“More Agents = More Buyers”… Sounds Right, But Isn’t
When selling a property, most owners fall into the same logical trap. They think:
“If one agent can bring buyers, then five agents should bring more.”
On the surface, this makes perfect sense. You want maximum exposure. You want your property in front of as many eyes as possible. So you give the listing to multiple agents. An open listing.
It feels like you are increasing your odds.
But in property, like many things in life, more does not always mean better. In fact, what actually changes when you open your listing is something far more important than visibility:
You remove control from your own sale.
And once control is gone, the outcome becomes unpredictable.
The First Signal You Send to Buyers
Today’s buyers are not passive. They are browsing across platforms like PropertyGuru and 99.co multiple times per day. They compare listings. They track how long a unit has been on the market. They notice inconsistencies.
So when your property appears three, four, or five times—each time with a different real estate agent, a slightly different description, and perhaps even a different price—the buyer’s conclusion is immediate and brutal:
“This unit cannot sell.” “That’s why so many agents are pushing it.” “They must be desperate. Let’s try a lower offer.”
Be honest — you are now the buyer.
You have the budget. You’re actively searching.
You see the same unit listed by multiple agents.
What’s your first thought?
This is not a rare reaction. It is the standard reaction.
Buyers don’t see ‘more marketing.’
They see ‘more urgency from the seller.’
What you intended as “aggressive marketing” is interpreted as “weak positioning.” And once buyers see you as weak, they stop competing against each other—and start competing to get the lowest price from you.
The Part Most Sellers Don’t Understand: Market Testing Done by the Agent
A genuinely well-managed sale does not rely on guesswork or luck. It relies on a structured testing process that typically includes:
- Adjusting pricing based on early buyer response (not randomly, but strategically)
- Changing how the property is positioned—shifting the angle, the target buyer profile, the key selling points
- Testing different marketing angles across platforms to see what generates genuine interest
- Observing buyer behaviour—what questions are being asked? Where does hesitation appear?
- Building momentum deliberately in the first few weeks, not just waiting for enquiries to trickle in
These are not random actions. They are controlled decisions, made in response to real market feedback.
And they shape two critical things:
- How buyers perceive your property
- How buyers ultimately offer
Why This Cannot Happen in an Open Listing
Here is the structural problem that most sellers never see coming.
In an open listing, no agent will seriously conduct this kind of testing.
And it is not because they are unskilled or unmotivated.
It is because the structure works against them.
Ask yourself honestly:
Why would an agent spend days refining pricing, repositioning the unit, testing different angles, and carefully building momentum… when they may not even be the one to close?
Any improvement they create—better phrasing, better positioning, better buyer perception—does not just benefit them. It benefits every other agent on the same listing.
One agent does the hard work. Another agent swoops in and closes using that improved setup.
That is not a theory. That is the daily reality of open listings.
What Happens Instead
Naturally, effort drops.
Everyone does just enough to stay involved — but not enough to move the deal forward.
- Put up a listing
- Wait for enquiries
- Arrange a few viewings
But no one does the deeper work:
- Refining strategy week by week
- Adjusting positioning based on feedback
- Building controlled momentum
- Owning the process from start to finish
Because why would they?
The Reality Sellers Need to Face
Your property is not being tested.
It is not being positioned.
It is not being managed.
It is simply being listed—and then left there.
And in a market where buyers are sharper and more skeptical than ever, being left there is the fastest way to become a stale listing that sells below value.
The first 2–3 weeks of a listing is where the strongest buyers are watching.
If you lose that window, you don’t get it back—you can only try to recover.
Advertising Costs Change Everything
Serious property marketing is not cheap. Strong campaigns on PropertyGuru, targeted social media ads, professional photography, and paid listings cost real money.
Now think logically:
Why would any agent spend serious money promoting your property when they might not even close the deal?
They won’t.
So in an open listing, what happens?
Everyone does a little bit. No one does enough.
You do not get one strong, well-funded campaign.
You get four or five weak, half-hearted ones.
And weak marketing does not create urgency. It creates noise—which buyers have learned to ignore.
If You Don’t Commit, Don’t Expect Commitment
This is not an emotional argument. It is structural.
If you do not commit to an agent, your agent will not commit to you.
Effort follows certainty. When an agent knows they are the sole person responsible, their behaviour changes:
- They take ownership of the outcome
- They invest time refining the strategy
- They spend marketing money knowing it will not be wasted
- They stay accountable until the deal is done
Without exclusivity, you get none of that. Your property becomes just another “try and see” listing in a long queue of possibilities.
The Interest Shift: Who Are They Really Protecting?
In an open listing, agents are competing—but not to get you the best price.
They are competing to close first.
And this creates a critical, often invisible shift:
Instead of protecting your price, the system naturally pushes agents to protect their chances of closing—so they can recover the time and money already invested.
And the fastest way to secure a commission is to close a deal, not necessarily the best deal.
This shows up in subtle but damaging ways:
- Encouraging you to accept the first decent offer
- Framing information in a way that nudges you toward a quicker decision
- Not holding out for a better buyer
- Avoiding strategies that require patience (like waiting for the right buyer to appear)
Because waiting introduces risk.
And in an open listing, risk doesn’t just mean uncertainty—it means another agent could step in and close before you do.
So the system naturally shifts toward:
Faster deals, not better deals.
Why COV Becomes Unlikely in an Open Listing
If your unit has COV potential, an open listing is the fastest way to kill it. Here’s why.
Achieving COV in an open listing is not impossible.
But it becomes significantly more difficult.
Not because your property isn’t good. But because of how buyers perceive it.
When a unit is marketed by multiple agents at the same time, buyers draw a simple conclusion:
“This seller is trying too hard to sell.”
That signals weakness. And in property, perceived weakness directly affects price. And once buyers see weakness, they stop competing—and start negotiating down.
Why Open Listings Weaken COV
An open listing removes the conditions required for strong offers:
- The property appears overexposed → buyers assume it is not moving
- Pricing feels uncertain or inconsistent
- No single agent is fully committed → no momentum
- Buyers sense urgency from the seller → no pressure to act
So instead of stepping forward with strong offers, buyers wait. They negotiate slowly. They push for a lower price.
So while the intention is to increase exposure…
The outcome often does the opposite—
it quietly pushes your achievable price down.
What an Exclusive Listing Actually Allows You to Do
Exclusive is not about limiting exposure. That is the single biggest misunderstanding sellers have.
Exclusive is about enabling proper execution.
Only with exclusivity can an agent:
- Properly test pricing without interference
- Adjust strategy based on real buyer feedback
- Invest in meaningful marketing with confidence
- Control how buyers perceive the unit (instead of letting five different agents tell five different stories)
- Build momentum at the right time—not just whenever someone has a free afternoon
In short:
Exclusive allows your property to be managed—not just marketed.
“But Will I Lose Buyers If I Go Exclusive?”
No. This fear is common, but incorrect.
Even with an exclusive listing, other agents can still bring buyers. Co-broking still happens. Commissions are still shared.
You are not reducing exposure. You are simply:
- Centralising control
- Keeping messaging consistent
- Protecting your negotiation position
Think of it this way: having five agents is not like having five fishing rods in the water. It is like having five people pulling the same fishing rod in five different directions. You catch nothing.
A Real Case: When More Agents Led to Zero Progress
I once worked with a seller who came to me frustrated. His unit had been on the market for nearly five months with almost no serious buyer interest.
When I reviewed the situation, I discovered something immediately concerning:
He already had three agents marketing the property.
At first glance, this sounded like strong exposure. But in reality:
- Marketing was inconsistent across all platforms
- Listings were outdated (some still showed old pricing)
- There was no clear pricing strategy
- Viewings had dropped to nearly zero
And most importantly—no one was actively managing the sale anymore.
Each agent had tried in the first few weeks. But after months without results, effort naturally dropped. Why keep pushing when another agent might benefit? Why reinvest when the listing already feels “stale”?
Once momentum is lost in an open listing… there is no reason for any single agent to keep pushing.
The Reset That Changed Everything
I told the seller three things, very clearly:
- Give me exclusive control.
- Stop all marketing immediately.
- Let the listing rest for two months—no viewings, no ads, no presence online.
He was uncomfortable. Stopping everything felt risky. Resting felt like wasting time.
But the reality was simple: the property was already stuck. Continuing the same approach would not fix it.
Eventually, he agreed.
What Happened Next
We pulled everything down. No listings. No ads. No viewings.
We let the property disappear from the market entirely.
During that two-month rest, we:
- Reviewed pricing properly (not guessing, but using fresh comparables)
- Repositioned the unit for a specific buyer profile
- Planned a clean, focused relaunch with one clear message
After two months, we relaunched.
Clean. Focused. Controlled.
And this time—the unit was sold within two weeks.
What This Case Really Shows
The problem was never a lack of agents.
It was:
- Lack of strategy – No one was thinking beyond “post and pray.”
- Lack of control – Five different versions of the same property confused the market.
- Lack of accountability – With no single owner, no one stayed the course.
Once those three things were fixed, the result followed—quickly and predictably.
When an Open Listing Actually Makes Sense
To be completely fair, an open listing can still work. But usually for a different reason.
Open listings make sense when:
In these situations, you may need more outreach, more agents, and more attempts—because the problem is not poor execution. The problem is a lack of demand.
But for a normal property in a normal market? Open listing is not a strategy. It is an abdication of control.
And in property, lack of control doesn’t just affect the process—it affects your final selling price.
The Real Question
This is not really about open versus exclusive.
It is about one question:
Do you want your property to be handled seriously… or circulated casually?
Because once your property enters the market, buyers are forming impressions immediately. Within hours, they have decided whether your unit is a “hot opportunity” or a “stale listing to lowball.”
The longer a property sits, the more buyers assume something is wrong—
even when nothing is.
And those impressions are very, very hard to reverse.
Not every seller needs an exclusive strategy.But sellers who care about outcome, positioning, and control—usually do.
Final Thought
Many sellers start with an open listing. It feels flexible. Safe. Low commitment.
But over time, they realise the truth:
- No one is truly accountable
- No one is pushing hard
- The property loses momentum quietly, week by week
By the time they switch to exclusive… they are no longer starting fresh.
They are trying to recover.
Don’t let your property become a recovery project.
Start with control.
Because once it’s lost, you don’t get a second clean chance at the market.
Thinking about selling and want to understand what a properly managed sale looks like for your property? Let’s have a straightforward conversation — no pressure, just clarity.
I'm Jerey Han Sin from PropNex, bringing over decades of experience as a seasoned agent. Whether you're considering selling your HDB or condo in Singapore, or renting your property, I'm here to assist you every step of the way.
My expertise spans both residential and commercial properties, ensuring comprehensive support for all your real estate needs. Backed by a dedicated team, we stand ready to provide the assistance you require for a seamless and successful transaction.
If you're unsure what to do next, you can request a professional property and asset planning session before making a decision.
Your property journey is important to us, and I'm committed to making it a smooth and rewarding experience for you.
I hope you enjoyed reading my article. Please note that this is a creative and informative piece of writing, and not professional advice. If you have any questions or feedback, feel free to reach out 😊
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