Yesterday, I sat on our daughter’s sofa festooned with Super Bowl regalia.
The decibel level was akin to an Elton John concert, not because of the TV volume but from the excited youngsters born to some 20 families in attendance.
As the LX (60) logo appeared, what dawned on me was this: I have watched EVERY Super Bowl since its inception in 1967, as the Packers of Green Bay squared off against the Kansas City Chiefs.
But as my thoughts drifted to the week ahead, I wondered what commercial real estate lessons would be learned from this year’s extravaganza.
For this exercise, I looked at the game through the lens of the Seattle Seahawks. Not the pageantry. Not the commercials. Not the halftime show. But the way championship teams are built and how they mirror success and failure in commercial real estate.
Here is what stood out.
Champions are built over time
No Super Bowl is won on Sunday alone. It is the product of years of drafting, development, coaching continuity, discipline and systems. The Seahawks’ success has never been about a single star. It is about preparation and patience.
Commercial real estate is no different. Deals do not close because of one heroic phone call. They close because of months or years of relationship building, market knowledge, repetition and process.
By the time a transaction reaches the finish line, the real work has already been done.
Defense matters more
The Seahawks’ identity has long been rooted in defense, controlling the line, limiting mistakes and forcing the opponent to earn every yard. It is not glamorous, but it wins games.
In commercial real estate, defense is underwriting, due diligence, lease language, timelines and managing expectations. It is knowing when not to do a deal.
The brokers who endure are rarely the flashiest. They are the ones who protect their clients and their reputations.
Systems beat talent
Every Super Bowl roster is filled with talented players. What separates champions is how those players perform within a system.
It’s assignment football: Do your job, trust the structure.
This is where many brokers wash out.
Talent without structure leads to inconsistency. Systems — how you source, qualify, control, execute and close — create repeatable success. The best brokers do not rely on memory or motivation. They rely on process.
Special teams close games
Games often turn on field position, penalties, clock management and execution when no one is watching. Special teams do not get headlines, but they do swing outcomes.
In our business, special teams are follow-ups, summaries, documentation, communication cadence and closing logistics.
Clients remember how a deal felt. Sloppy execution at the end can undo months of great work.
Teams win or lose together
No one wins a Super Bowl alone. Coaches, players, trainers, scouts and support staff all matter.
The same holds true in commercial real estate. The most durable careers are built with transaction coordinators, analysts, mentors, partners and cooperative brokers.
Lone wolves burn out. Teams endure.
As the last confetti fell and Monday arrived, the Super Bowl faded quickly. But the lessons do not have to.
Whether on the field or in the marketplace, success is rarely accidental. It is built deliberately, patiently, and with discipline.
And that is a game worth studying.
Allen C. Buchanan is a principal with Lee & Associates Commercial Real Estate Services in Orange. He can be reached at abuchanan@lee-associates.com or 714-564-7104.