A polished presentation and a confident manner tell a seller almost nothing about how an agent actually works. The questions that reveal that are specific, process-focused, and almost never asked.
Why Most Sellers Skip the Questions That Matter Most
Sellers are socially conditioned to be polite in the listing presentation. The agent is a guest in their home. Asking pointed questions feels confrontational. So sellers ask about commission, look at the comparable sales, and make their decision based on who felt most confident in the room. The result is an agent selection made on presentation skill rather than campaign skill - and those two things are not the same.
Sellers who make poor agent selections almost always made them based on surface signals: the agency brand, the confidence in the presentation, the price estimate that felt most optimistic. Not one of those signals reliably correlates with how an agent actually works. The agent who presents best is not always the agent who works best. The two things are frequently uncorrelated. A seller who selects based on those signals has not chosen the best agent - they have chosen the best presentation. What happens in the following six weeks is determined by something else entirely.
What to Ask That Exposes Real Agent Behaviour
Ask the agent to describe their buyer follow-up process after each open home. Not in general terms - specifically. Who contacts each buyer, within what timeframe, and what does that conversation cover. An agent with a genuine process can describe it in detail. An agent without one will describe an intention rather than a practice. The difference between those two answers is significant - and it predicts exactly what will happen to buyer interest after the first open home once the campaign begins.
These questions are not designed to catch agents out. They are designed to distinguish agents who have a real process from agents who have a polished presentation. The difference becomes visible quickly when the questions are specific enough.
Vague answers are data. They tell you what the agent does not have.
What Vague Agent Answers Usually Mean for the Campaign
Specific answers have a different structure. They describe sequences: after each open home, we contact every attendee within 24 hours, ask these specific questions, and report back with this specific information by Monday afternoon. That level of specificity is only possible if the process actually exists and has been executed before.
The listing presentation is the only point at which the seller has full negotiating leverage. Before the contract is signed, an agent will do almost anything to win the listing. After it is signed, the seller finds out what the agent actually does. The questions that reveal the difference between those two things are the ones most sellers never ask - and the ones that would change most agent selections if they were.
What an agent tells you before signing is the best evidence you will get about what happens after.
How to Recover When the Agent You Chose Is Not Performing
Sellers who signed without asking the right questions are not without options mid-campaign. The same questions that should have been asked before signing can be asked once the campaign is running - and they serve the same diagnostic function. What specific follow-up has happened with each interested buyer since the last open home? What is the current level of genuine buyer engagement in the local market? What does the agent recommend changing and why?
The information needed to make a good agent selection is available to every seller. The questions just have to be asked before the contract is signed. questions before listing is what gives sellers the foundation for a campaign they can have confidence in
Sellers who ask good questions before signing make better choices. Sellers who ask good questions during a campaign make better decisions.