The client becomes more valuable the closer they get to the closing table, Josh Ries writes, and your value has to rise too.

A lot of agents think lead conversion is about getting a stranger to say yes early. They obsess over the lead, the appointment, the buyer agency agreement, the first signed document.

That is only the front end.

Real conversion is getting someone all the way to the closing table while keeping trust high, stress low and friction under control. The closer a client gets to closing, the more valuable that relationship becomes, but that is also when the process gets harder. 

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Emotions go up, risk feels bigger, and small problems start stacking into big decisions.

If your value does not rise with that friction, your conversion rate breaks down where it hurts the most, right near the finish line.

The moment this clicked for me

A few months back, I was consulting with a team leader who was frustrated because deals kept falling apart late. These were not leads that vanished early. These were real clients who were close, and then something would wobble.

He was convinced the answer was more objection handling. So they leaned harder into scripts, rebuttals and closing language. The goal was simple: get better at handling resistance.

It made things worse.

Late-stage friction is usually not fixed by pushing harder. It’s fixed by becoming more valuable.

I told him he needed to think more like Joe Torre. Joe Torre always seemed to have his teams playing their best when it mattered most. Not during the easy stretches, but when the pressure was highest. 

That is what real estate teams need to learn. Anybody can look decent when a lead is curious and excited. The question is, can your agents get better as pressure rises and uncertainty shows up.

Once we stopped obsessing over objection handling and started training agents to add value at every stage, especially near the end, things started to improve. Deals got steadier, clients felt supported, and the team stopped losing momentum right before the win.

The principle most agents miss

As clients get closer to the closing table, they become more valuable. Not just because the commission is closer, but because more time has been invested, more trust has been built, and more of the deal depends on your ability to lead.

If your value stays flat while stress rises, friction will take over.

The real estate conversion ladder

There is a visual I like using to teach this. It shows steps that move from lead to client to showings and offers to pending to closed. An arrow climbs upward, showing that as the client moves closer to closing, the value of that relationship increases, too.

The point is simple. A lead is worth something. A signed client is worth more. A client writing offers is worth even more. A client under contract is more valuable still. A closed client is the most valuable of all, because now you are not just talking about one commission. You are talking about reviews, referrals, repeat business and future pipeline.

The problem is that most agents treat value as if it is front-loaded. They work hardest to get the lead, then hardest again to get the appointment, then hardest again to get the agreement signed, and after that, they start coasting.

That is backward, because the closer the client gets to closing, the more your service matters.

Why friction spikes near the finish line

The industry talks about late-stage issues as if they are only transaction problems. Inspection stress, appraisal concerns, repair negotiations, financing delays, second thoughts, family pressure, closing hiccups, buyer fatigue, seller anxiety.

Those are real, but they are also trust tests.

When people get stressed, they start asking themselves one question. Does my agent actually help me through this, or are they just forwarding emails.

That question decides more outcomes than agents realize.

The mistake agents make when things get hard

Most agents respond to friction by becoming more aggressive. More scripts, more rebuttals, more pressure, more attempts to force a yes.

Late in a transaction, that usually backfires. When trust is under pressure, pushing harder often makes clients feel less safe, not more confident.

The answer is not more force. It’s more value.

What increasing value actually looks like

Value near the finish line is practical.

It starts with clarity. Clients need someone who can simplify what is happening and translate the situation into normal language. Not just repeat what the lender or title company said, but explain what matters most and what can wait.

Then, it takes emotional leadership. Clients are making a financial decision, while also managing stress and fear. A valuable agent knows how to calm the room and keep everyone moving without pretending nothing is wrong.

Problem-solving is next. As friction rises, agents need to offer options, not just updates. That means thinking ahead, giving paths and helping clients make decisions instead of dumping problems in their lap.

Expectation management is the quiet deal-saver. A lot of late-stage fallout starts because expectations were never set early enough. The more valuable agent is often the one who prepared the client before the issue ever showed up.

Finally, confidence transfer matters. Sometimes, clients do not need a better script. They need a steadier guide.

Reporting friction vs. reducing friction

Low value sounds like: Inspections are stressful, let’s see what happens.

Higher value sounds like: Here is what happens next, here are the two or three outcomes I think are most likely, here is what I would focus on first, and here is what probably does not matter as much.

Low value sounds like, “The appraisal came in low, so we may have a problem.”

Higher value sounds like, “The appraisal came in low. That is not ideal, but it is not uncommon. Here are the options, how I would rank them, and what I am already doing to protect your position.”

One agent reports friction. The other agent reduces friction.

Where real conversion actually happens

Even if the client still closes with you, that does not mean you won. If they felt pressured through problems or unsupported when things got hard, your repeat business and referral odds drop. The deal might close, but the relationship does not.

The real lesson is not that leads matter less. Leads matter.

But the client becomes more valuable the closer they get to the closing table, and your value has to rise too. Anybody can get attention early. It takes a completely different level of skill to guide someone through the hard part, keep trust intact and bring them all the way to close.

That is where real conversion happens.

Josh Ries is a real estate broker and a lead generation consultant. You can connect with him on TikTok and Instagram.

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