Why the First Two Weeks on the Market Matter More Than Most Sellers Realise Book a Property Valuation
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Blog May 14, 2026
     

Why the First Two Weeks on the Market Matter More Than Most Sellers Realise

Most sellers assume the sale really starts once their home is live online. In reality, the most important part often happens before that, and the first two weeks after launch tend to decide how the rest of the process plays out. 

This isn’t about rushing. It’s about getting those first few steps right, because buyers form their view quickly and rarely come back to reconsider. 

 

Buyer Attention Peaks Early 

When your home first appears on the market, it is new. That moment matters. 

Buyers who are actively looking will see it straight away. Many will have already ruled out everything else in their price range and are waiting for something better to appear. 

That first wave of interest is usually the strongest you’ll get. These are the buyers most likely to act if the home feels right. 

If the price feels off, or the presentation doesn’t match expectations, those buyers don’t wait for changes. They move on. 

 

What Happens When That Early Window Is Missed 

If early interest doesn’t lead to viewings, or viewings don’t lead to offers, the property starts to feel different in the market. 

It is no longer new. It becomes something buyers have already considered and passed on. 

At that stage, reducing the price often becomes the next step. The issue is that a reduction rarely brings back the same level of attention. It tends to attract buyers who are more focused on value than fit. 

That shift can lead to longer timescales and more negotiation later on. 

 

Preparation Carries More Weight Than Speed 

There is often pressure to get live quickly, especially if there is a purchase involved. But going to market before everything lines up properly can cost more in the long run. 

Pricing needs to reflect how buyers are actually behaving, not where sellers would ideally like to be. 

Presentation needs to hold up in person, not just in photos. 

Timing needs to make sense in the context of what else is available. 

Even small details such as layout, lighting and how each room is used can influence how a buyer feels when they walk through the door. 

When those elements are right from the start, the property lands properly. 

 

Where Sellers Often Get It Wrong 

One of the most common problems is being encouraged to start too high or too quickly. 

That might be done with good intentions, but it can create a false start. Early interest fades, confidence drops, and adjustments come too late. 

Another issue is assuming interest will build over time. In most cases, it does not. It tapers. 

A steady stream of viewings later on rarely replaces the impact of strong early interest. 

 

What a Sensible Seller Should Do 

Before launching, it is worth looking at the property as a buyer would. 

Does the price sit comfortably against similar homes? 
Does the presentation match what buyers expect at that level? 
Would a serious buyer feel confident enough to make a move after seeing it? 

If any of those feel uncertain, it is better to deal with them before going live. 

Selling well is less about what happens over months and more about what happens at the very beginning. That early window is where most of the momentum is either built or lost. 

If you’re thinking about moving and want clear, honest advice on price, positioning and what it would take to get your home sold properly in the current market, we’d be happy to help.  

 

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