The first week on the market sets the tone for your entire sale—here’s how to make it count.
When a home hits the market, there’s a moment—usually within the first 7 days—where everything matters most.
In today’s Orange County market, buyers move fast when something feels right. And from what I see across Tustin, North Tustin, Orange, Anaheim, Santa Ana, and Irvine, the homes that succeed early tend to outperform the ones that don’t.
Let’s walk through why that first week is so important—and how to take full advantage of it.
1. Your Listing Gets the Most Exposure Right Away
When your home first goes live, it hits:
The MLS
Zillow, Redfin, Realtor.com
Buyer alerts and saved searches
This is when your listing is fresh—and buyers are paying attention.
If your home doesn’t make a strong impression during this window, you lose momentum that’s hard to get back later.
2. Buyers Are Most Excited About “New Listings”
Buyers—especially active ones—watch the market closely. They’re often waiting for something new to pop up.
During the first week:
Showings are highest
Online views peak
Interest is strongest
That initial excitement creates urgency. After that, your listing becomes just another option.
3. Pricing Strategy Is Everything from Day One
One of the biggest mistakes I see is pricing high to “leave room to negotiate.”
In reality:
Overpricing early reduces showings
Buyers skip listings that feel off
You risk chasing the market with reductions
Homes that are priced correctly from the start often see stronger activity in that first 7-day window.
4. First Impressions Happen Online
Before a buyer ever steps inside, they’ve already made a decision based on:
Photos
Video
Description
Price
If your listing doesn’t stand out online, you may never get the showing.
Professional photography, clean staging, and strong marketing aren’t optional—they’re critical in those first few days.
5. Showings in Week One Set the Tone
The number of showings you get in the first week is a major indicator of how your listing will perform.
High showing activity → strong interest → potential offers
Low showing activity → pricing or presentation issue
This early feedback is incredibly valuable. It tells you quickly if you’re positioned correctly.
6. Early Offers Create Leverage
When a home gets attention right away, it can create:
Multiple offer situations
Stronger negotiating position
Better terms (not just price)
Buyers don’t want to lose out—especially when they feel competition.
That leverage almost always comes from a strong first week.
7. Stale Listings Lose Power Quickly
Once a home sits on the market too long, buyers start asking:
“What’s wrong with it?”
“Why hasn’t it sold?”
Even if nothing is wrong, perception becomes reality.
That’s why the first 7 days are so critical—you’re either building momentum or losing it.
8. Small Adjustments Early Can Save Your Sale
If the first week doesn’t go as planned, quick action matters.
Adjustments like:
Price refinement
Improved photos
Better staging
can help reset momentum—but it’s always better to get it right from the start.
Final Thoughts: Momentum Is Everything
The first 7 days of your listing aren’t just important—they’re everything.
That initial launch determines:
How buyers perceive your home
How much attention it gets
How strong your negotiating position will be
In markets like Tustin, North Tustin, Orange, Anaheim, Santa Ana, and Irvine, the homes that win are the ones that hit the market prepared, priced right, and presented at their best.
If you’re thinking about selling and want to make sure your first week counts, I’m happy to walk you through a custom launch strategy for your home—based on what’s working right now in your neighborhood.



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