The belief that a real estate agent’s gut is an asset is the industry’s most successful piece of fiction. We are told that experience is a sort of alchemy, a process where years of walking through two-bedroom apartments in Dubai Marina somehow crystallize into a supernatural ability to sense the market.
This is a lie designed to comfort the agent and pacify the owner. In reality, intuition is the polite term for a data deficit. It is what fills the vacuum when the facts are too expensive, too fragmented, or too buried to find.
To understand the failure of professional intuition, one must examine its architecture. The industry operates on three discrete propositions:
I.
The listing appointment is a theater of the absurd
II.
The portal is a funhouse mirror
III.
The spreadsheet is a cemetery
The Performance of Certainty
At , the marble lobby of a Downtown tower is a cathedral of silence. Layla is here to meet an owner who has just finished a three-year stint in London and wants to liquidate a high-floor unit.
The scent of oud hangs heavy in the air, mixing with the sharp, clinical smell of industrial floor wax. They sit on a velvet sofa that costs more than Layla’s first car. The