How ChatGPT Atlas Will Change How People Look for Information Online The web is changing…

I was at the Modern Mortgage Summit last year listening to some of the highest producing loan officers in the country speak.
None of them were debating whether their digital presence mattered.
That conversation wasn’t on the agenda. They were way past it. What came up instead was a list of non-negotiables; things they had already decided about how they show up online and how they protect that standard going forward.
It stuck with me. The gap between that room and the average producer is how they think about their time and what they allow inside their day.
Photos Taken at the Modern Mortgage Summit In Las Vegas
They’ve built a support structure and they protect it
The $25M, $50M, and up producers I talk to aren’t doing everything themselves. They figured out a long time ago that the job is originating. Everything that pulls them away from that is delegated or eliminated.
They have processors. Assistants. A lot of them now have a dedicated marketing person handling content, social channels, video strategy. Someone whose entire job is keeping the LO visible without the LO thinking about it every day.
That support structure is the business.
The rest of the story
Even with all of that in place, the website is almost always the orphan.
Untouched for two years, or a generic company page that tells very little about who this person is. Maybe there’s a decent site that was built once and never had anything added to it.
The marketing person is focused on social and content strategy, which is the right call. Pulling the producer into scripted posts or automating their voice out of content that needs them in it is a mistake most good marketing people already know to avoid.
But the website is a different problem. It needs consistent, localized, niche-specific content published regularly to do anything meaningful over time. That work either doesn’t get done or it pulls the marketing person away from what they’re better used for.
So the site sits there. Professional enough. Not working hard enough to matter.
How the better setups handle it
The producers on our Authority plan who have marketing people aren’t replacing them. The marketing person handles what requires the LO’s presence. Social, video, events; the things where the producer being in it is the whole point.
Authority handles the website. Content published consistently in the LO’s voice, built around their market and niche, optimized for search and AI discovery. The marketing person doesn’t have to think about it. The LO definitely doesn’t.
Six months in, that’s 70-plus pages of content indexed and building. A year in, it’s a real asset. Neither the LO nor the marketing person has to spend their time producing any of it.
The cost of waiting
You understand compound interest in your own investments. Start early, stay consistent, and the asset builds on itself.
The same math applies here.
The LO in your market who has been publishing consistent content for 18 months already has a position you can’t close overnight. Every month that gap gets wider.
They recognized it as a delegation decision, handed it off, and moved on.
If your digital presence is the one thing in your business that still doesn’t have an owner, that’s worth a conversation.
Book a call and I’ll walk through what your current digital footprint looks like and whether Authority makes sense for your setup.



