Weekly review completed
If agents do not complete the review, more features will not save the product. Measure the rhythm first.
StackPilot Realtor Hub / weekly pilot review
A no-login local dashboard showing how a 5-agent Realtor Hub beta would be reviewed: weekly completion, Money List opportunities, drafts reviewed, prep/resource/content packets created, blocked risks, and return intent. No agents are contacted and no real data is collected.
Open fictional dashboardOpen pilot operating roomBack to beta packetReview pricing thesisThe beta should answer one commercial question: will Realtors pay for a weekly relationship-control room that makes follow-up, prep, content, resources, and local guides easier without unsafe automation? This dashboard makes the pass/fail decision visible before any recruiting, live form, CRM import, account setup, or outreach.
If agents do not complete the review, more features will not save the product. Measure the rhythm first.
Count follow-up drafts, appointment prep, referral/resource tasks, content prompts, and local guide sections that an agent would actually edit.
Every claim, fair-housing-sensitive phrase, vendor recommendation, testimonial, private-data use, CRM/MLS change, and send/publish action must stop for human approval.
All five participant cards below are fictional. The numbers are teaching data designed to show what a real dashboard should measure after Tim approves a pilot and data policy.
Green light: Agents complete the weekly review, edit multiple drafts, and ask to repeat next week.
Yellow light: Agents like the concept but need onboarding, clearer approval gates, or fewer modules in week one.
Red light: Agents ask for autopilot sending, CRM scraping, MLS writes, income guarantees, or broad lead-gen promises. That is not the safe StackPilot product.
Recommended pilot cut: Start with Realtor Hub Pro for busy solo/repeat-referral agents. Keep Team Control Room as a later validation path after support, roles, and brokerage review are defined.
The dashboard should celebrate risks stopped before they become client-facing mistakes. This is part of the subscription value: safer speed, not reckless automation.
Approval wall
These are the pilot thresholds to approve, reject, or redesign the product after a real human-approved test.
Human approval lock
AI may draft, organize, summarize, score, route, remind, identify missing facts, create local review files, and prepare fictional/sample reports. Humans approve participants, data sources, facts, claims, recommendations, sends, publishing, lead capture, paid ads, CRM/MLS/system changes, legal/compliance-sensitive statements, and every external action.
Local Realtor Hub synthesis and prototypes support the wedge: Today’s Money List + Relationship Review, not another empty CRM. Public NAR, NAR Code of Ethics, HUD Fair Housing, and FTC endorsement/review guidance were checked for access and used only to shape the safety gates around consumer advice, true-picture advertising, fair-housing-sensitive language, testimonials, and endorsements.
Next product move
The operating-room kit and week-one wizard now flow into a launch decision sheet: proceed narrow, simplify, pause, or gather more evidence — still local-only and no outreach.