And yet it is probably the least systematised part of what most agents do.
What follows is not a guide to what sellers should demand. It is an honest description of what good communication during a property sale looks like, why it matters beyond just keeping sellers comfortable, and what its absence tends to produce.
What Good Communication Actually Looks Like During a Campaign
The number is not the information. What the number means in the context of where the campaign is sitting - that is the information.
Sellers who receive that level of communication tend to make better decisions during the campaign.
Frequency is the easy metric. Substance is the useful one.
If buyer interest is cooling, the seller should hear that before it becomes obvious from the absence of offers. If a price adjustment is likely to be necessary, that conversation should happen early - not after three weeks of low engagement.
Why Honest Feedback Matters More Than Good News
The feedback from a buyer who found the property overpriced is useful information. Delivered clearly, it helps the seller calibrate. Softened into "they were interested but not quite ready to commit" it helps nobody.
Some agents avoid it because sellers sometimes react badly. Some avoid it because it leads to conversations about price adjustments that are harder than conversations about inspections going well.
An agent who tells you only good things has given you no way to know whether the good things are real.
Honest feedback delivered with context is not the same as brutal feedback delivered without care.
An agent who makes every call feel positive is not necessarily running a good campaign.
How the Way an Agent Communicates Affects Seller Decision-Making
Communication is not just about how the seller feels during the campaign. It affects what the seller does.
The decision to accept an offer, counter it, or decline and wait is one of the most consequential decisions in a property sale.
When transparent process is built from honest ongoing information rather than reassuring summaries, sellers in the Gawler area tend to find that property guidance produces better decisions at the moments in the campaign that are hard to reverse.
The difference between being updated and being informed is real.
How the agent made them feel during the campaign - whether they felt informed, respected, and honestly represented - tends to be what stays.
An agent who communicates well earns a seller's trust at the moments when that trust matters most - when an offer is on the table, when a price conversation needs to happen, when the campaign needs to change direction.