Thinking of selling your home? Here’s why a Sole Mandate Will Earn You More

Advice, Sellers

   

Screenshot 2021-03-05 at 13.18.19

As a seller, you’ll need to make several smart choices to get the best price for your home. One of those will be choosing between a sole or an open mandate.

The differences between the two types of mandates may seem quite obvious. 

  • A sole mandate gives a single agent the exclusive right to market and sell your home.
  • An open mandate allows any qualified agent to find you a willing buyer. May the best salesperson win!

Under normal circumstances, you’d be forgiven for thinking that open mandates sound like the better deal. More competition and more exposure mean better service and a wider pool of buyers, right? Unfortunately, in the case of property sales, the opposite is more commonly true.

On the property market, competition between agents tends to incentivise a quick sale over a reasonable price. No one wants to waste time on negotiations when they could be beaten to the finish line by another agent at any moment. Because of this, it becomes far safer for an agent on an open mandate to push through a lower offer – and be guaranteed that commission – than to hold out for a higher offer and risk losing out altogether.

For similar reasons, agents on open mandates typically invest less time and money on great marketing, since they have no guarantee that they’ll be able to recoup that investment if the sale goes to someone else. That means open mandate homes are often underrepresented, despite their many agents, with poor quality photographs and carelessness – or just plain non-enticing listings. 

Agents with the wrong incentives aren’t the only problem with open mandates, however. Sellers also have to keep track of multiple agents, make their home available for multiple viewings, get out of the way for multiple show houses, and make room for multiple “For Sale” signs on their lawns. It can become a bit of a logistical nightmare and certainly destroys any impression of exclusivity buyers might have had. It also makes it difficult to get accurate feedback on how your property is faring, what buyers are saying, and what the market conditions are.

Open mandates add a risk of double commission

More importantly, open mandates can cause disputes as to which agent is truly responsible for the sale. If a buyer visits a show-house with one agent but negotiates and makes an offer via a different agent, you could face two parties who both contributed to the sale. Unless your contracts are unambiguous and you know exactly who did what, and when, that could put you in a position of having to pay double commission – something you’d never have with a sole mandate.

Choose a sole mandate!

Almost all the downsides of an open mandate are solved by simply choosing a single agent to represent you. With a sole mandate, your agent can afford to give your property their full attention, because they’re guaranteed the commission from the sale. That means they’re not going to shy away from spending more time and money on marketing or putting more effort into negotiations. The higher the price they achieve, the better they are rewarded for their efforts – an incentive that aligns their goals far better with those of the average seller.

 

Ready to sell? We will help you sell your property – quickly, easily and at the right price. Get in touch with our team of neighbourhood experts for a property valuation or advice on selling your property. Contact us on 021 658 7100, email marketing@rawsonproperties.com or visit our website on www.rawson.co.za 

Rawson

Leave a comment