Sarah Fortune operates as a residential real estate agent for RE/MAX Energy, a brokerage arm of the national RE/MAX franchise that targets professionals working in Oklahoma's oil, gas, and energy industries. She works within Oklahoma City's broader agent market by focusing on a narrower client base: relocating energy executives, engineers, and their families who need to move quickly and understand neighborhood trade-offs specific to commutes, school districts near employment clusters, and resale timing tied to industry cycles.
RE/MAX Energy is not a separate brokerage but a specialty designation within RE/MAX's national network. Agents who join it receive training on energy-sector client needs, industry connections, and the financial cycles that affect energy professionals' buying and selling timelines. Fortune holds the RE/MAX affiliation and operates under that brand. Unlike a general-market agent, she markets herself to energy companies' relocation departments and attends industry events where clients are already identified as likely to move. This matters in Oklahoma City because energy employment drives significant residential churn: when oil prices drop or projects end, professionals relocate; when projects ramp, they arrive with short timelines and budget certainty from employer packages.
Real estate agents in Oklahoma earn commission only on completed sales. The typical structure splits 5 to 6 percent of the home's sale price between the seller's agent and the buyer's agent; each agent's brokerage then takes a percentage of that split. Fortune earns nothing if a transaction does not close. When you work with her as a buyer, she shows you homes, advises on offer strategy, and handles paperwork in exchange for the buyer's agent commission, which the seller's side typically pays. As a listing agent, she prices your home, coordinates showings, and markets it in exchange for the listing agent's portion. The distinction matters: a buyer's agent works for the buyer's interest, while a listing agent works for the seller's interest. Fortune cannot serve both roles in the same transaction.
General-market agents like those at Coldwell Banker Global, ERA, or independent boutique firms serve all buyer profiles and neighborhoods across Oklahoma City. They typically have deeper local inventory knowledge because they work across price ranges and geographies. Fortune's advantage lies in industry-specific referral networks: energy clients already trust that she understands their employers' relocation timelines and can connect them to others in the same field. A first-time buyer, a retiree, or a teacher looking to move to Edmond will likely find more total options with a broad-market agent who has more listings in their specific neighborhood. Fortune is the better fit if you are relocating to Oklahoma City for an energy sector job and need someone who knows the industry's seasonal hiring patterns and typical relocation budgets. An agent at a boutique firm serving Nichols Hills or Edmond exclusively may know those submarkets more deeply but cannot help you navigate energy sector cycles.
Fortune suits energy professionals with six-figure relocation packages, defined move dates, and employer connections. She also works with spouses of energy executives who are relocating and those trading up within Oklahoma City after a promotion. She does not suit buyers with flexible timelines, tight budgets, or no employment anchor, because industry-specific networks offer less advantage there. Sellers in energy-heavy zip codes (73118, 73116, 73013) may benefit from her industry buyer access; those selling in neighborhoods with no energy sector concentration may prefer an agent with broader market reach.
Contacting Fortune begins with a direct inquiry through RE/MAX Energy or a local RE/MAX office website. Initial calls typically cover your move timeline, budget range, and whether your relocation is employer-sponsored. If you are a buyer, she will ask about your job location, commute tolerance, and school district needs. If you are selling, she will ask for a property address and brief description, then offer a comparative market analysis based on recent sales. First meetings often occur in person at the home (for sellers) or over a phone call to discuss neighborhoods (for buyers relocating from out of state).
RE/MAX Energy operates through RE/MAX's national and local office structure. Agent hours are not fixed to an office schedule; Fortune typically works client hours, including evenings and weekends for showings and closings. Reach out through the RE/MAX Energy website or a local Oklahoma City RE/MAX office to be connected. Commission and fee structures should be discussed directly; buyers pay nothing out of pocket, but sellers should clarify what listing agent commission and any brokerage fees apply before signing a listing agreement.
Fortune fills a specific niche in Oklahoma City's agent market: she is worth contacting if you are relocating for an energy job and want an agent who understands industry timelines, but not if you need neighborhood expertise, broad inventory access, or a market generalist.
