Who says that estate agents are among the least-trusted professionals in the UK?
According to fresh research by eXp UK, trust in estate agents is high, helping to ensure a positive relationship between home sellers and their agent.
The survey of over 1,000 UK home sellers, carried out by ProperPR on behalf of eXp, found that 95% of those who have sold a home over the last 12 months thought it was important that they trust their chosen estate agent.
Some 75% of respondents stated that they did ultimately trust the agent they opted for.
When asked which factors helped to cultivate trust when initially searching for an agent, face to face interaction with the agent topped the table.
Good old fashioned word of mouth was the second most influential factor when building trust, whilst the ability to demonstrate market performance via an agents website, via metrics such as the time it takes them to sell, also helped to boost trust levels.
Vendors were then asked which areas of the selling process those surveyed felt they could best trust their agent with.
Top of the pile was an agent’s ability to set an asking price in line with current market conditions, whilst frequent and clear communication also ranked highly, along with compiling a quality property listing, pushing a transaction through to completion and the negotiation of offers.
In contrast, when asked which areas they were least able to trust their agent with, the provision of support once a sale had completed topped the table, with the ability to overcome issues during the progression phase, such as chain delays, also ranking high.
Advice on how to improve the market value of a home came third.
The head of eXp UK, Adam Day, commented: “Trust is incredibly important when it comes to attracting sellers as the sale of their home is not only the largest they are ever likely to make, but it’s often a decision riddled with emotional attachment.
“It’s great to see that the vast majority of sellers trust their estate agent and this is largely cultivated through personal interaction, as well as word of mouth from other happy customers.
“It’s also interesting to see that an honest market appraisal and frequent communication are the two biggest factors that help build trust during the transaction process.
“In contrast, the ability to manage chain delays can be one of the biggest issues when building trust, but this is perhaps a tad unfair given that an agent’s influence is restricted at this stage of the transaction.
“That said, clear and frequent communication should be the absolute minimum in such circumstances so that sellers are at least aware of what’s happening with their sale and when it is likely to complete.”
It is always crucially important to analyse the actual survey questions before drawing firm conclusions of survey outcomes.
The phrasing and order of questions can be set in such ways as to draw preferable and misleading responses. It would be great to see those actual questions that were used. From the actual article I do find it conflicting to see vendors say they trust estate agent’s ability to price properties correctly whilst our sector continues to suffer from overvaluing and subsequent price reductions.
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Trust is a huge issue for vendors and there’s a lot of predictable responses in the survey. I’m all for any positive news that raises the status of the industry. The IPSOS Veracity Index of Trusted Professions 2023 puts estate agents ahead of only politicians, advertising executives and journalists.
It also raises the question: If 75% of 1,000 vendors did “ULTIMATELY trust the agency they opted for”, did that trust happen before or after the instruction? If it happened after the instruction and after the completion of sale, I would expect a higher figure. If it happened before the instruction, I’d argue that most consumers will concur that there was trust with the agency they opt for, otherwise it’s a coin toss and their fault if things don’t work out as they hoped.
I would have preferred to see a question asked of vendors whether they made the decision emotionally/intuitively, or logicallly. All the answers seem to indicate that competence is the over-riding factor in a decision on whether to trust – no mention of character.
Some of the most qualified professionals in any industry (Bernie Madoff) have turned out to lack positive character traits.
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