Good Enough Is Everywhere
Good Enough Is Everywhere — And That’s the Real Problem
“Good enough” has quietly become the standard in almost every industry.
Good enough customer service.
Good enough communication.
Good enough follow-up.
Good enough marketing.
Good enough professionalism.
People have become so used to average performance that they stop questioning it. They accept delays, excuses, poor communication, weak negotiation, and a lack of real strategy because it feels normal.
And in real estate, that mindset can be incredibly expensive.
Because unlike a bad dinner at a restaurant or poor service at a retail store, a mediocre real estate experience doesn’t just create frustration—it can cost you thousands, sometimes tens of thousands, of dollars.
That’s the part most people miss.
Most real estate agents are not bad people. Most aren’t even bad agents.
They’re just average.
They return calls—eventually.
They take listing photos.
They put the home on the MLS.
They install a sign in the yard.
They schedule showings.
They hold an open house.
They negotiate an offer.
They get the transaction to the closing table.
That’s “good enough.”
And for many homeowners, that’s all they think they need.
But if you are selling one of your largest financial assets, good enough should never be the standard.
Because average effort creates average results.
An average agent prices your home based on nearby sales and a quick conversation.
A strategic agent studies market timing, buyer behavior, inventory absorption, financing trends, and emotional positioning to maximize leverage.
An average agent focuses on getting offers.
A high-level agent focuses on creating competition.
An average agent reacts to buyer objections.
A professional controls the conversation before objections ever happen.
An average agent negotiates price.
A great agent negotiates terms, timing, contingencies, inspection leverage, appraisal strategy, and net outcome.
There is a massive difference between selling a house and maximizing a sale.
And most sellers never realize what they left on the table because they never see the alternative.
That is what makes average service so dangerous.
Bad service is obvious.
You know when someone drops the ball.
But average service is subtle. It feels fine. It feels normal. It feels like “this is just how real estate works.”
That’s where people lose money.
They assume the result they got was the best result possible, when in reality it may have simply been the easiest result for the agent.
That distinction matters.
Because many agents are trained to focus on speed, not strategy.
Get the listing.
Get it sold.
Move to the next one.
But homeowners should be asking a very different question:
Not “How fast can you sell my home?”
But “How well can you protect my equity?”
Because speed without strategy can be expensive.
Taking the first offer because it feels safe can be expensive.
Underpricing for convenience can be expensive.
Poor inspection negotiation can be expensive.
Weak contract management can be expensive.
Choosing the wrong representation can be the most expensive decision of the entire process.
And yet, many homeowners choose an agent the same way they choose a pizza place.
A friend referred them.
They saw their face on Facebook.
They received a postcard.
They met them once at a school event.
They liked their personality.
None of those things determine competence.
Being likable is not a strategy.
Being familiar is not expertise.
And having a real estate license does not mean someone knows how to protect your financial future.
The better question is:
Who are you trusting with one of the largest financial decisions of your life?
Who has the systems?
Who has the discipline?
Who understands leverage?
Who knows how to create demand instead of chasing buyers?
Who treats your home sale like a business decision, not a casual transaction?
That is the person you hire.
Not the cheapest.
Not the closest.
Not the most convenient.
The most capable.
Because “good enough” is everywhere.
Excellence is rare.
True professionalism is rare.
Real strategy is rare.
And in an industry filled with average, the right representation changes everything.
You do not need another agent promising the same things everyone else promises.
You need someone who understands that your home is not just a property.
It is equity.
It is leverage.
It is opportunity.
It is one of the largest financial decisions you will ever make.
That deserves more than good enough.
It deserves exceptional.
Because average is expensive.
And good enough is costing people far more than they realize.


