CPR™ Reviewed
CIR-20260507-85FE96
AI Twinning is coming to real estate — and I think it could actually help families make clearer decisions, not faster ones
Heading up to Boulder next Tuesday to meet with the eXp Boulder Collective — a group of agents who are genuinely ahead of the curve on how real estate gets done. The session is focused on AI Twinning, which is the idea of building a digital version of yourself that can communicate, answer questions, and stay present for clients even when you're not available in real time. My first reaction was honest curiosity. My second reaction was a practical one: could this actually help the families I work with? Here's my real position — tools like this are only useful if the person behind them has something clear and steady to offer in the first place. An AI version of a generic agent is just a faster way to get generic answers. But for families in Southmoor Park, Cherry Hills, or Centennial who are dealing with an inherited property or trying to plan a move at a complicated stage of life, what they need isn't speed — it's access to the right information at the right moment, delivered without pressure. If a tool like this could give a family a clear, well-organized answer at 10pm on a Sunday when they're trying to make sense of a situation they didn't plan for, that's worth paying attention to. The technology doesn't replace the judgment. It extends the reach of it. I'm going in with open eyes and practical questions. If there's a way to use this to help people in the Denver Tech Center or Greenwood Village corridor make better-informed choices about timing, pricing, and what comes next — I want to understand it. The best real estate tool is still a steady plan built around what's actually true in the market right now. If you've inherited a property in the south Denver corridor in the last year or two — what's the one question you wished someone had answered for you earlier in the process? — Kevin Lundy | The HomeBridge Group at eXp Realty