KGCI: Real Estate on Air - Building A Real Estate Business By Driving Leads Using YouTube with Levi Lascsak
Episode Date: August 23, 2025Friday Focus is your weekly mini-series from KGCI Real Estate On Air—a deep dive into one theme, broken into tactical, easy-to-implement episodes. Every Friday and Saturday, we unpack the s...trategies, scripts, and systems agents use to win more business—without the fluff.Catch every episode in the series to get the full picture, and put these moves into play by Monday.SummaryThis episode features Levi Lascsak, a leading expert in real estate video marketing, who shares a powerful blueprint for building a business using YouTube. The discussion goes beyond basic video tips and reveals a proven framework for generating a consistent stream of passive, high-quality leads without cold calling or spending money on ads. It's an essential listen for any real estate agent looking to transform their lead generation strategy and create a predictable business.Key TakeawaysThe Power of Passive Prospecting: Discover why Levi's approach, which he calls "passive prospecting," is a game-changer. It focuses on creating evergreen content that attracts leads 24/7, allowing you to stop chasing clients and start having them come to you.Creating Compelling Content: Learn the types of videos that truly convert. The episode provides a blueprint for creating content that addresses common client questions and pain points, such as videos on specific neighborhoods, market trends, and home buying/selling processes.The Compound Effect of YouTube: Understand how a consistent YouTube strategy builds momentum over time. The discussion highlights that a channel's growth is often slow at first, but your videos gain authority and continue to attract leads for years to come.Leveraging AI to Supercharge Your Channel: Hear about specific AI tools that can help you with everything from generating video scripts and titles to optimizing for search and tracking analytics. The episode stresses that these tools are meant to enhance, not replace, the human element of your brand.Topics:YouTube real estateLevi LascsakPassive prospectingReal estate leadsVideo marketingCall-to-ActionListen to the full episode on your favorite podcast platform and start building a lead-generating machine with YouTube! Ready for more? Subscribe to KGCI Real Estate On Air and grab the Always Free Real Estate On Air Mobile App for iPhone and Android. Inside, you’ll find our complete archive, 24/7 stream, and every Friday Focus mini-series—ready when you are.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Built to close your week strong and start the next one smarter.
Here's what you is from this week's Friday Focus on KGCI, Real Estate on Air.
Welcome to the Real Estate Fight Club, a podcast for agents, where you'll witness a battle of opinions about topics affecting your real estate business.
There are many ways for agents to achieve success.
The secret is to find which approach will work for you.
Now, always in your career.
corner. Here are your hosts, Jen Mertland and Monica Weekly.
Welcome to another episode of Real Estate Fight Club. What's up, J. Murtt?
Monica, I am pumped for this one.
I know. Honestly, maybe some of the last, I don't know, 176 episodes we've done,
I bet our listeners are going to get a real shift in their thinking about YouTube and actually
some nuggets that they can put into play right now.
Because anybody can do this, right?
We're going to find out from our fabulous guest here today in a second.
So today, Jen and I have the honor of having Levi Lassick with us, the classic Lassick.
This is a real honor because his schedule is super tight.
And we're just glad you made time for us, Levi.
Thank you.
Welcome.
Thank you.
Thank you for having me.
Yeah, thanks, Levi.
So today you are like the YouTube master generating leads on YouTube and we are happy to hear
your top three tips for generating those leads.
But can you first, I want to just do a quick introduction.
You're at EXP Realty as a real estate agent.
Your team is called the Living in Dallas, Texas team.
Can you give us a broad overview of like your business as it relates to generating leads on
YouTube and then can we go into some of the tips?
Of course.
Absolutely. So we released the first YouTube video on December 5th of 2020, which is basically
whenever I started. Yeah, whenever I started our real estate career. So Travis, my business partner,
also got licensed in December of 2020. And you guys are baby realtors. Yeah, we are. We just hit
our two-year anniversary. So the anniversary. I didn't know that. That makes this whole thing
even more like attainable for people. Yes. I love this. Okay, good. Yep.
So, and here's the stats.
Of course, starting in December of 2020, we sold zero homes in 2020.
We sold zero homes in Q1 of 2021.
And so it took us 90 days to get the first deal under contract from YouTube,
and we ended up closing the first two transactions in April of 2021.
Now, the last nine months of 2021, we closed 64 transactions,
33 and a half million in volume, and hit right at a million.
and $6,000 in commissions.
Now, now look at 2022.
It's been a complete snowball.
So 2022 is our second full year in real estate.
And we are projecting right now with everything in place because this is December of 2022.
We will close right at 99.1 million in volume 188 transactions just at 2.8 million in GCL.
I mean, who doesn't want to go from like two or zero transactions to almost 200?
In two years. Hey, wait, though, Jen, if somebody is right now listening, I'm like,
I am not interested in doing 60 deals. I'm not referring out or guess what? You might not have to work
as hard as they do and you could make do 20 deals. It's fine. Well, you know, that was actually
my goal. I mean, I thought if I could just refer out two to four deals per month and at a 50%
referral, because I figured, well, if I give somebody volume or more than one deal in a month,
I could probably get a 50-50 split because I didn't initially, yeah,
your team, Martland, Levi.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So that was just kind of like the goal.
I was like, look, I was just here to kind of make a steady, Eddie living.
I thought I didn't want a cold call in Doork and try to brand myself through postcards
and magazine ads.
And so I just thought, let me, I can make some videos.
I can talk about Dallas.
Let me try that out.
I'll refer business to a couple of agents.
And it was really, whenever the first client started coming in, that's whenever I really
met Travis and we started work together. And it was really Travis's ambition to really go hard,
big and fast. And so he was like, look, he goes, I want to sell 100 homes in a year. And I was,
I was like, man, 24 or 36 would be cool for me. And I was just, okay, well, we'll see. And so because
he wanted to do more, I just, it allowed me to start producing more content. And that's what just
started generating more business. Because he literally said, look, let me handle the transactions.
if you want to keep doing videos because he didn't want to do videos,
then I was like, okay, sounds like a cool deal.
And that's what we started doing.
And then it just started growing and growing and growing.
And it got to the point to where within our first year,
we had to bring on a buyer's agent because once Travis hit like 10 to 12 transactions
in one month himself, he was like, dude, I can't handle anymore.
Right.
So you have to make that decision.
If you start to grow, what do you want to do?
Do you want to refer it out?
Do you want to bring on a buyer's agent?
Do you want to start a team?
I never started with those.
ambitions, but we did not want to leave any money on the table. And so for us, it was like,
well, we're going to start a team. Now, we didn't expect to have a big team, just started with
one buyer's agent. Then we had to bring on a second one because that one started getting busy.
And then by January of 2022, we had 10 agents on the team. And then that's what we closed.
Yeah, we just started. I mean, we were doing a deal a day in the first quarter. And so if we hadn't
had those 10 people in place, we would have left so much business on the table. And I
I'm very happy because I've gotten a referral fee on every single one of those transactions,
but I've actually never opened one of those doors.
Can I ask you, Levi, were you comfortable in front of video from the get-go?
What was your positioning with the video?
So I've been in sales for 20 years, but belly-to-belly face-to-face.
So I've never had a problem selling.
I think I was not afraid of the camera.
I think what I had to get used to was selling to a camera or speaking to a camera or having
a conversation, I was used to interacting with people, kind of touching and feeling without
touching and feeling, right? Not being. Don't be creepy. Yeah, yeah. Yeah, yeah. Don't, yeah.
Don't drip on them. Yeah, yeah, yeah. So it was, you know, people interrupt you. They ask questions.
They have concerns. They have objections. Body language. Yeah, body, all this stuff you can read and
adapt and adjust. And it's fun. It's interactive. And I always love that. But also what I realized
it was every day I went home, I had to start over the next day. Because,
my conversations lived and died with that one person.
And so it was never scalable for me as an individual.
So as I made that move into real estate, that was the one thing I told myself.
I said, okay, first of all, I don't want to get in that one-to-one scenario anymore.
Well, that's like how you get on the roller coaster and it's like up, down, up, down, and it's like nauseating, right?
When you have that one-to-one stuff.
Yeah.
Okay.
This is great.
Are you listening, people?
Can we pause here and make sure they know where to go to check out what we're talking about here?
Because what's interesting Levi is that you didn't do the Levi LASIC YouTube channel,
realtor Levi channel.
You didn't do that, right?
And talk a little bit about the name of the channel and why you chose that and why that was a smart move
and why agents should mimic that.
Well, instead of getting into real estate and then trying to figure out a plan,
I decided to figure out a plan and then I felt comfortable getting into real estate.
So the thing was is I did research over the summer of 2020.
So actually previously, I had a financial services business where I worked with all the teachers
at Dallas ISD on their retirement planning.
Well, all the schools shut down in April of 2020.
And my business literally shut down overnight.
And so over the summer of 2020, I thought, how do I pivot?
How do I transition?
I didn't see, I didn't know when schools were going to open back up.
I didn't know when the world was going to open back up.
But I started to see real estate start to grow.
That was like the only industry other than on.
online shopping for toilet paper that was growing. So, you know, hashtag essential. Yeah. And actually,
you know, the funny thing is, is I've known Michael Reese for 20 years. And Michael Reese has been
trying to get me into real estate for 20 years. I just never wanted to be a real estate agent.
So over the summer 2020, I just did some research. And I knew if I wanted to gain any reach
quickly with the least amount of money, it would be through social media. But I didn't really like
social media. You know, I'm at that 40-year-old age range and above where we have that love-hate
relationship. We didn't grow up with it. It wasn't there in high school or college. And then,
you know, we thought it's just people posting their lunch and stupid cat videos. So I was kind of like,
when I dug into YouTube, which that was my last choice, I started to research and I figured
out YouTube's a search engine. Okay. And so therefore, you can figure out, you can actually
go into Google and YouTube and figure out what people are searching for on those platforms. And
people are searching for information about homes. And those are intentional buyers and sellers.
they're in the process.
They're trying to make buying and selling decisions at that moment.
And so plus, I knew they were looking for information on Dallas.
I didn't know anything about being an agent, but I've known everything about Dallas.
So I thought, well, if I can make content about Dallas and just educate them on the areas and the neighborhoods and suburbs,
maybe I can attract people and they'll never know that I'm a brand new agent because they'll think I'm so experienced in the area.
It'll just look like, you know, I'm not talking about.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And so that's how that kind of came up.
And so naming the channel, what I realized was that I was nobody.
I had no brand, no reach.
Nobody knew who I was.
If you did the search volume then for Levi Lassick, zero.
So I thought, okay, well, why not name it a search term?
Because then I could give my channel more exposure.
And so I just started playing around with things about Dallas, Texas, moving to Dallas, Texas, relocating to Dallas, Dallas, Texas living, living in Dallas, Texas.
Living in Dallas, Texas actually came up with the highest search results.
So it's kind of like, okay, well, I'll name is that.
That was it.
Boom.
That's it.
Because to your point, nobody was coming to look for you.
Right.
Exactly.
Yeah.
So you've built this whole channel on the idea of just providing information about Dallas
and then, of course, real estate as you got more into it.
And nowhere when you go to it, does it say your name?
Is that right?
Or at least not obviously, correct?
Not obviously right.
I mean, I introduce myself in the video, but I still don't start out saying, hey, I'm a real estate agent.
Actually, I never really say I'm a real estate agent. I just say, if you're thinking about making a move, give me a call, shoot me, text, send me an email.
And so that, I think, real estate agent, my disclaimers, my I ABS, all that's in the description of the video.
So, you know, and what's interesting is my IABS form, I track those clicks. It's got thousands of clicks.
So people are going in the description of my YouTube videos and clicking on that IABS form to make sure,
I'm a real person, a real agent.
What's that stand for?
Information about brokerage services, at least in, yeah, in Texas.
Like the compliance aspect.
Yeah.
Yeah, you're supposed, and you have to post that in the consumer protection notice, you know,
basically on your marketing or emails.
You're supposed to provide that at your first interaction or communication with a client.
So for me, if I'm marketing myself in a way, I just posted it in there.
There's not really any real regulations about that for social media,
but I have it in there just,
yeah.
I think, yeah, it's like, well, I think, go ahead, Monica.
And then when we come back, Levi, do have time to talk about maybe the first five
playlist ones should put together or the first 10 videos or how to get started here.
That's probably part of his tips.
Well, yeah, I'm here for y'all.
So, actually, tips yet.
I forgot.
Let's take a break.
We're going to get to the tips.
Yes.
Levi Lassick, he is the king of YouTube and has really in an organic,
and authentic way,
created a path for all of us
to earn business through YouTube.
So Jen,
but it's purposeful.
What's that?
Get us back on track here.
Yeah, right.
But I think also, Levi,
what I'm hearing from you,
it is authentic, like Monica's saying,
but it is also very purposeful.
Like, you are running this.
You created the business first,
and you're running it strategically.
So give us some tips on as real estate agents.
Maybe we have a YouTube channel,
but maybe have a ton of subscribers.
but how do we get leads from that? What do we do? Yeah, you have to be extremely intentional and
strategic. I love to say you can hyperlearn any subject in 60 days because of the amount of
information out there and the age you live in right now. So, I mean, if you want to be the best
postcard marketer on the planet, if you actually studied postcard marketing for the next 60 days,
you could do that and probably be better than 99% of the agents. So same with YouTube.
I mean, the information is out there. There's YouTube marketing books.
Now, I bought them all. I bought like eight or nine of them. I narrowed it down to two,
which was YouTube Secrets and YouTube Formula. Those are the two books other than our own
that is coming out in February. We do have a book. Yeah, passive prospecting, which we have
coming out in February, which that is- So just get that, right? Because that'll pull from everything.
Well, it's really going to help you break down, yes. Well, in the first nine chapters, I break down
the principles of why YouTube is so important and why it's so powerful over every other platform.
I believe just in marketing in general. I'm not saying that don't do anything else. I'm just saying
that if you're going to be in business more than a year or longer, you need to incorporate YouTube.
And this is not just for real estate agents. It's for any business owner. So the first nine
chapters are the principles. We compare a lot of traditional marketing versus marketing on YouTube
and why it's so powerful. Then the last five chapters of the book, I'm actually breaking down
the whole process for you to start your own channel, build it out how to research, you know,
how to create content, how to shoot videos.
I mean, I explain that as in depth as much as possible in the book with pictures,
snapshots from our channel, from the back-in analytics, all of that so they can get the
best visual possible.
I mean, that right there, I imagine the book's probably going to be, let's say, 20, 25 bucks.
I mean, for that amount of value in that book is priceless for that.
So the thing is, is that if you don't do that, and you want to start right now, you don't
want to wait until February, go out and you've got to do some research, first of all.
You have to, what I like to say is that if YouTube like a hobby, it'll pay you like a hobby.
If you treat it like a business, it'll pay you like a business.
So most people get on these social platforms and don't understand them.
They just get started, which there's something about that.
I mean, I admire that.
I feel personally attacked, Levi.
Yes.
We'll argue with you.
Well, look, hey, I admire anybody that takes action.
But I also recommend just taking a step back first and understanding, researching,
getting a good, not analysis paralysis, don't do that, but get in a research, have a deadline to where,
okay, I'm going to study this for the next 30, 60 days. And while I'm studying that, I'm going to build
out a business plan. Actually treat a social platform, whichever one you want to get started on,
as a marketing opportunity, as a marketing platform, and understanding how it works,
first and foremost. Then once you build out your plan, you're going to understand through
your research, what videos to shoot, when you should shoot them, how consistent should you be,
many times per week do you want to publish? So all of that should be laid out before you
ever hit record because you don't want to record one video and then you'll lost after that.
Or you get so excited and you publish it and then guess what happens? Life happens, health
happens, real estate happens, family happens, and then nothing happens. And you don't post anything
the next four or five weeks and that will create a channel quickly anything. So research,
plan, film. And then once you film, I always recommend people film at least a month's worth in advance.
So if you're going to publish three videos a week, film 12 videos first.
Have them done, edited, scheduled because when you publish the first video, you're already
a month ahead.
Right.
And it gives you that entire month to film your next month's worth of content.
And so by the time that month, full month publishes, you have another month scheduled out.
And guess what that allows you to do to start working on your next month.
So if you can do that and then if something happens, life, health, or maybe you
take a vacation. Then you're
still ahead three weeks
instead of trying to just publish
something every single week and always feeling
behind. And then you can get back
on track. But this is why
this last year in 2022,
we went to 25 conferences.
And we spoke.
Yeah, we spoke half of them. The other
half, we were there just to
meet people and build relationships
and network and learn.
And so we were
able to do right under 100 million in business and still being gone to 25 conferences.
In addition to that. And so we didn't have to be in our business every single day because the
videos were constantly working for us. And that's the whole concept of passive prospecting.
Most people that get in trouble with their families or especially when they're on vacation or don't,
you know, the spouse is always like, you don't take any time off. It's usually because they feel
guilty about, you know, not generating leads and not, you know, being in their business.
But when you have a channel working for you constantly and not just 24-7, YouTube doesn't take time.
YouTube makes time. Not only does it make you time, it compounds your time.
And the thing is like in one month, our channel has watched 11,800 hours in one month.
That's awesome. Yeah, you divide that by 24 hours in a day. That's 1.34 years. So in one month,
our channel prospected for us 1.3,4 years.
Wow.
And so, yeah, that's why we're able to do the amount of business we're doing is because
it's not just us shaking hands and kissing babies.
It's not just us making phone calls for two hours a day.
It is getting a multiple compound of our time because the videos can be viewed by
100, 1,000, 10,000 people at one time.
I don't care if you had a team of 20 inside sales reps.
You would never be able to make the amount of phone calls still.
because those salespeople can only call one person at one time.
And so the videos are just-
Well, they may not even be calling the people that are, I mean,
I make a ton of phone calls every day,
but the real, there's only a few leads out of that, right?
So where this is like it's the right people coming to your channel.
Inbound.
Yeah, it's all inbound.
Well, Levi, do you, I know the book's coming out,
but if people want to engage with you before that,
how can they engage with you?
Yes.
Passiveprospecting.com.
is our website. You can sign up to be notified as soon as we release the book. And we'll be
for the people that do sign up, we'll be running some very specific contest, a lot of good
stuff. I plan to give away a lot. Tons of camera equipment, microphones, all kinds of stuff.
Just so we can, we really want to push out the sales on that within the first week and see if
we can hit a bestseller list, you know? That's awesome. Yeah. Would you, we're going to buy a handful of
books so we can give them to our listeners. Will you come back to promote it when, when you're
when you're launched.
Of course.
I'd settle down a little bit after the launch for it.
Yeah, of course.
And if people do have a referral for you in Dallas,
do they go to that same place or is there a different place?
They should connect with you for that.
They can email info at living in Dallas TX.com.
And, you know, our team will pick it up and be happy to help out.
So info at living in Dallas.t.x.com.
This looks like so much nuggets.
So many good nuggets here.
I wish I had thought of this 20 years.
I get, well, it wasn't. Well, now you know, Monica. I should start it right now. I'm going to do it.
I absolutely love it. Real quick, did you say what your cadence is every 30 days, 12 videos? Is that what
you said? Or did I make that up? Well, I was using that as an example, but I do three videos a week.
And so we've been pretty consistent on that. Some people do two. Some people do one. Some do one
every other month. I mean, you ultimately, you want to have some consistency in the beginning.
I think quantity and consistency in the beginning is very good. Your quality is usually not going
to be great in the beginning. Nobody really usually comes out. Not because I'm not saying you can't,
but they usually don't come out making awesome videos, great quality, audio, you know, you kind of
figure that stuff out. So just get through that. The more you do it in the beginning, the more of a muscle
memory you're going to develop, and so it's going to be a lot easier. So I always recommend at least
three videos a week for as long as possible until you really find your groove and get comfortable.
And then that's whenever you start getting really creative and thinking about how to improve.
And ultimately, the ultimate goal you should have with YouTube is to get better, you know,
just get better every video. Is there a category of video that is watched more than others?
Because I know you do different playlists. Well, we do all kinds, but there's four main times.
I mean, the vlog video actually taking people out in the neighborhoods and showing them around
because anybody can go on an eye buyer platform and look at the inside and the outside of a house,
but they can't see the house across the street, the house next door, the pool down the street,
the community center, you know, the Chipotle around the corner, all the important stuff.
So, yeah.
So that map tours, I was very surprised by doing map tours.
What I mean by is just simply getting on a screen share and walking people around a map of your
suburb or your city or the neighborhood.
And anybody can do that online themselves too, but they can't get your stories and your perspective.
And so that's what people love about that. And then also, yeah, pros and cons, our number one
video on our channel is we can't stand Dallas. So we're talking into people and moving to Dallas
by telling them how much we don't like it. You know?
That's awesome. Unfortunately, unfortunately right now, a lot of negativity on YouTube gets a lot of views.
You know, on YouTube, you see every thumbnail has fire and, and everything burning and crashing.
And you're like, but home prices still increased this last part.
Appreciation and value still increased this last month, but everyone keeps saying that.
So it is what it is.
But I tend to stick on the positive side.
I've made like three negative videos, which is, and I can't stand Dallas.
That was really, we were talking about the cons of Dallas.
But of course, we were like, well, look, you know, we've been.
our whole lives. Clearly, it's not terrible enough for us to make us move away. Any area is going to do
that. So, you know, in that list videos, top five suburbs, top six neighborhoods, top seven this,
top eight that. People like list videos. And we don't say, we always reference a website or something
where we find that ranking. So it's not us. We don't want to get in any trouble with that's a good
idea. Yeah. Their housing or something. So we say, hey, recent article came out from Money Magazine or
niche.com or something. They're listing these as the top six neighborhoods in Dallas, Texas right now.
Yeah. Let's see what you think or whatever. Yeah. Let us know what you think. Or then at the end,
I'll say, well, in my opinion, yeah, mostly accurate. All these neighborhoods are really good,
blah, blah, blah, blah. Give a little opinion piece at the end of so, but you don't want to steer
anything like that. So the main thing is that anytime we reference that top this or best of this
or something, you put a little disclaimer on there.
Love it.
That makes sense.
Levi Lasic.
I love this so much, Levi.
You are helping people show them a different way to lead generate.
And this is what Jen and I fight about every freaking week.
Well, and both of us are pro passive income.
So be sure to check out the passive prospecting book, the passive prospecting website.
And if you're an agent and you want to find out how to partner with Monica and I so
it can help you grow your business, feel free to reach out by calling or texting.
at 513, 400, 1691. Levi, thank you so much. It was awesome. Thank you. Have a great day.
Bye. See you. See you next time, Jen. Bye. Thanks for listening to this episode of the Real Estate Fight Club
podcast. Make sure to hit the subscribe button so you get updates when new episodes are available.
And we truly love feedback and would appreciate all likes, reviews, and suggestions for future topics.
Thank you.
