A real estate agent managing a property sale is doing significantly more than most sellers realise before they go through the process.
This is not a sales pitch for the industry. It is a description of what a competent selling agent is responsible for at each stage of a campaign.
How a Selling Agent Builds the Foundation of Your Campaign
Before a property goes to market, a selling agent is coordinating a series of tasks that determine how the campaign will perform.
Then the marketing preparation. Copy, photography, portal selection, inspection scheduling.
The pre-listing period sets the tone for everything that follows. A rushed or poorly considered start rarely recovers cleanly.
The sellers who feel most in control during a sale are usually the ones who understood what was happening in the week before it went live. local representation goes well beyond putting a listing online.
What Happens Between Listing and Receiving an Offer
The middle of a campaign is where good and average agents begin to look very different from each other.
Enquiries come in at different volumes and from different types of buyers. Some are serious. Some are early. Some need managing carefully because they could become serious if handled well.
Good buyer management during an active campaign is less about administration and more about reading the room. Who is emotionally engaged. Who is stalling. Who needs more information versus who needs a nudge toward a decision.
Passive agents receive offers. Active ones cultivate them.
Not every offer deserves a counter. Not every buyer who offers low is a bad buyer. The agent who understands the difference earns their commission at this stage more than any other.
Judgement is what sellers are actually paying for.
Negotiation, Contracts and Getting You to Settlement
Accepted offer is not the end. It is the beginning of the administrative and legal phase - and things can still go wrong.
Contract management, condition follow-up, settlement timing - these are the unglamorous parts of the role that sellers only notice when they go wrong.
What sellers are actually buying when they engage a real estate agent is not access to a listing portal.
Questions Sellers Have About What Agents Actually Do
How much buyer interaction does a seller need to manage
The seller is usually kept informed of buyer activity through regular updates from the agent, but is not expected to engage with buyers directly. That is what the agent is there to manage.
Does the agent stay involved after the offer is signed
Settlement coordination is part of the role. Condition follow-up, solicitor liaison, and timeline management all sit with the agent through to the day of settlement.
How often should a real estate agent update the seller
Regular, substantive updates are a minimum expectation - not a bonus. If an agent only calls when there is an offer on the table, that is a communication gap.