group which is give me more.
And the early adopters, those people that are saying give me more, those are the people
who are thriving anyways.
Yes, yes.
And I'm seeing that, well, yes and no.
I see big producers that will say never.
that are very offended by it
and I see big producers that will say
this is save my life
right so it's
it's all over the board
and on the other hand
realtors
immediately take to it
because they don't find it as
because it helps them so much and it generates
business for them that
they're not afraid of it
they're not they don't find it as
competing against their skills
that's awesome and very fascinating very fascinating i mean adoption is something that you know in technology
is always a major hurdle yeah it's just it's just a hurdle yeah and that's why the the design
and the approach is to keep it as simple as possible is it should be the experience needs to feel like
and that's where the empathy comes in that you're chatting with your best friend
and so the whole empathy side of this is the responses and the training that we do is the it should feel comfortable it should feel like the way you and i feel
natural that we're chatting with each other right and and so the responses from angel should feel that way
and that's a constant work in progress and and it's very complicated to teach a computer to be empathetic
It's ongoing.
It is ongoing.
It gets better.
It gets more empathetic every day.
So the user interface is sometimes disturbingly simple.
Because we get loaned officers and people going, they're like, was that it?
What do I do?
It's just talk to it.
And it's the unpurposely designed to be, I want the interface to be have nothing on it,
to be as simple as possible.
I told the engineers, I don't want any buttons.
If you could do it with zero buttons,
do it.
You know,
you can't do zero buttons.
It's only got one button, right?
It's basically a send button.
Yeah.
It's got one send button.
So it's like it's kind of the...
Just like kind of the chat,
it's like chat,
it's on steroids or mortgage.
Kind of like that.
One way to say it that way.
But, you know,
one of the,
the people I,
I,
I get inspiration from is Apple.
And, you know, I think the whole idea of a phone,
when they came out with the iPhone with just a single button,
and keeping everything uncluttered, right?
When you first, if you were using a BlackBerry
and you got an Apple, you got an iPhone,
you're like, what the heck?
It's so confusing, right?
Yeah.
Because there's nothing there.
How does this work?
Right?
Where all the buttons, where's, you know,
where this was at, right? But then you realize that the beauty of it is that. The simplicity.
It's a simplicity. Yeah. When I switched from BlackBerry to Apple, I was like, I need the keyboard.
I need a keyboard. What do you mean? There's no keyboard. Exactly. No, the keyboard's there. You just
got to go. Like, no, I don't want that. Yeah. So it took me a while to adopt Apple because I was so used to that
keyboard. Then it totally died off. Yeah. Yeah. It dies off fast. Once you understand it, it dies off
fast.
Yeah.
And that's the same idea is there's no menus.
There's no, there's nothing.
You just say what's on your mind and you tell what's on your mind.
What do I want to do?
Right.
And it goes.
And then again, another company that we got inspiration from was Google.
And Google came out with, you know, and it was the late 90s or whatever with their web
browser, right?
And they broke the mold.
They did it completely different than Yahoo and the others, right?
Yahoo.
When you went to Yahoo, you had a million things on that page, right?
Yeah, and then a little search there.
Yeah, and then Google, when you want to Google, it's just search.
Simple.
Yeah.
And Google doodle and a little search.
Right.
And whatever you want are you type there.
And guess what?
Simplicity always wins.
I love that.
Now, I got a couple last questions for you, and then we'll adjourn, and these are all personal.
Sure.
So the first question is a three-prong question.
What's a personal goal that you have for yourself?
What's a business goal that you have?
have and most importantly above all what's a family goal that you have for this for for this year
and this is all for this year and the next year i think all three of them would boil down to the
same answer um which is i need to spend more time uh and you take away i need to take out
more time regularly like we described our my morning schedule what was missing in there was
you know 15 minutes of meditation
and I need to have that discipline
I was doing that for a while and it was like my whole life
was just everything was so much better
and somehow you know how it is you want to diet
and then you fall off the diet I got to get back on that
I got to get back on that diet of that 15 minutes of meditation
every morning
and and I think just by doing that
everything else falls in place
like my goals for the family
is
I just
if they can
continue
to
to follow their heart
and do what
they are doing
right
that's achieved
right
there's just like
you can't
you can't really
make a goal
for your family
because they're
their own people
right
so if I can keep
teaching them
what I know
and then
their own souls
have to
find their own
paths, right? So, and I feel like they're on their, on, on their personal path and they're doing
what they need to do. And, and that's a great, great thing. Where, where, where those paths take
them when, you know, that's not up to us. That's tough to God to figure out where that takes them.
And as far as goals for the business is, is, again, goes back to meditation and taking care of,
that means that means doing, making sure I make all the right decisions that,
offer and deliver the best possible solutions to my customers, whether it's my customers
on the AI side of the business or the mortgage side of the business, I want to make sure that
they always have a best in-class feeling. They always enjoy and value the service, right?
As long as that's the goal is taking care of my, taking care of my customers.
And in the mortgage business, as you know, there's multiple customers, there's your, he's a
consumer, right? There's your loan officer. There's your employees and there's your regulators.
A lot of people forget the regulator. Oh, they're my best friends. They're our customers. And finally,
of course, the biggest customer is the investor because they're buying the product that we produce.
We manufacture a product, which is a loan and then they buy it. And we actually look at our vendors
as our customers too. Our vendors, yes, absolutely. Yeah, because we have to build awesome relationships
with them.
So everyone,
you know,
another way to say
everyone around you
is your customer.
So delivered
the best
possible
highest level of service
and
at the highest level
integrity
to everyone around you.
And whatever happens
after that,
whether you make a buck,
lose a buck,
it's not in your hands.
That's in God's hands.
Yeah.
Let him figure out
what he will decide
what you've burned.
You know,
As long as we were of service at all times, like God figures it out for us.
Yes.
Every time.
Exactly.
Every time.
It's just guaranteed.
Yes.
My last question, it's my favorite question.
And you can answer it quickly or go into a deep discussion about it.
But when you're in front of the pearly gates, what do you think God's going to tell you?
Do?
I don't know.
I think I don't even.
even think I have to wait that long. I think God's talking to us all the time. I never thought about
that question ever in my life because there is, I think if you're tuned in and if you're paying
attention, that conversation is happening continuously. So just listen and stop and listen. And that's
what the point of meditation is. And you can call it meditation, you can call it prayer,
you call it, go to church or going to the mosque or whatever it is that you want to call it,
right, whatever ritual that is that you want to, you want to follow that ritual, right?
And you're having that conversation.
You just have to.
Tune in.
Yeah, why wait until you get to the pearly gates when you can have it, when you can have it today?
You know what?
You're the first person to describe it that way.
Yeah.
I want to ask that question.
And it really puts things in perspective because I'm always trying to, you know,
to have that conversation with God and I actually had a discussion with a mentor yesterday about
meditation and he's like you know he teaches people how to meditate he's like an expert meditator
and been doing it for years and very very successful guy hire CEOs for Fortune 500 companies
and and I don't necessarily meditate I pray I don't do it as much as I'd like to but
it is something that you know I have to learn more and and and to
tap into more because it's important.
And hearing you put that as one of your primary goals just puts it in perspective.
So hopefully people are listening right now.
This is the real deal.
This guy is the real deal, guys.
Listen to everything he said.
Re-listen to the podcast because Pavon is one of the most brilliant minds of our time in our
generation in this space.
And now in the AI space, now trailblazing the mortgage AI.
So Pavon, you've been an absolute wonderful guest.
I thank you so much for joining us today on Coffee's,
for closers. I thank you so much for everything that you're doing for the community at large
and having that collaborative mindset for the entire mortgage community. God bless you, your family,
your businesses, your ventures, everything that you're doing. I appreciate you. Thank you.
Bye on. Thank you, Joe. All right. Thanks everybody. Thanks for watching.
