By Adrian Bo, CEO of Adrian Bo Real Estate Training & Auctions.
Commission conversations have changed a lot over the years. As Adrian Bo, CEO of Adrian Bo Real Estate Training & Auctions, reflects, there was a time when fees were regulated, fixed, and never up for negotiation. You simply didn’t talk about it; it was law.
Fast forward to today’s market, and fees are one of the most common—and emotionally charged—topics in any listing conversation. But Adrian’s advice is clear: don’t let fee discussions rattle you, and don’t let them define your worth.
Self-Regulate: Know Your Range
One of the most effective ways to handle commission conversations is to have two clear fee points in mind before you walk into any listing appointment:
Having this range established early helps you stay clear-headed during negotiations and prevents you from making reactive decisions based on emotion or pressure.
Don’t Chase Every Listing at Any Cost
It’s natural to feel disappointed when you miss a listing based on commission—but Adrian stresses that you should only feel that way if it was a listing you were realistically prepared to match on fee.
If another agent offered to do it at a rate you’d never consider, then you didn’t lose anything. That was never your listing to begin with.
And most importantly: don’t let the disappointment carry over into your next appointment.
Agents often make the mistake of bringing the energy of a lost listing into the next vendor meeting, which can negatively affect their mindset, tone, and confidence—costing them two listings instead of one.
Protect Your Value, Protect Your Energy
Commission discounting isn’t a new conversation, but how you handle it makes all the difference.
By setting your own boundaries, staying calm, and understanding that not every vendor will align with your value proposition, you protect:
Remember: the only listings worth chasing are the ones you’re proud to win.
By Adrian Bo, CEO of Adrian Bo Real Estate Training & Auctions.
More Adrian Bo readings
Delivering tough news to sellers: Why honesty and objectivity matter
Managing your time: How to ensure every vendor feels like your only vendor
Staying in Touch: The Key to Long-Term Real Estate Success
The Danger of waiting for perfection in Real Estate
Handling Buyer Objections: How to stay firm on price while maintaining trust