The Depth Model: Inside KW Commercial’s Product Division Experiment—and the Brokers Behind It
By Alicia Shepherd, KW Commercial
Date Published: May 2025
There was a time when the brand KW Commercial was synonymous with the idea of a “generalists” practice of commercial real estate, and in many cities around the US, as a “resi-mercial” version of what commercial real estate is. Yet, when we look up today, we see something else altogether. Something that’s delivering results and closing deals at a global level.
In the last three years, the firm has been quietly building something with the precision of a private equity shop and the rhythm of a research institute: a national network of product divisions, each led by an established expert in their vertical. The goal isn’t brand optics—it’s operational depth. And at a time when clients are demanding more specificity, more clarity, more actual expertise, the timing couldn’t be more exacting.
Nine divisions. Nine asset classes. Nine leaders who still broker deals.
This is not a pivot to theory. It’s a return to practice.
An Architect Returns to the Field
It’s difficult to overstate the significance of Joe Williams taking the helm of KW Commercial’s Development Division. As co-founder of Keller Williams Realty International, Williams helped build the largest real estate company in the world by agent count. He could have remained an icon. Instead, he chose to remain relevant.
Operating from Austin, Williams is as fluent in public-private finance as he is in entitlements. His focus isn’t just on where to build—but why, when, and for whom. In private meetings, he’s more likely to reference housing absorption data or municipal tax base projections than to discuss brand. His presence signals that KW Commercial isn’t building a hierarchy—it’s building a working brain trust.
Industrial, Without the Noise
Ask anyone in the Midwest who actually understands the industrial sector—especially in this post-pandemic logistics boom—and John Merrill’s name will surface early. Based in Indianapolis, Merrill leads the Industrial Services Division, though he’s not interested in division titles. He’s interested in site utility, access to rail, and the future of cold storage capacity.
Merrill’s work is quiet, analytical, and deeply regionalized. He doesn’t claim to know every market—but he knows how to evaluate any of them. Brokers under his guidance are trained not just in square footage or lease comps, but in transport modeling and third-party logistics trends. It’s brokerage, but engineered.
The Office Realist
The word office still causes some firms to flinch. Bruce Seid is not one of them.
Seid, based in Los Angeles, heads the Office Services Division—a group navigating the most existential questions in the commercial world: Do tenants want space? What kind? How much? What will they pay for flexibility? For location? For certainty?
Seid doesn’t offer platitudes. He offers frameworks. His experience spans both institutional and private clients, and he seems more concerned with the physics of tenant behavior than the headlines about it. In conversation, he’s unhurried. “This is not a collapse,” he says. “It’s a recalibration. Our job is to interpret it.”
And that’s what his division does—interpret. Not just for brokers, but with them.
The Analyst’s Analyst
If office is a question mark, multifamily remains the industry’s exclamation point. It’s active, crowded, and capital-heavy. But few brokers command the asset class with the focus and fluency of Joey Wang.
Wang leads the Multifamily Division from San Francisco with a quiet intensity. His language is closer to that of a fund manager than a broker. Talk to him about a listing and you’re as likely to hear about absorption velocity, T12 anomalies, or IRR sensitivity as you are about unit count.
His division operates like a discipline. Younger brokers are not handed scripts—they’re handed models. You get the sense that Wang cares less about growing teams and more about growing talent. “Multifamily isn’t a momentum game,” he says. “It’s a margins game. That’s where the story is.”
Hospitality with a Longer Lens
Rav Singh never set out to lead a national division. Based in San Antonio, Singh has spent his career quietly advising private hospitality clients—operators, developers, regional chains—on how to think long-term in a famously short-cycle business.
Today, as head of KW Commercial’s Hospitality Division, Singh brings that same long lens to a national stage. He talks about brand flags and operator agreements with the comfort of someone who’s read every line of the franchise agreement—and questioned half of them.
His leadership isn’t about taking up space. It’s about creating systems: how to evaluate management performance, how to underwrite seasonal volatility, how to position a boutique property for acquisition without losing its soul.
“Hospitality,” Singh says, “only works if people return. That applies to guests—and it applies to capital.”
Retail Beyond the Headlines
While the press debates whether retail is dead, Joe DeCola is quietly helping it live better.
DeCola, based in San Antonio, doesn’t romanticize the asset class. He tracks it. Patterns of use. Shifts in co-tenancy. Anchors that draw not just traffic but spend. His role as leader of the Retail Services Division isn’t to protect retail—it’s to pressure test it.
There’s a kind of rigor to the way DeCola speaks about merchandising strategy and tenant mix alignment. He’s unimpressed by foot traffic unless it converts. He reminds agents that retail is not an emotion—it’s a revenue formula.
And under his guidance, KW Commercial’s retail brokers are learning to think like both placemakers and portfolio managers.
When Real Estate Includes the Business Itself
Key West might seem an unlikely headquarters for a commercial real estate innovation, but it’s there that Sandra Swann leads the firm’s Business Brokerage Division. And it’s there that one of the most misunderstood sectors of CRE is being methodically redefined.
Swann specializes in transitions—when a business is sold, often with its property, its people, and its reputation bundled into the same line item. There are few comps. Fewer templates. And very little room for error.
What her division offers is structure in the face of uncertainty. Financial analysis, deal packaging, and an ethos of discretion. Swann is firm but diplomatic: “You’re not just selling a business. You’re handing someone your legacy. That changes how we show up.”
The Lease Strategist
In Charlotte, Ty Martin brings a kind of tactical calm to one of the industry’s most ubiquitous—but least elevated—disciplines: leasing.
As leader of the Leasing Division, Martin is both methodical and slightly contrarian. He pushes his team to approach lease negotiations like capital events, not just paperwork. He reads clauses the way attorneys do—but structures deals with the speed of a broker who’s still active in the field.
Martin isn’t loud. He’s precise. And his division is quietly producing some of the most technically competent leasing specialists in the firm.
The Public Sector Operator
Finally, there’s Duncan Chapman—New England-based, GSA-fluent, and head of KW Commercial’s Government Services Division. In a sector most brokers avoid, Chapman has built not only a niche—but an institutional standard.
He approaches government work with a mix of procedural fluency and economic pragmatism. There’s no flourish in his speech. No need for it. He understands the sequence, the statutes, and the pressure points—and he teaches his agents to do the same.
Public-sector deals, Chapman says, “require less hustle and more discipline.” His division delivers both.
The Takeaway: Specialization Isn’t Limiting. It’s Liberating.
What KW Commercial has done with its product divisions is not a marketing strategy. It’s a structural recalibration.
By elevating subject matter over surface-level scale, and by installing producers, not managers, at the head of each vertical, the firm has built a system that trades ambiguity for access.
If the old model celebrated versatility, this one rewards expertise. And for brokers ready to go deeper, not broader, it’s offering something rare: the infrastructure to actually become great.
Not perform it. But
become it. Welcome to the new standards and these new paths, inside KW Commercial.








