2 minute read

MORTGAGE METEOROLOGY

EXCLUSIVELY ON

PRODUCED BY NMP FOR THE INTEREST moved forward working at other financial services companies, she found that she was being asked to choose between her personal and company branding.

FEATURING SARAH WOLAK, STAFF WRITER FOR NMP TUNE IN EVERY FRIDAY FOR YOUR WEEKLY FORECAST.

“As you get older and make [the mortgage industry] a career, it’s vital to understand the power of presence,” she said. “I’m one of the only women in the industry who check a lot of boxes. I’m a mixed-race woman, a single mom, and bilingual. So I wanted to embrace what made me stick out rather than be pale, male, and stale.”

Monetize The Schtick

From there, Ramos started her own company, Love and Tacos Media. The Orlando-based company is what Ramos describes as half media and half content creation. “It’s mainly me and my media partner, Michael Hammond,” she explained. “We essentially do ghost marketing for other companies in the mortgage industry. We do press releases, email campaigns, video creation, and even cross-promote with Taco Tuesday.”

Today, Ramos has monetized her schtick — and not just for herself. “Way back when I was offered by a guest to pay me to have them on my show, I decided to put a package together to offer that to others,” she explained. “Now as part of my media company, people can collab by being on Taco Tuesday. They can pay for one or a few episodes, keep and chop the video

CEO of Dwell Mortgage, started his self-branding well before his career as a mortgage originator took off. The topproducing CEO is known for wearing his baseball cap backwards, casual appearance, and for always having a cup of coffee in hand.

As a former Seattle firefighter, Kidwell was used to a physically taxing blue-collar environment. “After every shift, I would make it a point to stop at a new coffee shop,” he said. “It became a part of my identity as a fireman that I decided to carry with me into my career in the mortgage industry.”

But when Kidwell took a job at a mortgage company following early retirement from the Seattle Fire Department, he found that it felt inauthentic to be clad in a suit and tie and sitting behind a desk. “It didn’t feel like me, and what I realized was people cared less about how I looked and they cared more about what I knew and how I treated them,” Kidwell said. “But I knew that if I were to dress however I wanted to look and feel, then I have to be really good at what I’m saying and be good at my brand.”

Kidwell says he started wearing hoodies and backward baseball caps, and customers began to realize that they could relax and let their guard down around him.

“I didn’t want people to feel formal were three reasons why it made sense [to brand myself this way.] One, it was how I felt most comfortable. Two, it made others feel comfortable. Three, it made me more memorable.”

Curating Your Brand

Kidwell said that although his schtick was a conscious decision, it wasn’t hard to “curate” his brand. “Your brand is who you are. When you’re being authentic and you have a good sense of self, it’s not hard to brand,” he said. “It’s only hard to brand when people try to do things outside of who they are.”

Kidwell knows that he doesn’t come across as a serious mortgage guy, but that doesn’t deter potential customers. “Your audience is looking you up before they ever come in contact with you, so people already know what I’m about,” he

This article is from: