What a Listing Agent Should Do — and What Maximum Effort Actually Looks Like
Neither should your list price be based on an algorithm that hasn't. We start by meeting at the home, understanding your situation, and observing the property firsthand. Then we return with a strategy built around your specific goals. Presenting a price before doing that work isn't a starting point — it's a guess.
We start by understanding your situation
We meet at the home to understand your intentions, timeframe, financial situation, and any factors specific to your circumstances — divorce, estate, downsizing, relocation, sell and buy simultaneously. We walk the property. We ask questions. We listen. We do not bring a price to this meeting.
We return with a plan built around your goals
We come back with a pricing strategy, marketing plan, and preparation recommendations developed specifically for your home and your situation — not a template pulled from the last listing. Every recommendation is built around what we learned in Step 1 and what we observed in the home.
| Phase | Minimum Effort | Better | Maximum Effort — The Cyr Team |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pre-Listing | iPhone pulled out - photo taken. MLS form completed. Price based on a quick CMA. | Professional photography. Basic staging walkthrough. Marketing plan template. | Two-step process. Value-add improvements identified sensitive to budget and timeline. U&O and municipal requirements identified early. Buyer Universe analysis. Five FH-compliant buyer personas. Persona-specific description angles. Persona-specific social content per buyer profile. Pre-listing inspection. Formal launch sequence. |
| Launch | Listing goes live on MLS. Auto-syndicates to Zillow. | Coming soon on social. Open house first weekend. | Offer strategy established before first showing. Offer handling protocol defined. Buyer Universe activation — Known Active, Known Passive, Unknown Active, Unknown Passive — each addressed differently with content matched to platform and persona. |
| Active | Waiting for offers. Price reduction when listing goes stale. | Showing feedback collected. Weekly check-in. Competition monitored informally. | Buyer and buyer agent expectation management. Formalized offer handling system. Offer comparison analysis showing net proceeds per offer — not just headline price. Buying agent community actively engaged and kept informed throughout. |
| Under Contract | Inspection report forwarded. Fingers crossed on appraisal. | Inspection items reviewed. Repair credits discussed. Appraisal date tracked. | Licensed Transaction Coordinator running documented processes through integrated software — managed by a human whose judgment only years of experience could produce. Every date made. All parties informed before and as events happen. No seat-of-the-pants processing. |
| Settlement | Show up. Sign. Hand over keys. | Walk-through coordinated. Final figures reviewed. | Nothing surprises anyone at the closing table because every phase was managed as a documented system from day one. Settlement is the last step of a process — not the moment problems surface. |
Pre-Listing: Where Home Sales Are Won or Lost
The preparation phase is where the outcome of your sale is largely determined — before a single showing is scheduled. This is where we identify value-add improvements designed to improve how your home is perceived by the marketplace, always sensitive to your budget and timeframe. We do not recommend improvements for their own sake. We manage the constraints you have.
This is also where we identify municipal and township Use and Occupancy requirements that are entirely independent of the home inspection. U&O certificates are township-mandated with their own timeline, pass/fail criteria, and remediation requirements. A seller who discovers a U&O issue after going under contract is negotiating from a weakened position with a deadline. We identify these requirements during preparation — before the listing goes live — so you have time to address anything on your terms, with your contractors, at your pace. Requirements vary significantly across Chester County, Delaware County, and Montgomery County municipalities.
The Buyer Universe
Most agents think about buyers as a single pool. We segment them before the listing launches — because each quadrant requires a different activation strategy, and the marketing plan is built around that structure from day one.
Known Active Buyers
Already in the market, actively searching. Reached through agent network and MLS on day one. These buyers just need to find you.
Known Passive Buyers
Not actively searching but would move for the right property. Reached through coming-soon campaigns and targeted pre-marketing before active status.
Unknown Active Buyers
Searching but haven't found you yet. Reached through MLS syndication, targeted digital marketing, and search optimization.
Unknown Passive Buyers
Don't know they want to move until they see something that changes that. Reached through social and visual content that creates aspiration.
Buyer Persona Analysis
Within that framework, we produce a property-specific buyer persona analysis before the listing launches. The marketing strategy, description angles, staging decisions, and social content are all built around these profiles before the first photo is taken. The following is from a recent 4-bedroom listing in the Garnet Valley area of Delaware County.
| Persona | Likely Origin | Stage (FH-Safe) | Typical Industries | Budget Mindset | Key Motivators |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| School-District-First Searcher | Local Delco / Chesco | Prioritizing district alignment and resale confidence | Healthcare, finance, tech, trades | Stretching but disciplined | Location, strong comps, right condition, easy weekday routines |
| Philly / Wilmington Corridor Commuter | Philly / DE / NJ | Commute-optimized; values predictable logistics | Corporate, pharma, sales, consulting | Value-driven; hates wasted time | Route access, drive-time reliability, turnkey feel |
| WFH + Flex-Space Maximizer | Local move-up | Hybrid or remote; needs defined work zones | Tech, recruiting, design, operations | Pays for layout over "extra rooms" | Office-ready spaces, quiet corners, work/downtime separation |
| Low-Maintenance, Low-Drama Buyer | Cross-shopping $600–$750k listings | Detail-oriented, risk-aware household | Engineering, accounting, project management | Conservative; wants clean inspection posture | Systems clarity, upgrade documentation, simple story |
| Weekend-Host / Outdoor-Rhythm Buyer | Local and regional | Social household that hosts regularly | Small business, management, sales | Amenity-driven | Deck/yard flow, kitchen connection, space for gatherings |
Market signal from comp set: homes in this segment sold at approximately 103.5% of list price with an average of 4 days on market. Primary persona: Low-Maintenance, Low-Drama Buyer — certainty beats charm at this price band. Non-obvious insight: buyers are not purchasing "4 bedrooms." They are purchasing zones. Marketing leads with zones, not room count.
Listing Description Angles
We write multiple description angles — each targeting a specific buyer persona. The MLS description leads with the primary persona. Syndication and social content rotates angles based on platform and audience.
Social Media Content by Persona
The same five buyer personas that drive the description angles also drive the social content strategy. Each persona gets its own feed post, reel hook, and story frame — written before the listing launches.
Feed / Carousel
A layout that gives you real flexibility (office / hobby / guest)
A location that stays on short lists for a reason
Feed / Carousel
Enough space to spread out without feeling oversized
A layout that doesn't require constant rearranging
Reel Hook
Second flex space for workout / hobby / guest.
Main living stays uncluttered.
Feed / Carousel
Simple, straightforward property story
Documentation available
Reel Hook
Space for gatherings without stepping on each other
Easy indoor/outdoor rhythm
Story Strategy
Universal DM Keywords
Every piece of content routes to one of four keyword triggers — so every buyer type has a frictionless path to the information they specifically want.
All social content is Fair Housing compliant — behavioral and lifestyle-based, no identity-based language. "A layout that handles real life — workdays, weekends, and everyone doing different things at the same time" is compliant. "Perfect for young professionals" is not. Same message. Different legal posture.
"What buyer personas will you identify for my property — and will you show me the specific social content you'll produce for each one before we list? Will you identify my township's U&O requirements before the listing goes live?"
Launch: The Strategy Is Set Before the First Showing
Most agents figure out how to handle offers after one arrives. We have that conversation before showings begin — before there is any pressure, any deadline, and any buyer waiting on the other end of the phone.
The decision to accept offers as they come in versus setting an offer deadline depends on your market conditions, anticipated buyer volume, your timeline, and your risk tolerance. These factors are assessed during preparation. The protocol is defined before day one of showings. When an offer arrives, we are not making a decision under pressure — we are executing a strategy we already agreed on.
The Buyer Universe framework drives launch activation simultaneously. Known Active buyers through agent network and MLS on day one. Known Passive buyers through pre-marketing before active status. Unknown Active buyers through syndication and targeted digital marketing. Unknown Passive buyers through the persona-specific social content already built and ready to deploy the moment the listing goes live.
"When do we discuss offer handling strategy — before showings begin or after the first offer arrives? How do you activate different buyer segments simultaneously at launch?"
Active: Managing the Market, Not Waiting on It
Once the listing is live, the work shifts to the buying community — not just the buyers, but the agents who represent them. We maintain active communication with buyer agents throughout the showing period so every agent who has a potential buyer feels informed, included, and able to participate with all the information they need to make an offer. An agent who feels shut out or uninformed does not bring their buyer back.
When offers arrive, they go through a formalized offer handling system at offers.thecyrteam.com. Every offer is analyzed and formatted into a structured comparison — evaluated across the same dimensions simultaneously so the decision is based on data, not impression. The highest offer price is not always the highest net proceeds.
Spread between highest and lowest net on this five-offer set: $26,821. Offer 2 nets $6,779 more than Offer 4 despite the same headline price — because of concession and financing differences. Without this analysis, a seller choosing by offer price alone could leave over $26,000 on the table.
"Can you show me a sample offer comparison that displays net proceeds per offer — not just the headline price? How do you maintain communication with buyer agents throughout the showing period?"
Under Contract: The Phase Where Most Money Is Lost or Saved
Most sellers assume that going under contract means the hard part is over. It isn't. The under contract phase — inspection, appraisal, financing contingency, and the timeline to settlement — is where deals fall apart, where concessions are extracted, and where sellers who weren't prepared lose money they didn't know they were at risk of losing.
The inspection response is not a reactive conversation. The seller who completed a pre-listing inspection arrives at this phase with no surprises — because what the buyer's inspector finds was already known, documented, and priced into the transaction. The response is prepared, not improvised. The appraisal is not left to chance. A comparable support package is prepared before the appraiser visits. Every financing contingency deadline is monitored actively — not discovered when it has passed.
The Transaction Coordinator system. Our licensed Transaction Coordinator manages the under contract phase through a system of multiple integrated software platforms — managed by a human whose judgment only years of experience could produce.
Every contractual date is tracked. Every party — buyer, buyer's agent, lender, title company, township — is kept informed before and as events happen. There is no seat-of-the-pants processing. Technology without judgment misses the nuance that experienced human oversight catches. Judgment without documented systems misses dates. The combination is what protects your transaction from contract to closing table.
"Who manages my transaction after we go under contract — and what systems do they use? How do you prepare for the appraisal before the appraiser visits? What is your contingency monitoring process?"
Settlement: The Last Step of a System
Settlement should be a formality. Not a surprise. Not the moment a problem surfaces that nobody addressed. When every phase before it was managed as a documented system — the pre-listing inspection, the U&O requirements addressed before listing, the appraisal supported before the appraiser arrived, the financing contingencies monitored against their deadlines, all parties kept informed as events happened — the closing table is exactly what it should be: the moment you receive what was agreed upon.
The work that protects your settlement happens in the four phases before it. That is what maximum effort means in practice.
"Walk me through what your process looks like from the moment we go under contract to the closing table. What systems do you use to make sure nothing falls through the cracks?"
What should a listing agent do before pricing my home?
A listing agent should meet with you first to understand your intentions, timeframe, financial constraints, and situation-specific factors. Then they should physically see your home before developing a pricing and marketing strategy. Giving a seller a price without doing that additional analysis — based on an algorithm or a quick CMA pulled before seeing the property — is irresponsible.
What are Use and Occupancy requirements in Pennsylvania real estate?
U&O certificates and municipal inspection requirements are mandated by individual townships, entirely independent of the buyer's home inspection. They have their own timeline, pass/fail criteria, and remediation requirements. A seller who discovers a U&O issue under contract is negotiating from a weakened position with a deadline. We identify these requirements during preparation — before the listing goes live. Requirements vary significantly by municipality across Chester County, Delaware County, and Montgomery County.
How should offers be handled when selling a home?
Offer strategy should be defined before showings begin. The decision between accepting offers as they come in versus setting an offer deadline depends on market conditions, anticipated buyer volume, your timeline, and risk tolerance. Once offers arrive, a formalized comparison system analyzes each across price, financing strength, LTV, deposit, contingencies, concessions, and net proceeds — so you are comparing real outcomes, not headline numbers.
What does a licensed Transaction Coordinator do in a real estate sale?
A licensed TC manages the under contract phase through documented processes and integrated software — managed by a human whose judgment only years of experience could produce. Every date is tracked, every party is kept informed before and as events happen. This is a system that protects your transaction from contract to closing table — not a calendar and good intentions.
What questions should I ask a listing agent before hiring them?
Ask: Do you meet with me before seeing the home, or do you bring a price to the first meeting? Will you physically walk through the home before developing a pricing strategy? What buyer personas will you identify and how do they drive your marketing and social content? Will you identify U&O requirements before we list? What is your offer handling protocol and when do we discuss it? Can you show me a sample offer comparison with net proceeds per offer? Who manages the under contract phase? Use InterviewYourAgent by The Cyr Team to generate a complete situation-specific question set for your exact circumstances.
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