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When a seller says they want to interview other agents, most agents say "no problem" and drive away knowing they just lost the listing. That is not an objection. That is an emotion. And there is a word-for-word way to handle it before you ever leave the room.
Most agents lose listings not during the pitch but at the close. The seller liked you. The appointment went well. And then they said they had another agent coming by later and you had nothing. You went quiet. You let it happen. The real problem is that nobody taught you what to say in that exact moment, not a generic reframe, but an actual sequential script that reads the seller's emotional state and gives you a precise path forward based on what they say next.
Here is what this breaks down:
✅ Why the seller wanting to interview more agents is an emotional objection, not a logical one, and why that distinction changes everything about how you respond
✅ The full live real estate listing appointment roleplay so you can hear exactly how the conversation flows in real time, not just read a script off a page
✅ The three decisions every seller must make before signing and how walking them through each one on the spot replaces pressure with clarity
✅ How to use the Colombo close to relieve pressure while staying in the room and still moving toward a signature
✅ The real estate objection handling script for isolating whether the hesitation is price, marketing, or commission, and how to address each one sequentially without guessing
✅ What to do when the seller says they feel obligated to meet the other agent even though they have already decided, and how to offer to cancel that appointment on their behalf
If you want to understand how to close a listing appointment when the clock is already running on a competing agent showing up later that afternoon, this is the playbook.ƒ
By Aaron Novello5
2424 ratings
When a seller says they want to interview other agents, most agents say "no problem" and drive away knowing they just lost the listing. That is not an objection. That is an emotion. And there is a word-for-word way to handle it before you ever leave the room.
Most agents lose listings not during the pitch but at the close. The seller liked you. The appointment went well. And then they said they had another agent coming by later and you had nothing. You went quiet. You let it happen. The real problem is that nobody taught you what to say in that exact moment, not a generic reframe, but an actual sequential script that reads the seller's emotional state and gives you a precise path forward based on what they say next.
Here is what this breaks down:
✅ Why the seller wanting to interview more agents is an emotional objection, not a logical one, and why that distinction changes everything about how you respond
✅ The full live real estate listing appointment roleplay so you can hear exactly how the conversation flows in real time, not just read a script off a page
✅ The three decisions every seller must make before signing and how walking them through each one on the spot replaces pressure with clarity
✅ How to use the Colombo close to relieve pressure while staying in the room and still moving toward a signature
✅ The real estate objection handling script for isolating whether the hesitation is price, marketing, or commission, and how to address each one sequentially without guessing
✅ What to do when the seller says they feel obligated to meet the other agent even though they have already decided, and how to offer to cancel that appointment on their behalf
If you want to understand how to close a listing appointment when the clock is already running on a competing agent showing up later that afternoon, this is the playbook.ƒ

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