“Damn, there is so much great knowledge out there. Did you know that “BOOKS” are full of smart?? No, I mean like life changing, I-wish-I-knew-that-years-ago type stuff.
I know that I was waaaayyy late to the game figuring it out. And I know that a lot of you are too busy to read as much as you ‘should’. And that is why you need me.
I still remember how it started for me. It started in June of 2008. After 11 years …..Click to continue
June 5, 2026

The New Credit Score Reality: 4 Pros and 4 Cons That Will Actually Affect Your Business
How the shift to FICO 10T and VantageScore 4.0 will change your daily workflow, your opportunities, and your bottom line
Change in the mortgage industry typically arrives with all the grace of a drunk elephant: loud, disruptive, and leaving a mess you'll be cleaning up for months. The transition to new credit scoring models is no exception. But unlike some regulatory changes that are all pain and no gain, this one actually comes with legitimate opportunities—if you know where to look and how to position yourself.
Let's cut through the noise and focus on the four most significant advantages and the four biggest challenges these credit scoring changes will create for mortgage companies, loan officers, and lenders. This isn't theory—this is what's going to affect your pipeline, your workflow, and your wallet.
The Pros: Real Opportunities in the New Scoring Landscape
Pro #1: Expanded Borrower Pool and Competitive Advantage
The most significant opportunity is access to borrowers who were previously unqualified or marginally qualified under the old scoring models. FICO 10T and VantageScore 4.0 are both designed to evaluate a broader range of credit behaviors, particularly benefiting borrowers who have improved their credit management over time or who have limited traditional credit history.
VantageScore 4.0, in particular, can generate scores for approximately 30-40 million consumers who were previously "unscorable" under traditional FICO models. These are people with thin credit files—perhaps recent immigrants, young adults, or individuals recovering from financial setbacks who haven't yet rebuilt extensive credit histories. When alternative data like rent and utility payments are fully integrated, this number could grow even larger.
For loan officers, this translates to real opportunity. Those referral partners who've been sending you borrowers that "just missed" qualification? You now have a legitimate reason to revisit those applications. The borrower who had a 615 FICO score six months ago might score 635 under the new models if they've been demonstrating positive payment behavior. That's the difference between an approval and a decline.
Early adopters who master these new scoring models will have a competitive edge. While your competitors are still figuring out how to explain the changes to borrowers, you can be closing loans with people they're turning away. The originators who educate themselves first, build relationships with underwriters who understand the nuances, and can confidently explain the new scores to borrowers and real estate agents will capture market share.
Pro #2: Better Credit Coaching and Borrower Guidance
The trended data component of both FICO 10T and VantageScore 4.0 creates a new opportunity for loan officers to provide more sophisticated credit coaching. Under the old models, you'd tell borrowers to pay down balances and avoid new inquiries. That advice still applies, but now you can provide much more nuanced guidance.
Because the new models reward consistent payment behavior over time, you can work with borrowers who are 6-12 months away from qualifying to develop specific action plans. A borrower who's been making minimum payments on credit cards? Show them how consistently paying more than the minimum for six months could boost their score significantly under FICO 10T, even if their overall utilization doesn't change dramatically.
This transforms your role from simple transaction facilitator to trusted financial advisor. Borrowers who receive this level of guidance become clients for life—and referral sources. The loan officer who helped someone improve their credit score by 40 points and qualify for a home doesn't just earn one commission; they earn a relationship that produces referrals for years.
Additionally, because you'll be seeing both the new and old scores during the transition period, you can identify specific credit behaviors that are helping or hurting borrowers under each model. This creates legitimate value-add conversations with borrowers that differentiate you from competitors who are just running credit and hoping for the best.
Pro #3: Reduced Disparate Impact and Fair Lending Benefits
From a compliance and business development perspective, the new scoring models potentially reduce fair lending risk. The FHFA's validation process specifically examined whether FICO 10T and VantageScore 4.0 reduce disparate impact on protected classes compared to the classic FICO models.
The data suggests that both new models produce higher scores on average for minority borrowers, particularly Black and Hispanic applicants, compared to the old FICO models. This isn't about lowering standards—it's about more accurately assessing creditworthiness by incorporating more sophisticated analysis of payment behavior over time.
For mortgage companies, this means potentially better fair lending metrics and reduced regulatory risk. For loan officers, it means more opportunities to serve diverse communities and expand into markets that may have been underserved by traditional lending criteria.
This also creates partnership opportunities with housing counseling agencies, community development organizations, and affordable housing initiatives. Organizations that work with first-time homebuyers and underserved communities will be looking for lenders who understand and can leverage the new scoring models to maximize approval rates. Position yourself as that expert, and you've got a referral pipeline that competitors can't easily replicate.
Pro #4: Technology and Automation Improvements
The infrastructure investments required to implement the new scoring models are forcing the entire industry to modernize. Fannie Mae's Desktop Underwriter and Freddie Mac's Loan Product Advisor are being updated with more sophisticated algorithms that can better evaluate the new scores in context.
For lenders willing to invest in their technology stack, this creates opportunities to streamline workflows and reduce manual intervention. Better automated underwriting means faster approvals, fewer conditions, and improved borrower experience. In a competitive market where speed matters, these improvements translate directly to closed loans.
Additionally, the credit reporting agencies are enhancing their platforms to deliver the new scores more efficiently. Lenders who integrate these enhanced platforms into their loan origination systems can reduce errors, minimize re-pulls, and provide faster service to borrowers. The companies that view this transition as an opportunity to upgrade their entire credit evaluation workflow—not just swap one score for another—will emerge more efficient and more profitable.
The Cons: Real Challenges You'll Need to Navigate
Con #1: Complexity and Training Requirements
The most immediate challenge is the dramatic increase in complexity. Instead of one set of FICO scores, you're now dealing with potentially six scores per borrower (three FICO 10T and three VantageScore 4.0). Understanding which score to use, how to explain discrepancies to borrowers, and how to navigate scenarios where the two models produce significantly different results requires substantial training.
For mortgage companies, this means significant investment in training programs. Every loan officer, processor, and underwriter needs to understand the new models. This isn't a one-hour webinar situation—this is comprehensive training on credit scoring methodology, fair lending implications, and practical application in underwriting decisions.
For individual loan officers, the learning curve is real. You'll need to invest time understanding how trended data works, why a borrower might score differently under each model, and how to explain this to borrowers who are already confused by having three different scores from three different bureaus. The borrower conversation just got significantly more complicated.
There's also the challenge of inconsistent knowledge across the industry. During the transition period, you might understand the new scores perfectly, but the real estate agent, the home inspector, and the closing attorney won't. You'll spend time educating everyone in the transaction chain, which slows down deals and creates friction.
Con #2: Increased Costs and Uncertain Pricing
Credit reports are about to get more expensive, and nobody's quite sure by how much. Under the old system, you paid for a tri-merge report with three FICO scores. Under the new system, you're getting six scores (or potentially more if lenders choose to pull both old and new scores during the transition).
FICO has historically charged premium pricing for newer score versions. FICO Score 9, for example, costs more than the classic FICO scores. FICO 10T will likely follow the same pattern. VantageScore's pricing for mortgage lending hasn't been fully disclosed, but it's unlikely to be cheaper than current FICO pricing—the credit bureaus didn't create a competitive scoring model to make less money.
For mortgage companies operating on thin margins, increased credit report costs directly impact profitability. A $10-$20 increase per credit report might not sound like much, but multiply that by thousands of applications annually, and it becomes a significant line item. These costs will either need to be absorbed (reducing profit margins) or passed to borrowers (reducing competitiveness).
There's also the question of re-scoring and credit supplements. If a borrower's score is close to a threshold, will you need to pull multiple score types to find the most favorable option? That could mean additional costs per file. The business model for credit evaluation is changing, and the full cost implications won't be clear until the market settles.
Con #3: Technology Integration Headaches and Operational Disruption
Every system in your technology stack that touches credit scores needs to be updated. Your loan origination system, your pricing engine, your automated underwriting interface, your point-of-sale platform, your customer relationship management system—all of it needs to be reconfigured to handle the new scoring models.
For large lenders with sophisticated IT departments, this is a manageable (if expensive) project. For small to mid-sized mortgage companies and independent brokers, this could be a nightmare. You're dependent on your technology vendors to update their systems, and those updates won't all happen simultaneously or smoothly.
During the transition period, expect glitches. Credit reports that don't populate correctly in your LOS. Pricing engines that can't interpret the new scores. Automated underwriting findings that contradict each other. Every one of these technical issues creates delays, requires manual intervention, and frustrates borrowers.
There's also the operational challenge of maintaining dual processes during the transition. You'll need procedures for handling both old and new score types, training staff on both, and ensuring quality control across both methodologies. This operational complexity increases error rates and slows down production.
For loan officers, this means more time spent on each file troubleshooting technical issues instead of originating new loans. It means more borrower conversations explaining delays that aren't your fault. It means more frustration with back-office operations that used to be seamless.
Con #4: Uncertain Investor Requirements and Secondary Market Fragmentation
Here's the challenge nobody's talking about enough: Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac aren't the only game in town. Portfolio lenders, credit unions, non-QM investors, and private-label securities issuers all have their own credit score requirements, and most haven't announced whether they'll accept the new scoring models.
This creates potential fragmentation in the secondary market. You might have a borrower who qualifies under FICO 10T for a Fannie Mae loan but doesn't qualify under classic FICO for a portfolio product. Or a jumbo loan investor that only accepts traditional FICO scores while the GSEs require the new models. Suddenly, you need to know which score each investor accepts before you can determine loan eligibility.
For mortgage companies that sell to multiple investors, this complexity is exponential. Your underwriting guidelines become investor-specific not just on debt-to-income ratios and loan-to-value limits, but on which credit scoring model to use. Your pricing becomes more complex. Your quality control becomes more challenging.
For loan officers, this means you can't make blanket statements about qualification anymore. "You need a 620 credit score" becomes "You need a 620 credit score under the specific scoring model accepted by the investor who will ultimately purchase this loan, which I won't know for certain until we lock your rate and determine pricing." That's not exactly a confidence-inspiring conversation.
There's also the representation and warranty risk. If you originate a loan using VantageScore 4.0 because it produced a higher score than FICO 10T, and that loan defaults, will your investor claim you should have used the more conservative score? The legal and contractual frameworks for these scenarios haven't been fully established, which creates uncertainty and risk.
The Bottom Line: Navigating the New Normal
The credit scoring changes are neither the disaster some fear nor the panacea others promise. Like most industry shifts, they create winners and losers based primarily on how quickly and effectively companies and individuals adapt.
The loan officers and mortgage companies that will thrive are those who:
• Invest in comprehensive training early rather than waiting until they're forced to
• View the expanded borrower pool as a genuine opportunity and build systems to capitalize on it
• Upgrade their technology infrastructure proactively rather than reactively
• Develop expertise in credit coaching and borrower guidance using the new models
• Build strong relationships with underwriters and operations staff who understand the nuances
• Communicate transparently with borrowers about the changes and what they mean
The companies that will struggle are those who treat this as a compliance checkbox—update the system, check the box, move on. The complexity and opportunities embedded in these changes reward expertise and punish complacency.
For individual loan officers, this is a career-defining moment. The originators who become known as the "credit score experts" in their markets, who can help borderline borrowers qualify through strategic credit coaching, who can navigate the complexity and explain it clearly to borrowers—those people will build businesses that competitors can't easily replicate.
The changes are coming whether you're ready or not. The question isn't whether to adapt—it's whether you'll adapt quickly enough to capture the opportunities or slowly enough that you're just catching up to competitors who moved faster.
The mortgage industry moves fast, and staying ahead of changes like these is the difference between leading your market and chasing it. Subscribe to Well That Makes Sense at WellThatMakesSense.com for analysis that cuts through the complexity and gives you actionable insights before your competitors figure it out. Because in this business, knowledge isn't just power—it's profit. And occasionally, it's the thing that keeps you from explaining to a borrower why they have six different credit scores and none of them make sense.
June 4, 2026

June 4, 2026
The Real Reason You're Working 60 Hours a Week and Still Broke (It's Not What You Think)
Alex Hormozi's uncomfortable truth about why hustle culture is making you poor, not rich
The Productivity Theater Destroying Your Life
Hormozi calls it "productivity theater"—looking busy, feeling busy, being exhausted from busyness, but not actually moving toward meaningful goals. In real estate, this looks like spending three hours on social media "building your brand" when you could spend thirty minutes making strategic calls to past clients. It looks like attending every networking event in town instead of building systems that generate referrals automatically. It looks like personally handling every detail of every transaction instead of training a team to execute your processes. The real estate industry has created an entire culture around celebrating busyness. We brag about how many showings we did over the weekend. We post about working through holidays. We wear our exhaustion like a badge of honor. Hormozi would say we're idiots. Not because hard work doesn't matter, but because we're working hard on activities that don't actually create wealth. Here's a simple test Hormozi recommends: track every activity you do for a week and assign each one to a category—revenue generating, revenue supporting, or neither. Be brutally honest. Scrolling Instagram looking at competitor's posts? Neither. Reorganizing your CRM for the third time this month? Neither. Attending a three-hour team meeting that could have been an email? Neither. For most real estate professionals, the "neither" category represents forty to sixty percent of their working hours. That's not a hustle problem, it's a priority problem. You're not working too little, you're working on too much of the wrong stuff. Hormozi built his fortune by ruthlessly eliminating everything that didn't directly contribute to business growth. He didn't try to do everything—he identified the twenty percent of activities that generated eighty percent of results and doubled down on those. Everyone else is out here trying to do one hundred percent of everything and wondering why they're exhausted and broke.The High-Value Activity Framework
Hormozi's framework for escaping hustle culture starts with brutal honesty about what actually makes you money. For real estate agents, there are maybe five activities that directly generate revenue: prospecting for new clients, conducting listing or buyer consultations, negotiating deals, asking for referrals, and maintaining relationships with past clients. Everything else is either supporting these activities or wasting time. Supporting activities include things like transaction coordination, marketing, administrative tasks, and continuing education. These matter, but they should be systematized, delegated, or minimized. The goal is to spend maximum time on revenue-generating activities and minimum time on everything else. Yet most agents do the opposite—they spend hours on busy work and squeeze in revenue generation when they have time left over. Hormozi recommends a simple scheduling principle: block your calendar for high-value activities first, then fit everything else around them. If prospecting and client meetings are what actually make you money, those should be sacred, non-negotiable blocks on your calendar. Everything else gets scheduled in the gaps or delegated entirely. This sounds obvious, but almost nobody does it. Instead, we let our calendars fill up with whatever screams loudest, then wonder why we're not hitting our income goals. For loan officers, high-value activities might include calling real estate agent partners, following up with leads, conducting pre-approval consultations, and asking for referrals from past clients. Processing loans, handling paperwork, answering random questions—these are necessary but should be systematized or delegated. Yet many loan officers spend the majority of their time on processing and administration, leaving scraps of time for the activities that actually grow their business.Why "Outworking Everyone" Is a Losing Strategy
The hustle culture narrative says success comes from outworking the competition. Wake up earlier, stay up later, sacrifice more, grind harder. Hormozi calls this "the poverty mindset disguised as work ethic." Why? Because it assumes the only variable you can control is effort, which is false. You can also control strategy, systems, and leverage. Think about it: there's a ceiling on how much you can personally outwork others. You have twenty-four hours in a day, same as everyone else. You need to sleep, eat, and occasionally see your family if you don't want them to forget what you look like. So the "outwork everyone" strategy has a built-in limitation. You might win in the short term through sheer effort, but you'll burn out or plateau eventually. Hormozi's approach is different: instead of trying to work more hours than everyone else, build better systems so each hour produces more value. Instead of trying to personally handle more transactions, create processes that allow a team to handle them for you. Instead of grinding harder, work smarter by focusing exclusively on high-leverage activities. This isn't about being lazy—it's about being strategic. The real estate industry hates this message because it undermines the entire "hustle harder" culture we've built. We celebrate the agent who worked through Christmas and did showings on their anniversary. We give awards to whoever logged the most hours. We've created an environment where rest is seen as weakness and boundaries are seen as lack of commitment. Hormozi would say we've created an environment that produces burnout, not wealth.The Leverage Principle That Changes Everything
Hormozi's ultimate framework for escaping hustle culture is leverage. There are four types: labor leverage (other people doing work for you), capital leverage (money working for you), code leverage (software and systems working for you), and media leverage (content working for you). Wealthy people use all four. Broke people rely exclusively on their own labor. In real estate, labor leverage means building a team where transaction coordinators handle paperwork, showing agents handle showings, and you focus on high-value activities like business development and strategic relationships. Capital leverage means using your income to invest in assets that generate passive income. Code leverage means using CRM systems, automated marketing, and technology to do work you'd otherwise do manually. Media leverage means creating content that attracts clients without you personally prospecting. Most real estate professionals use zero to one of these leverage types. They rely almost entirely on personal labor—their own time and effort. This creates an income ceiling because there's only so much you can personally do. Hormozi built multiple businesses to eight figures by maximizing all four types of leverage. He didn't work more hours than struggling entrepreneurs; he worked on activities that created leverage. The shift from hustle to leverage requires a fundamental mindset change. Instead of asking "how can I work harder," start asking "how can I create systems that work for me." Instead of "how many more hours can I put in," ask "what high-value activities should I focus on and what should I delegate or eliminate." Instead of celebrating busyness, celebrate effectiveness. This doesn't mean you don't work hard—Hormozi works incredibly hard. But he works hard on things that create leverage and compound over time. He builds systems that continue generating value long after the initial effort. He creates content that attracts customers while he sleeps. He invests in businesses that grow his wealth without requiring his daily involvement. That's the difference between hustle culture and strategic wealth building.The Brutal Math of Trading Time for Money
Here's the math that should terrify every real estate professional: if your income is purely a function of your personal time and effort, you have a job, not a business. Jobs have income ceilings. Businesses have profit potential that scales beyond your personal capacity. Hormozi's companies generate revenue whether he shows up or not because he built systems and leverage. Most agents' income drops to zero the moment they stop working because they built a dependency on personal effort. The hustle culture narrative tells you this is fine as long as you're making good money. Hormozi would say you're delusional. What happens when you get sick? What happens when you burn out? What happens when the market shifts and your current approach stops working? If your entire business model depends on you personally grinding sixty-plus hours a week forever, you haven't built a business—you've built a treadmill you can never get off. The solution isn't to work less hard—it's to work hard on different things. Work hard on building systems. Work hard on creating leverage. Work hard on developing a business that generates value independent of your constant personal effort. This is harder in the short term because it requires strategic thinking, not just activity. But it's the only path to sustainable wealth and actual freedom. Hormozi escaped the hustle trap by recognizing that his time was his most valuable asset and should be spent on the highest-leverage activities possible. Everything else should be systematized, delegated, or eliminated. Most real estate professionals do the opposite—they spend their time on whatever seems urgent rather than what's actually important. Then they wonder why they're exhausted and not wealthy. The answer is simple: you're confusing motion with progress, activity with achievement, and hustle with strategy. Stop grinding harder on the wrong things and start working smarter on the right ones.RECENT ARTICLES

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