The second piece of paperwork is called an agency agreement. These agreements confirm the terms under which your agent has been appointed and legally authorize the agent to perform duties on your behalf.
But be warned. These agency agreements are designed solely for the protection of the agent, not you.
In real estate, it’s all about getting the listing. If you work as a selling agent you simply have to get listings or you will not survive. The Sydney market is one of the best in the world so it stands to reason that if you can find and secure stock (ie properties) you will make sales. Not surprisingly, the competition amongst agents for listings is fierce.
What
many sellers don’t realise is that the agreement you sign with an agent is a
very powerful document. And surprisingly, many people don’t read the whole
document – until it’s too late. On one hand, I’m not surprised that this
happens as an average agency agreement is about four pages in small print.
However, you simply must know what you are signing before you sign it!
What
can go wrong? Plenty. We regularly meet consumers that signed an agreement with
an agent without realising that even if their property didn’t sell they would
be slugged for thousands of dollars in expenses. We also meet people who sign
agreements with agents that have exclusive periods (ie only that particular
agent is permitted to sell the property) that exceed four months. Which raises the obvious question: if an agent is
promising you that they already have buyers and will sell your house in two
weeks, why on earth are they asking you to sign a 16 week agreement?
A
very well known ‘premium’ franchise signs people up from 30 days prior to the
auction and then 90 days after the auction. Why? Why do they need 90 days after
the auction if they’re so confident that it will sell either prior to or at the
auction? Very good question…and this is where it gets interesting or sinister –
depending on how you are looking at it.
No matter what you have been promised by the agent prior to signing the agreement – once you have signed the agreement, you are trapped. It’s very common to hear people say the agent was great and then the minute they signed, things changed and the agent started talking the price down.
When you sign with an agent, the high point of the relationship shouldn’t be when they get your signature, but rather when contracts are exchanged for a price you’re delighted with.
David
Murphy owns an independent real estate agency in Sydney’s lower north shore –
feel free to call ON 02 9968 2088 or email with questions david@davidmurphy.com.au