Making a Difference: Coldwell Banker Tomlinson’s Charitable Impact in Washington & Idaho (2023)
Our dedication to leading people home is deeply intertwined with our commitment to giving back to the communities we proudly serve. 💖 In 2023, Coldwell Banker Tomlinson agents and staff proudly contributed $386,600 and 2,300 volunteer hours to communities across Washington and Idaho, totaling more than $1.25 million since 2020. 🌟 We’re honored to serve Spokane, Boise, Meridian, Idaho Falls, and the Quad Cities (including Pullman, Lewiston & Clarkston, and Moscow) — all vibrant real estate markets where families find their dream homes and where we are committed to giving back. 🌆 As we embark on 2024, we renew our commitment to building homes and communities where everyone thrives. ✨ 🫶🏡Making a Difference: Coldwell Banker Tomlinson’s Charitable Impact in Washington & Idaho (2023)
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Coldwell Banker Tomlinson – @cbtomlinson Real Estate Professionals Serving Spokane, WA / Boise, ID / Tri-Cities, WA / Idaho Falls, ID / Lewiston, ID / Clarkston, WA / Pullman, WA / Moscow, ID, and surrounding areas. Washington State / Idaho State
Building Legacies: The Inspiring Journey of Tomlinson Group of Companies – From Humble Origins to a Top 500 Real Estate Powerhouse
This story originally ran in the Spokesman Review on May 11th, 2023 here

Bob Tomlinson, who recently turned 76, winters six months a year in Arizona and no longer is actively involved in managing the Tomlinson Family of Companies real estate brokerage he helped develop into a major enterprise here over five decades.
It would be wrong to assume, though, that he now is content to bask in the Southwest warmth and leave all his former business ventures and holdings in the hands of others. Tomlinson retains some commercial building ownership interests here, including with former business partner NAI Black CEO Dave Black. He also is continuing to pursue land-acquisition opportunities aimed at creating more lots for new homes throughout the Inland Northwest.
He remains chairman of the Tomlinson Family of Companies board, and thus stays in regular contact with his daughter, Shelley Johnson, who took over as CEO when he stepped down from that position two years ago.
“I don’t know how to retire,” he says, laughing.
His ongoing need to stay involved in real estate dealings, rather than shifting fully into a leisure-focused retirement phase of life, comes as no surprise to family members and former colleagues.
“He would tell you he wants to be relevant and not responsible,” muses his daughter, Shelley, who speaks to her dad often and says he never tries to influence how she guides the real estate enterprise’s day-to-day operations.
The Tomlinson Family of Companies, encompassing the three major brands of Coldwell Banker, Century 21, and Sotheby’s International Realty, now includes more than two dozen real estate brokerage offices, and about 1,000 agents throughout Eastern Washington, Idaho, and Montana.
It ranked 74th in the country last year with closed sales volume of about $3.83 billion in an annual review of the nation’s top 500 real estate brokerage firms compiled by RealTrends, a prominent source of analysis and information in the residential real estate market industry. Separate from sales volume, its 6,396 closed transaction “sides” ranked 90th in the country in RealTrends’ 2022 compilation.
Such achievements seem remarkable for a brokerage operation that began modestly here in 1938. That’s when Tomlinson’s grandfather, C. Verne Tomlinson, sold his farm during the Great Depression to launch Verne Tomlinson Realty, marketing farm and ranch properties. Bob’s father, William R. “Bill” Tomlinson, joined the company in 1948 and became a leading ranch and farm specialist. Bob Tomlinson began his real estate career there in late 1968, selling farmland in the Spokane area. At the time, the brokerage had only about eight agents.
Before becoming a third-generation real estate professional, Tomlinson had been working at the venerable Crescent department store in downtown Spokane, contemplating a possible retail career, and says he considered it “a big deal” when he was promoted to assistant manager there. His career took a lifelong detour shortly thereafter, though, he says, when his father approached him about coming to work at the real estate firm.
Tomlinson took the real estate exam while attending college and transitioned fully into real estate soon thereafter.
“He was pretty happy being a farm guy and only a farm guy,” Tomlinson says of his father. “I was a city guy and didn’t know a thing about farming.”
He says he quickly convinced his father to diversify the brokerage into residential real estate, adding, “The rest is history, I guess.”
Tomlinson took over the company reins in 1971. Over the following decades, the enterprise expanded steadily, largely through a mix of opportunistic mergers and acquisitions, including a key early merger with Alvin J. Wolff Co. in 1976. The growth wasn’t linear, though, as the operation shrunk substantially in size during real estate market downturns, but the overall long-term trend remained upward, he says.
“My dad impressed on me pretty early in life that (in business), if you’re not growing, you’re shrinking,” he adds. “I always felt pretty strongly about growing.”
Dave Black was business partners with Tomlinson for 12 years following a merger in 1995 that created the Tomlinson Black Group of Cos., blending companies with respective commercial and residential expertise. Black is awed by Bob’s achievements over the course of his career.
“His dad went from A to B (with the brokerage), and he went from B to Z,” Black says.
Friendly competitors before their merger, Black says Tomlinson “was a big-picture guy, which I appreciated, because I’m a big-picture guy. We always talked in macro terms.” Though their merger eventually dissolved when the companies decided to refocus on their separate market niches, it ended amicably.
“Bob was always a very good people guy. That to me was the hallmark of his success,” Black says, adding, “He’s very good at getting other people’s opinions and then finding a path (toward a common goal).”
Tomlinson’s daughter, Shelley, who joined the family business in 2017 after working in the insurance industry for many years, describes him similarly.
“This business is very relational. He’s got a wonderful way with people. I’d say that’s his superpower,” she says, adding, “As I watch him today, he doesn’t have a sense of hierarchy in who he interacts with,” treating everyone equally.
Beyond those people skills, she says, “I really appreciate his vision and expertise.”
Fred Meyer, a Tomlinson Family of Cos. board member and longtime friend and business colleague, says the key thing Tomlinson learned from his father in his early years in real estate was how to treat people honestly and fairly.
“Bob had a way of making anybody he was in front of feel they were the center of his attention,” Meyer says.
Tomlinson also was adept at nurturing the talents of the colleagues working around him.
“He’s a special guy. I’ve always looked to him as a leader,” Meyer says. “He just had a skill set that’s unique and a really fine mind.”
He describes Tomlinson as “a hard act to follow,” but adds that he believes Shelley—the fourth-generation family member to lead the real estate enterprise—is “doing as good as anyone possibly could. I think the quality of the agents and the quality of the company have remained consistent, including through tough times.”
Reflecting back on his career, Tomlinson says, “My father told me your good name is the most important thing you have.” He attributes a large part of his success to striving to live and do business with that thought in mind.
He’s uncomfortable, though, taking singular credit for the success of a business enterprise that he says had many key contributors.
“I sure don’t want it to come off like it was all me, because it wasn’t,” Tomlinson says. “An awful lot of people helped.”
One of the development projects he says he and fellow investors currently are pursuing likely will include 21 residential lots with boat slips along the Spokane River in the Post Falls area. Other projects are in the Tri-Cities and the Lewiston-Clarkston areas.
Krompton, Kim ” 2023 Business Icon: Tomlinson Family of Companies’ Bob Tomlinson: Third-generation broker expanded real estate firm to national prominence” Spokane Journal, May 11, 2023
Maintenance Hacks for Your Home
Delta Media Group
Try one of our quick tips to save money and time!
- Fasten a Tennis Ball to your Mop Handles
Never get on your hands and knees again to scrub scuff marks off your floor. Simply attach a fuzzy tennis ball to the end of your mop handle, and whenever you find a difficult scuff, flip the mop over and use the tennis ball to buff the mark from the floor.Bonus Hack: Keeping a couple of tennis balls in your swimming pool helps remove the oils, lotions, and sunscreens from the water. - Plunge the Clogs from the Drains
The next time your bathtub or sink drain backs up, don’t reach for a bottle of expensive chemical drain cleaner. Grab your toilet plunger instead. Fill the basin with a few inches of water, use a bit of cloth to cover the overfill hole, and use the plunger over the drain. More often than the clog loosens after just a few plunges. - Easy Spackle
If your drywall cracks, make your own spackling compound by mixing a small amount of baking soda with glue. - Loosen Stubborn Nails
Whenever you engage in a home improvement project, there always seems to be that one nail that refuses to come out. A homeowner’s trick that frequently works involves using a hairdryer to warm the nail, causing it to expand, creating a larger hole so that after the nail cools and returns to normal size, you can easily remove it. - Repair Windows
If you have a small hole or crack in your windows, fill the space with clear nail polish. It prevents the hole/crack from spreading when the temps drop below freezing. - Caulking Made Easy
Caulking isn’t always a favorite home maintenance chore. Many struggle to keep the tip of the caulk gun straight, or they find that they get caulk everywhere but the spot they want it at. Rather than having a professional come into handle routine caulking for you, stock up on painter’s tape. Simply place a strip of painter’s tape above and below the area you need to be caulked. Caulk the area and peel the tape away while the caulk is still wet. All the mess goes on the tape. - Fix Holes in Drywall
Don’t worry if you get a small hole in your drywall. Fixing it is easy. Home improvement experts will tell you that you’ll need to invest in paper tape or mesh. However, those with strong home maintenance skills know that all they really need is a small makeup brush to spackle their walls. Use the brush to fill the hole with spackle and sandpaper to sand down the spackle.
Take the Elbow Grease Out of Shower Cleaning
Rather than scrub by hand, easily clean your shower by fastening a foam ball to your cordless drill attachment. It’ll have your shower gleaming in no time.
Anytime Ribs Recipes
Fantastic recipes just in time for your holiday get-together!
Tequila Baby Back Ribs
- Dry Rub:
- 2 Tbsp. chili powder
- 2 Tbsp. paprika
- 1 Tbsp. garlic powder
- 1 Tbsp. salt
- 1 Tbsp. dried oregano
- 2 tsp. cumin
- 1 tsp. black pepper
- 1 tsp. white pepper
- 1 tsp. cayenne pepper
- 1 tsp. crushed red pepper
- 1 chopped onion
- 1 lg. handful chopped cilantro
- 3-4 cloves garlic, diced
- 1 bottle (fifth) tequila
- 1 lemon, halved
- 2 limes
Combine all the above and season 2 full slabs of ribs, each cut in half. Refrigerate 2-4 hours. Put half of 1 slab in 1-gallon ziploc bag, layer with onion, cilantro, and garlic. Place other half on top, repeat with onion, cilantro, and garlic. Pour in half bottle tequila. Add juice of half lemon and 1 lime. Seal. Repeat with other slab. Marinate at least 4 hours. Grill with onion, cilantro, and garlic at 350o until done.
Honey Mango-Glazed Baby Back Ribs
- 1 c. honey
- 2 full racks, baby back ribs
- 1 can chipotle peppers in adobo sauce
- 4 ripe mangos, cubed
- 1 tsp. pepper
- 1 Tbsp salt
Remove ribs from packaging, rinse and pat dry. Remove membrane from backside of ribs. Place ribs in shallow pan, sprinkle salt and pepper evenly and set aside. In a small saucepan, add chipotle/adobo, mango and honey. Cook over medium heat, stirring constantly until cooked down and thick enough to coat the back of a spoon. Using the slow and low method of BBQ’ing, set temperature to 225-240 degrees. If using coals, let them burn off and move over to one side of the grill. Wrap the ribs and 2/3 of the sauce mixture in aluminum foil tightly and place on grill. Close lid. After 2 hours, flip the ribs and let cook for another 2 hours. Open the aluminum and remove ribs, place them on grill and brush on remaining sauce and let cook another 30 minutes.