Wake Up to Wealth - From Scarcity to Success- Jeff Crisalli on Wealth, Leadership, and the Entrepreneurial Mindset

Episode Date: March 27, 2026

In episode 59 of Wake Up to Wealth, Brandon Brittingham interviews Jeff Crisalli, Vice President of eXp Realty, as he shares his transformation from solo entrepreneur—starting and scaling a construc...tion company—to an executive guiding major divisions at one of the largest, fastest-growing real estate brokerages in the country.  Tune in for this high-impact conversation designed to sharpen your vision, fuel execution, and help you take bold action—whether you’re leading a team, scaling a business, or building your personal empire.   SOCIAL MEDIA LINKS Brandon Brittingham Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mailboxmoneyb/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/brandon.brittingham.1/   Jeff Crisalli Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jcrisalli/ LinkedIn: http://linkedin.com/in/jeff-crisalli-09202017/   WEBSITES Brandon Brittingham: https://www.brandonsbrain.org/home eXp Realty: https://www.exprealty.com/ ========================== SUPPORT OUR SPONSORS: Rocketly: https://rocketly.ai/ Accruity: https://accruity.com/

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Starting point is 00:00:00 This is Wake Up to Wealth, a podcast dedicated to helping you change the way you think about wealth. And now, here's your host, Brandon Brittingham. Hey, everybody, this next segment is brought to you by my good friends at Accruity. Now, if you run a business, most business owners neglect their back office, and they don't even know where to go or who to trust when it comes to their financials or CPA or taxes. That's where Accruity comes in. You can trust them. They can give you advice and they understand the back office. Listen, you're not running a business correctly if you don't have a hold of this and it's really hard to trust people that are out there. And most CPAs frankly work for the IRS and don't work for you. That's not the case with accruity. Check my good friends out at accruity for any needs that you have when it comes to helping with your back office, getting your book straight, getting your taxes correct. And they guide you and give you advice, which most firms don't. So check out my guys at a crudy, tell them I sent you.
Starting point is 00:01:10 Hey, what's up, everybody? We are back with another episode of Wake Up to Wealth. And thank you guys again so much. I know open the show every time for you guys liking, subscribing, downloading the show. As of yesterday, we are number four in the United States in investing. You know, Prof.G, Dave Ramsey, and Bloomberg are the three. ahead of us, which is remarkable to say the least that you guys have supported the show to make us one of the biggest in the United States without a huge budget, without a huge studio behind us, without any famous people behind us. So it's just been us coming, putting out good content, you guys supporting it.
Starting point is 00:01:56 So I can't thank you enough. Continue to support us. If you like the show, leave us a good review, like and subscribe, tell your friends about it. because I want to keep it the way that it is where, you know, we're not going to a big studio. We've been approached by big studios, but I don't want to give up control. And I want to keep coming on here, giving you guys good information, bringing on cool people, and sharing information for you guys to wake up to wealth. So again, thank you guys so much.
Starting point is 00:02:26 I'm honored and humbled that you guys have supported us. We're north of 120,000 downloads per episode. and that could not be without the support of all of you guys. So thank you so much. And again today, we've got another friend of mine, another entrepreneur, good guy, worked together at EXP and do a whole bunch of cool shit at EXP. And he's got pretty colored background of being an entrepreneur. And that's my good friend, Jeff.
Starting point is 00:03:01 Hi, Chris. So, hey, Jeff, I appreciate you being on here with us today. And you're a VP at EXP for my listeners. I know that you do a lot of things and you wear a lot of hats. Tell us kind of what do you do day to day. Yeah. You know, Brandon, thank you so much, you know, for coming on here. I do consider you a friend as well as a colleague.
Starting point is 00:03:22 And, you know, we've got a, we've secured a really nice relationship over the last couple of months. And, you know, so I thank you for, you know, not only you are, you know, your business acumen, but being able to call you a friend. And I appreciate today's opportunity, right? This is a great opportunity for me personally and for EXP, you know, our brokerage, our brand. So as a vice president of EXP, I get to run the business of EXP, everything outside of
Starting point is 00:03:51 core realty, right? So I work a few different things. Number one is I oversee a few of our joint venture partnership. So we have a joint venture with a mortgage company, success lending. we have a JV with a healthcare company called Clearwater. So I oversee our joint venture relationships. Secondarily, we have a division inside EXP called Revenos. Revenos is a lead aggregator.
Starting point is 00:04:16 So we've got relationships through all different types of companies, affinity companies, relocation companies, and specifically, I run investment services, which caters to the Wall Street, right, caters to the large institutional homeowners, 10, 20, 80,000 homes. I oversee that division as well as the REO division. So what happens in the investment services is we handle on a national level and not to the agent. There's a corporate layer in there where we support acquisitions, dispositions, and just this year, until end of last year, we are now playing a large role in the BTR.
Starting point is 00:04:59 the build to rent space where these large developers are coming in, you know, exactly that. They're building homes to rent. And we are sitting EXP agents and teams inside those communities to act as the on-site leasing agent. Right. So as a caveat, what that does for these institutions is it lowers their cost because they have no SG&A, right? They don't have the employee factor anymore.
Starting point is 00:05:24 And that, no, agents are entrepreneurial and they're incentivized to close leases for them. I'm going to go on, Brandon, so I apologize. Yeah, go ahead. Vision and EXP called the EXP Solutions. And what that is, is we strike national deals with providers of services to our real estate agent base. So think of build a sign. Think of, you know, different companies like that. So I'm part of the team that will manage those current relationships, help, you know, help speak about. those on stage and promote those opportunities.
Starting point is 00:06:03 And then I also figure out, like, if a solution fits well in the EXP ecosystem. So that's kind of brand in my day to day. So, EXP obviously is a big company and you're in a very prominent position. So kind of take us before this, like, what did you do to get to this point, right? Because you didn't wake up one day and become a VP. No, I tell you, I scratched and I clawed and I, and, you know, I had street fights and Wall Street conversations. So, you know, I've always been an entrepreneur.
Starting point is 00:06:38 You know, I say that I've never had a real job, you know, up until I started to work, you know, for corporate America. But, you know, way back when I started a construction company and I can't hammer two boards together. But what I could do is coordinate and I can drive sales and I can create relationships where people trusted me to bring the right resources in to build a deck or build a house. And, you know, what happened was I scaled that to doing national rollouts for retailers. Like, I did store revamps for Old Navy, friendlies. And when I tell you, again, I had no experience
Starting point is 00:07:16 in the construction business, but I knew a lot of people in that industry. And I said, wow, I think I could do this, right? And I did that. And it was great. My entreat's a really estate was, again, being in the construction business, I was working with flippers and I was working with, you know, new home builders. And I said, ah, might as well get this real estate license. So I got that. And being an entrepreneurial, I didn't go work for a brokerage. Not only because I didn't want to work for someone, but I didn't, I kind of didn't know what the brokerage world was. I really didn't know the ins and outs of what real estate agents do. So I said to my attorney, hey, I want to start my own brokerage. And he's like, well, you're in New Jersey. You can't.
Starting point is 00:07:57 You got to be licensed for three years. You got to be a broker. You know, blah, blah, blah. I said, well, tell me about this broker of record thing. So I said, well, can I hire one? And he's like, well, I guess so. Nobody ever asked me that before. So I said, okay, I'm going to hire one.
Starting point is 00:08:11 So I went out. I found a broker. I made her the broker of record for my real estate company. And I owned a real estate agency, right? You know, it's things like that. And concurrently, I had a construction management firm where I started to develop. up. I was the sweat equity partner, not the money partner at the time. And I was building commercial shopping centers. So I developed three shopping centers. And then I actually got the tenant fit out. And then I did
Starting point is 00:08:38 the lease up for those. And then I did the property management for those. So, you know, Brandon, I think having an entrepreneurial mindset, if you said to me tomorrow, Jeff, we're going to start an airline, all right, we'll get some pilots. We get some planes. We'll lease some hangar space. So that mindset, Brandon, I think you can do anything in business if you've got to grit the determination and that entrepreneurial spirit. So what do you think is kind of one of the biggest lessons, you know, going going through all that to then where you are today, you know, managing, I mean, you're talking tens of millions of dollars in revenue and people and I mean, it's a tall, tall order you're ever seeing. You know, how did, like, what do you think is kind of, I'm sure a ton of lessons,
Starting point is 00:09:30 but like, what do you think is one of your, your biggest lessons you've learned kind of through this journey as an entrepreneur? You know, I'll tell you, that's a great question because as an entrepreneur, and one of the things I didn't like about being kind of a solo entrepreneur was, I had nobody to bounce ideas off of, right? I look in the mirror. Jeff, what do you think of this idea, right? And I had no other feedback. I only had my own experience. I only had my own research. One of the things that I pride myself on is I love to learn and I love to think. And by learning, I don't just mean research. I don't just mean, you know, the large language models. I don't just mean Google. What I mean is learning from people. So I, you know, I manage a lot of people and I deal with a lot
Starting point is 00:10:15 of people at my level and above. And one of the things I do is I listen a lot, right? Then I form my opinion and I'm not afraid to ask questions, right? So before I make any big decision, right, I work it out in my brain, but then I'll ask for the input, not even of people that are direct stakeholders in that decision, but other people, right? Because everybody comes to the table with a different perspective, with a different experience, right? So seek the knowledge of others, trust your gut, right? Trust yourself, but then seek the knowledge of others and think. Don't react and think through the issue.
Starting point is 00:10:54 And normally, listen, we all make mistakes, right? I make mistakes every day. But, you know, you'll normally end up in a place where you, even if you're half right, you'll make that decision right. What do you think is, and this is a loaded question, what do you think is, you know, one of the biggest mistakes you've made in kind of your journey and your entrepreneur journey. You know, Brandon, I think I was very reactive in my entrepreneurial journey, right?
Starting point is 00:11:22 I reacted first and I thought second. So as I've matured as a person. As do most entrepreneurs. Right. So again, you know, as I've matured as a person and as a businessman and as a business leader, I've learned patience, right? So that's really a huge lesson. And the other thing I think I've, and I'm still learning every day,
Starting point is 00:11:48 is that emotional intelligence, right? Because as entrepreneurs, right, we are, listen, if you can't do this, get out of my way and I'll do it myself, right? And that's part of the emotional intelligence of being able to connect with people and see things from their perspective as opposed to my result. Because everybody's got a different journey to get to the result. right. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:12:10 No, I love that. So you being obviously, you're an entrepreneur, right? So you have a view that's different where you're coming into a big company where your life was not just being an employee, right? So you come in, you're now responsible for, I don't know, a lot of people, right? You know, you're responsible for a lot of money. You're responsible for a lot of decisions. So you now have an inside look of how a big company like EXP works, right?
Starting point is 00:12:43 So it doesn't just happen by luck, right? To get as big as EXP is to recruit the talent that they're recruiting, you know, all the things we know. What have you kind of, what have you learned being at a company like this that you're like, oh my gosh, like, you know, this is part of the magic. This is why it works. Like what have you seen that you've learned being in your seat? and having this purview that's different now, you know, being at EXP. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:13:11 You know, working for big companies, it's all about the C-suite and the level below the C-suite. They set the tone, right? You know, our CEO, Leo Pereja, Glenn Sanford, our founder. Both have been on the podcast, by the way. Great, yeah. So, you know, and my boss, right? The person that I report to gives me the runway and the leeway because he has trusted in my decision making to make those entrepreneurial decisions and to see them through. But, you know, Glenn, Leo, and I report to a gentleman by the name of Kyle Kittleson, they all are about empowering the people that work for them to make the decision, right, and to see that decision through.
Starting point is 00:13:59 There's no, I am not micromanaged at all. So I think that it's about getting the right people in the right seats and empowering them to make decisions. Because if I had to go to, you know, Kyle and he had to go to Leo or there was, you know, if I was lower on the totem pole and there were four levels that had to get approvals, like that is is a cog in the wheel. It is a clogged pipe, right? So, you know, giving the people that, you know, that are key leaders, the ability to make decisions and see them through and trust those decisions, I think that's what certainly has propelled me in my career, but what kind of sets EXP apart from not only other brokerages, but from other companies of our size. Yeah. What else do you think it, you know, so just my two cents on this, And you certainly can, I want your opinion, you know, for a company the size EXP is, which I'm just a believer in this, is idea to implementation is where you're going to live or die. You know, taking in a way that once a decision is made, you know, people got to be involved,
Starting point is 00:15:21 legal, that kind of stuff because we're publicly traded company. But I've seen, at least in my purview, idea to implementation is fast. right? What would you say? Yeah, you know, I would say, Brandon, there's different circumstances, right? When we're making decisions that impact, you know, 78,000 agents throughout the entire United States, right? And we're making decisions as a publicly traded entity, right? And we've got a matrix that before we make those what I'll call global decisions, you know, there's legal compliance, right? There's SEC compliance. Sure. There is RESPA compliance, right? So,
Starting point is 00:16:06 so those things, I will tell you that they're made quickly only because those stakeholders that are in that decision are of the same mindset, right? Yep. This is the thing. We've got to get it here. And if I'm in the middle, I got to look at it, analyze it, and pass it to the next person, right? So what I will say is it's the process is speedy. but there's a process, right? Sure, of course. That's how I'll categorize that. Yeah, it's operational efficiency.
Starting point is 00:16:38 We make a decision fast, but we've got an operational efficiency behind it to get it implemented so that we check all the boxes and shit gets done. That's right. Yeah, for sure. Another question I'll ask you,
Starting point is 00:16:50 just because I just see this myself, is, you know, I coach a lot of the top agents in the United States, done business with them, lot of the top investors, agents, entrepreneurs, you name it. And a lot of them, I can say they have two to three of the same traits. So you have the experience now at EXP for talking to different agents, team owners. Like, what do you think if there was one or two traits that you've said,
Starting point is 00:17:22 I see this repeatedly and these people that I deal with and interact with at EXP? What do you think that is. Probably reacting to the word no, right? Because you can react to the word no negatively or you can react to the word no. So, okay, if I can't do it this way, let me see if I could do it this way. And if I can't do it that way, if I got another no, then I'm going to do it this way, right? So I think reacting to the word no is what I see in entrepreneurs in EXP specifically. And I also think plugging in and understanding the resources that you have being part of EXP, right?
Starting point is 00:18:08 We're not just any other brokerage, right? We are a platform to give real estate teams and agents the tools to build wealth, right? I mean, that's just what we are, right? We're not a brokerage, you know, for all intents and purposes. That's how I see it. Got it. So I like the no answer. Taking EXP aside, right?
Starting point is 00:18:35 Because not everybody started here. Right? A lot of people that that you interact with came from somewhere else. What's another trait you see that how everyone is kind of similar? And I'm talking top of the food chain, the best agents and the best teams you deal with. What is another trait you see that's a similarity between all of them? A sense of community. right we're a virtual brokerage but we have like quarterly mastermind sessions where those top people and you know brandy you've been out you're at every one of them so am i right so it's the collaboration it's getting in the room with the people that are excelling at your level or above it's listening to the leaders that are given the ability to speak to that audience right so it's leaning into the ideas being open and everyone in that room is to say wow you know
Starting point is 00:19:27 maybe there's a different way to do two plus two, right? So I think the collaboration in the room with the like individuals is huge. So yeah, I would wholeheartedly, you know, agree with you that getting in the right room, compressing time, getting around the right folks is one thing that no matter what brand you're at or where you're at of something that will make you really successful. So I couldn't agree with you more than that. Two more questions before. before we wrap. Yeah. You know, you've seen a lot of different sides of the business, right?
Starting point is 00:20:04 Investing, construction, commercial, you know, being on the corporate side now, you know, overseeing a lot of people. Like, give our listeners just, you know, some words of wisdom of, they want to build that empire. If they want to get to a level that me and you are at, like, just give them some advice of what you think, how they should get there. Wow. You know, I could use that advice, right? What I would say is, you know, be deliberate in your actions, right? Try to try to do activities that make you money or refine your systems. Don't waste time. And I don't mean don't take a day off or don't take a vacation. What I mean is when you're in work mode, be very very. very deliberate with your actions.
Starting point is 00:21:03 I love that. Oh, you know what? I can't, we can't, I can't let you leave without talking about this. Because I'm a big believer in this. And I'm a big believer in health as wealth. Everybody that knows me, knows me well of the autoimmune journey I had to go through. And the health shit that I've had to go through, you've lost how much? How much weight have you lost?
Starting point is 00:21:28 I've lost 53 pounds this shit. year. Holy shit, dude. And number one, congratulations. You look great. Thank you. But number two, how did you do? How did you, like somebody hears that?
Starting point is 00:21:41 And it's like, I know you didn't smoke crack. So how did you do it? You know, Brandon? I didn't even put two and two together. I was deliberate in my weight loss journey, right? I, listen, I'm Italian. Every, every meal was a celebration to me. And I changed my relationship.
Starting point is 00:22:00 my relationship food. So it wasn't just about, you know, being on a diet. I changed my lifestyle, right? So at the start of it, before I even started to work out, I said, I got to change food. I was a nighttime snacker. I'm a salt guy, not a sweet guy, right? So it was overindulging at every meal, eating the wrong foods. The weight loss journey is more about what you put in your mouth and how many times you go to the gym or walk, right? So I was really strict at the beginning of the journey. Then I started to add in walking, right? I would walk. I started two miles, right? Then I went three miles. Now, when I go for a walk, I'll put my AirPods in. I'll take my phone calls. But yesterday, I did, it was beautiful here. I live in New Jersey. It was beautiful. I did four
Starting point is 00:22:48 miles, 4.1 miles. The day before, again, it was, you know, it was four miles. I am now at the gym doing weight training at least three days a week. So today I was at the gym early morning. I'll work hard today. End of the day. It's beautiful. I'll walk again probably three miles today, right? So I, you know, I am now, you know, I've reversed so many health issues that I had, sleep apnea, my blood pressure, all those things are gone. I had a fatty liver, gone. My liver function is great. So, you know, I have added years to my life. I feel great. I look different. People notice.
Starting point is 00:23:29 And I'll tell you, it feels great. Yeah. You know, so the point I want to make about that is when people, from a health perspective, you know, I think the struggle is, number one, consistency is difficult for anyone. But people look at this as this daunting task. I think what you just talked about is it's actually simple, right? You change your relationship with food. You started paying attention to what you're eating.
Starting point is 00:23:56 You made sure you exercise, even if it's not gym working out, you're walking every day. I'm assuming you probably are consuming a lot more water and sleeping better, which are, you know, great components of all this. But I think it's, it's, you know, people have witnessed my health journey of where I was almost bedridden to, you know, physically as strong as I've ever been. And people will come up to me in the gym and they're like, man, how did you do it? I'd be like, how many times you've been in here this week? Oh, three.
Starting point is 00:24:30 Do you see me every time you're in here? Yeah, I'm just consistent, right? I'm just consistent. I don't overcomplicate it. So that's really cool that you've done that. Yeah, thank you, man. Thank you. And it's about forming the positive habits and removing the bad habits, right?
Starting point is 00:24:47 So even if you go to the gym, I don't care if you can lift 10 pounds or 50 pounds. Lift the 10. Just do it all the time. Be consistent. Schedule. Right, exactly, exactly. Yeah. Awesome. Well, I always end the show with the same question to everybody. We call this show Waking Up to Wealth. The premise behind this show was I grew up for, was never taught about money correctly.
Starting point is 00:25:10 And then when I started to make money and I got around people who had money, I realized there was a whole educational money that was hidden from this world. So Wake Up to Wealth is two things to me. It is I like to wake my audience up to wealth so they understand it. And then number two, I want to bring people. alone like you that can give them ideas and advice so they can go out and wake up and be wealthy one day. Wealth to everyone is different. And I ask everyone at the end of the show, what does waking up to wealth mean to you? And it's whatever your version is.
Starting point is 00:25:42 You know, Brandon, I like you, grew up on the other side of the tracks, right? And we didn't have money. We had less than not having money growing up. And, you know, I come from a tough background. Um, you know, well, waking up to wealth, the first thing that comes to my mind is accepting where you're at. And then if you don't like where it is, change it. And I will also say, Brandon, I'm going to throw you a twist. It's waking up to health has changed my life. Oh, look, you're going to have a thousand problems. You ain't got your health. You got one.
Starting point is 00:26:24 That's it. I want to thank you so much. By the way, we're sitting in here. I'm in the dark. The power is going out in our building. But as entrepreneurs, we adjust and we keep moving. So, those are an interesting twist. That's never happened.
Starting point is 00:26:38 But, dude, I want to thank you so much. I appreciate you for coming and spending time with us. I appreciate the relationship with you. And I thank you for coming and pouring into my audience. And thank you for being a guest with us today. Yeah, Brendan, again, thank you so much. Thank you, everybody. I hope what I said resonated and you get a little bit of, you know, of knowledge from it.
Starting point is 00:26:58 So again, Brandon, thanks. It's all to you. Hey, this next segment is brought to you, but my good friends at rockately.a.i. That is rocketly.a.i. If you're in the real estate business, especially the investment side and you need a platform that can run your real estate business and talk to leads through AI when you're not able to talk to them and can qualify and get to all the leads you can. can't get to. Plus, it has an amazing piece of technology with it called lead detector that
Starting point is 00:27:32 helps get all the people that come to your site and not opt in to opt in to turn into a lead. These are my good friends at rocketly.com.A.I'm part of this company as well. I use it to run my real estate business, my real estate investment business. Go check them out. Again,rocketly.com. And thank you guys for sponsoring the segment. Thanks so much for tuning into this episode of Wake Up to Wealth. We sure to appreciate it. If you have done so already, make sure you're subscribe to the show wherever you consume podcast. This way of good updates as new episodes become available. And if you feel so inclined, please leave us a review on Apple Podcast and tell your friends about the show. It is how new people find us. Until next time.

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