The budget that quietly grew after the promotion. The inspection that left a bad taste. The offhand comment three months ago that turns out to be the thing that closes the deal. Clients don't come back because your funnel was slick — they come back because you remembered, and it made them feel known. That's what earns the next deal. No funnel buys it.
Not after a full Saturday of showings. Not across years of relationships — the birthdays, the budgets, the offhand comments that turn out to matter most. It was never a discipline problem. It's just being human.
So Kynjo holds it for you. Every client, every conversation, every detail — so the things that earn the next deal are never the things that slip away.
Walk out of an open house and brain-dump the whole conversation — who they are, why they're moving, what they loved, what they can't stand. No forms, no required fields, no dropdowns. First name and a pile of context is enough.
And the things you don't think to write down? Kynjo catches those too — quietly pulling the people and details from the email you're already sending, so your CRM is never starting from empty.
Every conversation you capture makes the next one sharper. Nothing evaporates between transactions. Three months from now, when a name resurfaces, it's all still there — the preferences, the timeline, the reason they trusted you in the first place.
The industry's answer to staying organized has been more software — more fields, more tabs, more controls to learn before any of it gives anything back. It's why nearly 40% of agents barely touch the CRM they're paying for. Not because they don't care about their clients — because the tool asked for more than it gave.
Kynjo asks for none of it. Your contacts and your local market, in one place. Nothing to configure, no course to sit through. You just ask — the way you'd ask a colleague who already knows your book. The hours you'd have lost to setup go back to the work that actually matters: the people.
Sophisticated under the hood. Plain English on the surface. No certifications, no jargon, no part of it that asks you to think like a software engineer to get value out of it.
“Spend your time on the people. Let Kynjo keep the record.”