Track records are real. The sales happened. The prices are accurate. What is missing is context - and context is where the picture changes. A list of twenty sold properties in twelve months looks impressive until you find out the agent had forty listings and half of them did not sell.Most sellers do not know what to look for in an agent tra… Read More
The relationship between inspection attendance and competing offers is not automatic. Something has to happen in between - and that something is almost entirely the responsibility of the agent.The open home is visible. The follow-up is not. Sellers see the number of groups through. They do not see whether those groups were contacted afterwa… Read More
The assumption that a well-known agency name guarantees a better outcome is one of the most persistent beliefs in real estate. It is also one of the least supported by evidence.Agency brand is a marketing asset. It builds consumer recognition and supports recruitment. What it does not do is determine how an individual agent prepares for a l… Read More
Picture a vendor sitting across from their agent, hearing for the first time what the market thinks their property is worth. The reaction arrives before any logic does - before the comparable sales are considered, before the data is processed, before the rational mind has a chance to weigh in.It is about the years of ordinary life the walls… Read More
The appraisal process is where a significant number of Gawler vendor campaigns go wrong - not because of anything that happens after launch, but because of the number written on a piece of paper during a thirty-minute presentation. That number shapes the price. The price shapes the buyer response. The buyer response shapes everything that follows.… Read More