7 Signs Your Vendor Advocate Is Earning Their Fee
Engaging a vendor advocate should feel like an advantage not an added expense. The right advocate doesn’t just make the process smoother, they actively protect your sale price and help you make better decisions at every stage of the campaign.
Here are 7 clear signs your vendor advocate is genuinely earning their fee.
- They Are Truly Independent
Your advocate should represent you — and only you.
They should:
- recommend agents based on performance, not relationships
- challenge advice where necessary
- always prioritise your outcome over convenience
Independence is the foundation of good vendor advocacy.
- They Help You Choose the Right Agent (Not Just a Big Name)
The best-known agent isn’t always the best fit.
A good vendor advocate will:
- assess which agency team is strongest for your property type and location
- compare fee structures and marketing proposals
- select someone who can execute now, in the current market
This decision alone can materially impact your result.
- They Obsess Over the Marketing Detail
This is where real value is often created.
A strong vendor advocate will carefully review:
- whether the key features that buyers care about are clearly highlighted
- if the floor plan is accurate and marked up correctly
- whether the styling enhances the home’s strengths
- if the copy actually sells the lifestyle, benefits, and location
Agents often hand marketing to external providers, and most good agents are running multiple campaigns at once. We regularly see properties that need small but critical tweaks and those details matter.
- They Sense-Check Pricing and Strategy Throughout the Campaign
Pricing is not a “set and forget” decision.
A vendor advocate should:
- pressure-test pricing assumptions
- interpret buyer feedback early
- adjust strategy before momentum is lost
This ensures decisions are made with clarity, not emotion or guesswork.
- They Keep a Finger on the Pulse (and Hold the Agent Accountable)
You want someone who’s watching the campaign closely, not passively.
A good advocate:
- reviews all buyer feedback objectively
- ensures the agent is actively working buyers
- keeps momentum high and excuses low
Accountability is one of the most underrated advantages of vendor advocacy.
- They Manage Communication and Protect Your Headspace
Selling can be emotionally draining.
A quality advocate will:
- filter noise and summarise what actually matters
- communicate clearly and calmly
- help you make confident decisions under pressure
This allows the agent to focus on buyers and negotiations while you stay informed without being overwhelmed.
- They Improve the Outcome — Not Just the Experience
Ultimately, a vendor advocate earns their fee when they:
- reduce costly mistakes
- strengthen competition
- support better decision-making
- and help protect or maximise your sale price
A smoother process is nice. A stronger result is the goal.