When home buyers and sellers in Rochester, Minnesota hear the pitch to hire a large real estate team, the promise is straightforward: more agents, more coverage, more availability. But according to local Realtor Alex Mayer, the reality often falls short of that promise. Mayer, who runs rochesterareahomesbyalex.com and has a decade of experience in the market, says that the team model can lead to misrepresentation of production numbers and a lack of continuity for clients.
Mayer points to a practice he calls ‘Transaction Stuffing,’ where the sales of an entire team, including junior agents with minimal transactions, are attributed to a single lead agent. This inflates the perception of experience. ‘There is no solo agent doing 150 to 200 transactions a year on their own,’ Mayer says. ‘When you see those numbers, someone is likely stacking other agents’ sales to increase perception of their true transactions.’ According to the National Association of Realtors, the average agent completes 3.92 transactions annually, and only 3% of agents handle 45% of the business. On a team of 10, that means just one or two agents are true producers, while the rest are newer agents fed leads.
The practical consequence for clients is that they often don’t work with the lead agent they thought they hired. ‘The top producing agent on a team is likely not going to be working with people who just found them online,’ Mayer explains. Instead, those clients are passed to junior agents who need the business. Even if a client works with the lead agent, that agent is also managing the team, handling multiple transactions, and dealing with administrative tasks, dividing their attention.
Given that about 30% of real estate transactions encounter issues like financing problems or inspection disputes, having a single point of contact is critical. ‘If every time you’re talking to a different person, you’re starting over,’ Mayer says. ‘In a transaction that’s already under stress, that can be the difference between things moving along or collapsing.’
Mayer’s ‘Direct Representation Model’ aims to eliminate these pitfalls. He does not buy leads from large platforms or run prospecting campaigns. Instead, most clients come through referrals or his online content, freeing up time to serve existing clients. A fully licensed assistant with 20 years of experience handles back-end paperwork, ensuring Mayer can focus on client needs. ‘What I offer is what teams claim to offer: the marketing, the systems, the support. But when something comes up, the person who picks up the phone is the person who knows the deal,’ he says.
For more on Mayer’s approach, visit his background page at rochesterareahomesbyalex.com/meet-alex-mayer. Mayer is a 4X winner of Best Real Estate Agent in Rochester MN with over 300 five-star reviews. This article is based on information provided by the expert source cited above and is for informational purposes only.
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