What do buyers and sellers need when they select a real estate agent? Are they looking for expertise? Reputation? The latest tech tools? Familiarity with the neighborhood? Or do they conclude that their sale or purchase can be entrusted to a friend, regardless of their experience, because, after all, how complicated can it be? Do consumers devote considerable time to determining whom they should work with, and what criteria they use to choose one agent instead of another? They should.

First, what NOT to look for. 

Here is a cautionary tale: An agent at my firm recently sold an apartment, with multiple bids, in less than a week. The apartment had been listed previously for many months with an agent at another firm — a friend of the husband of the couple was selling the unit but was new to the business himself. Incorrectly priced, inappropriately comped, with poor quality photos and a misleading description, the property languished on the market for months with no offers. Once the property was relisted at a better price, with beautiful photos and an accurate description, it attracted extensive interest and sold at once. 

Lesson #1 – expertise matters.

In April, the national brokerage firm Compass went public in a much-anticipated public offering. The company, based on its last round of raised capital (much of it from SoftBank), had been valued in excess of $6 billion. This valuation, based largely on Compass’s claim that their transformative technology and artificial intelligence were revolutionizing the brokerage landscape, has failed to excite the public. The stock, which opened at a valuation of $18 and change, trades today, only a month later, for $14 and change. 

Real estate brokerage blogger and analyst Mike del Prete noted in the run-up to the Compass IPO that there seemed to be no evidence that the Compass tech tools had made the company’s agents more productive. 

Lesson #2 – don’t be fooled by the window dressing.

So the evidence suggests that neither new technology nor friendship should determine the choice of a residential agent, although the former can certainly be useful and the latter is lovely to have. Then, what criteria should a consumer use in evaluating agents in order to choose the best one? Here are a few tips:

An efficient relationship based on mutual respect will lead to the best outcome in what is, for most people, the most significant financial transaction of their lives. Particularly in an accelerating real estate market, like the one New York City is experiencing today, the best advice can mean the difference between success and disappointment.