Some people seem like they were born lucky. On paper, at least, Tyler Whitman does too. He was picked to star in Bravo’s Million Dollar Listing, got in on the ground floor of brokerage startup Triplemint and had the boyish good looks necessary to become the media darling he is today.
But Tyler Whitman wasn’t born lucky. Not even close. When he first landed in New York City from Alabama, he could only find work as a waiter and handing out flyers in Times Square. A job he kept during his first year in real estate. He was also clinically obese in one of the most image-conscious industries and cities on the planet. He had a drinking problem. He was unlucky by anyone’s standards.
Like so many ultra-successful people, Tyler Whitman decided to make his own luck. He started working his Manhattan real estate niche relentlessly, joined Triplemint, quit drinking, lost 200 pounds and became a star on Million Dollar Listing. To learn how he did it, we sat down with Tyler to get his take on making your own luck in real estate, his advice for brand new agents and even his best script for drumming up business at parties.
Tyler Whitman: By the numbers
- Market: New York City and The Hamptons
- Niche: Starter apartments, $48,000,000 penthouses and everything in between
- 2024 team sales volume + sides: $135,000,000 + 67 sides
- Primary lead generation strategy: Referrals, social media
- Highest ROI real estate software: Brokermint
Niche down as an agent, scale up with your team
If you want to succeed in real estate, the first step is to niche down. Find a gap in the market—preferably one you have a passion for—and work it until the wheels fall off. Whitman started out working rentals in Manhattan but didn’t start making enough money to give up his flyer gig until he stumbled onto a lucrative niche other agents were ignoring: fresh Ivy League college graduates.
Starter apartments for Ivy League kids
It all started with a phone call from a new Princeton grad looking for an apartment. Lucky? Maybe. But what Whitman did next turned a lucky break into a highly lucrative niche that finally allowed him to stop handing out flyers. He knew Princeton was a tight-knit community, so he gave his new client white-glove service even though he was only looking for a humble apartment. He did 80 rental deals with Princeton graduates that summer.
From Million Dollar Listing to a team that sells anything it can get its hands on
Whitman parlayed his Ivy League clients into buyers and built his business in luxury real estate — eventually rubbing shoulders with Ryan Serhant on Million Dollar Listing.
After starting his team, Whitman decided he didn’t want to pigeonhole his agents into luxury listings. The market was too small, even in New York City and the Hamptons. This turned out to be a savvy business decision. His team is thriving, working everything from starter homes to eight-figure penthouses. Listings are listings, and listings grow successful businesses.
Here’s Tyler:

“Last year, my team had seven sales north of $10 million, and everything else was almost exclusively first-time buyers. We had a ton of volume under $1 million. That business was huge for us last year. It’s funny; I think our smallest sale was a $400,000 studio, and I had the listing for the 15 Central Park West penthouse that was $48 million. Most people think I just do luxury, but my team does it all now. It all adds up.”