Skipping a real estate agent? How this homebuyer got her own housing market lead

After spending a year looking for a home with a realtor, Malory Lea knew she would need a creative approach.

“There was barely anything available. The supply was very, very low,” said Lea, who was looking for a home in the under $1 million price range in Pleasantville, New York. “Anything she (the agent) did show us was either terribly overpriced and a dump, or it was nice but overpriced, and then also went for a hundred grand more than the already overpriced amount.”

So Lea started tracking down leads on social media in search of homeowners looking to bypass realtors. She left notes on doors in her preferred neighborhood. She also employed old-fashioned tactics such as leaning into the local grapevine to search for potential sellers.

And, within months, her efforts worked and her family closed on a home without the help of a realtor. She's among would-be homeowners working without realtors in an uber-competitive market where homes often sell in days. One only needs to look at the almost daily posts on social media to see buyers asking if they know of anyone looking to sell their home.

Call it the whisper campaign. This is not to be confused with the controversial "whisper listing" or "pocket listing," where agents show “off-market” homes not listed on the Multiple Listing Service to potential buyers. Whisper campaigns solely rest on the resourcefulness of the buyer and seller and their ability to tap into word-of-mouth, no-agent possibilities.

Malory and Dustin Lea with their daughters
Malory and Dustin Lea with their daughters

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A whisper listing? No, a whisper campaign

To be sure, hunting down a potential lead without a real estate agent takes a lot of leg work.

But Lea was facing steep competition, willing to pay a premium and growing weary of what was to be a temporary living situation. She, along with her husband, Dustin, and their two girls moved into her parent's home in Pleasantville in February 2021.

Lea, 35, a lawyer, worked from her home in South Burlington, Vermont, with two toddlers in tow. But after a break in her child care arrangement during the pandemic, the situation became untenable. The move allowed Lea's mother to help with the children until she found child care in Pleasantville.

Her sister also lives in Pleasantville and during a walk on her street, Lea got an idea.

"I left little notes in people's mailboxes saying, ‘I really wanna live here. Let me know if you are interested in selling your house’,” she says.