Elite AgentFEATURE INTERVIEWS

Spring surge or missed opportunity? Matt Lahoodโ€™s insider advice to win the season before it starts

While many agents are gearing up for a spring surge, The Agency CEO, Matt Lahood, cautions that relying on the season to deliver results is a flawed strategy.

Every year, spring arrives with a familiar promise for real estate agents: more listings, more buyers, and the potential for a career-defining season. But according to industry leader Matt Lahood, waiting until the sun is shining and the flowers are blooming might already be too late.

โ€œIf you are not back into it mid-July, coming into August, the gameโ€™s already been run and won,โ€ says Matt. โ€œA lot of agents go away in the school holidays and only start prospecting in August, but the smart ones did all the work before they went away.โ€

As the CEO of The Agency and a veteran with more than three decades in real estate, Matt has seen enough spring markets to know the difference between agents who thrive and those who fall behind. His advice? Start early, plan smarter, and stop relying on seasonal hype to deliver results.

Spring isnโ€™t always the best time to sell, but it feels like it

While the real estate calendar is shaped by events like school holidays and weather patterns, Matt says springโ€™s allure is mostly psychological.

โ€œIt just seems like people are more comfortable to sell in spring. The homes present well, thereโ€™s a lot of sun, the gardens look good. Itโ€™s a more pleasant time for open homes, but that doesnโ€™t mean itโ€™s the best time to sell.โ€

Buyers, he insists, are not seasonal.

โ€œBuyers buy when they see the property they want,โ€ he says. โ€œTheyโ€™re not sitting around waiting for a nice day. If itโ€™s July and they see a property that ticks the boxes, theyโ€™ll go for it. Thatโ€™s why youโ€™re seeing clearance rates of 80% in Sydney right now.โ€

Avoiding the August bottleneck

Matt also warns of what he calls the โ€œAugust bottleneck,โ€ where underprepared agents scramble to re-engage sellers or start prepping campaigns just as their competitors are already going live.

โ€œYour vendors should be getting a timetable and a timeline from you in July,โ€ he says. โ€œIf thereโ€™s any maintenance, repairs or cosmetic upgrades to do, that should be happening off-season.โ€

He calls this preparation period โ€œoff-season Julyโ€ – a time to do the groundwork so homes hit the market polished and poised to sell.

Why vendor education is your secret weapon

One of the most common missteps Matt sees? Agents assuming sellers know when to go live.

โ€œBuyers are driven by settlement dates. If someone wants to be in a new home before Christmas, they need to be purchasing in September or October … Novemberโ€™s probably too late. But if agents donโ€™t educate their vendors about that timing, they miss the window.โ€

In this climate, he says agents must be more than marketers, they must be educators and project managers.

โ€œThis is where the real professionals stand out. They understand the nuances of timing, presentation, and buyer psychology. They guide the vendor, not just list the property.โ€

In a crowded spring market, Matt says one of the best ways to stand out is to avoid the crowd altogether, at least initially.

โ€œAt The Agency, we use what we call a โ€˜soft launch.โ€™ Itโ€™s not listed on the portals, thereโ€™s no signboard, but weโ€™ve got photos, we know the story behind the home, and weโ€™re showing it to our qualified database.โ€

He says this strategy builds exclusivity and urgency among buyers, while giving sellers a chance to attract premium offers before going public.

โ€œItโ€™s not off-market. Itโ€™s pre-market. And buyers love it. They feel like theyโ€™re getting special access, and that emotional edge can lead to a stronger price.โ€

The two-speed market agents need to watch

With rate cuts on the horizon, Matt says a quiet but important shift is now taking place.

โ€œThere are two types of buyers emerging. One group is already approved and will pay a bit more now, knowing rates are coming down. The other group is holding off, waiting for the cut so they can reapply and increase their borrowing power.โ€

For agents, this means knowing where their buyers are in the financing cycle, and adjusting their vendor strategy accordingly.

โ€œYouโ€™ve got to be in tune with your pipeline. If your seller can hold, they might get into a better suburb once rates shift. But thatโ€™s not something theyโ€™ll hear on the news, they need their agent to tell them.โ€

For newer agents without an established database, Matt says thereโ€™s still plenty of opportunity.

โ€œFocus on listings that have been on the market for a while with a competitor, those are ripe for a re-launch. And look after your buyers. A buyer you help now might be a seller in spring.โ€

Itโ€™s a long-term game, and he knows it well.

โ€œSome of my clients I sold to 30 years ago are still calling me now. Iโ€™m getting referrals, estates, and repeat business because Iโ€™ve stayed in touch and helped them across multiple chapters of their life.โ€

Finally, while many agents tie their hopes to the spring surge, Matt says the agents who dominate year after year are those who think ahead, act early, and care deeply

โ€œYouโ€™ve got to scan the road ahead – school holidays, public holidays, rate decisions, buyer sentiment. Itโ€™s not just about listings. Itโ€™s about timing, storytelling, and trust.โ€

And if youโ€™re wondering what separates a good agent from a great one?

โ€œThe great agents donโ€™t just put a property on the market,โ€ he says. โ€œThey educate, they plan, and they do whatโ€™s right for the client – even if it means waiting. Thatโ€™s how you get lifelong clients, not just one sale.โ€

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Catherine Nikas-Boulos

Catherine Nikas-Boulos is the Digital Editor at Elite Agent and has spent the last 20 years covering (and coveting) real estate around the country.