How Real Estate Agents Use Task Workers to Close More Deals
The most successful real estate agents in 2026 share a secret: they don't do everything themselves.
While average agents spend their days coordinating staging furniture, hanging lockboxes, taking photos, and driving across town to let in inspectors, top producers have figured out how to delegate these time-consuming tasks to on-demand workers — freeing up their hours for what actually makes money: meeting clients, negotiating deals, and closing transactions.
Task platforms like RentAHuman have become an essential tool in the modern real estate agent's toolkit. Here's exactly how the best agents are using them.
The Real Estate Agent's Time Problem
Let's be honest about the math. The average real estate agent's commission on a $400,000 home sale is roughly $10,000–$12,000 (after splits). That sounds great — until you factor in the 40–80 hours of work that goes into each transaction.
At 60 hours per deal, that's about $167–$200 per hour of agent time. Every hour spent on a task that could be done by someone else at $25–$35/hour is money left on the table.
Here's where agents typically waste the most time:
| Task | Time Per Listing | Could Be Delegated? |
|---|
| Property prep and staging | 4–8 hours | Yes |
|---|---|---|
| Photography coordination | 2–4 hours | Yes |
| Open house setup/teardown | 2–3 hours per event | Yes |
| Sign installation | 1–2 hours | Yes |
| Inspection coordination | 2–3 hours | Partially |
| Moving help for clients | 3–6 hours | Yes |
| Flyer/material distribution | 2–4 hours | Yes |
| Lockbox management | 1–2 hours | Yes |
| Post-closing cleanup | 2–4 hours | Yes |
At $30/hour for task workers, that's $600–$1,050 in delegation costs to free up 20–35 hours of your $167–$200/hour time. The ROI is obvious.
7 Ways Top Agents Use Task Workers
1. Pre-Listing Property Preparation
Before a home hits the market, it needs to look its best. Top agents don't just suggest improvements — they make them happen by hiring task workers to:
- Deep clean the property — Windows, carpets, kitchen appliances, bathrooms
- Landscaping touch-ups — Mow, trim hedges, plant flowers, spread mulch
- Minor repairs — Patch nail holes, touch up paint, fix leaky faucets, replace light bulbs
- Decluttering assistance — Help sellers box up excess items and move them to storage
- Power washing — Driveways, walkways, decks, siding
2. Home Staging Setup and Removal
Staging is one of the highest-ROI activities in real estate — staged homes sell 73% faster and for 5–25% more than unstaged homes, according to the National Association of Realtors.
But staging involves serious physical labor:
- Moving heavy furniture in and out
- Arranging rooms according to a design plan
- Hanging artwork and placing accessories
- Setting up outdoor spaces
1. Hire a staging consultant for the design plan ($200–$500) 2. Rent furniture from a staging warehouse ($500–$1,500/month) 3. Hire task workers through RentAHuman to do the physical setup and teardown ($150–$400)
This approach saves 50–70% compared to full-service staging companies while achieving similar results.
Find Staging Help →3. Open House Preparation and Support
Open houses require significant preparation and staffing. Here's how agents use task workers:
Before the open house:- Set up signage throughout the neighborhood (directional signs, banners)
- Arrange furniture and set the scene
- Bake cookies or set up a refreshment station (yes, this is a real task people post)
- Place marketing materials at strategic points
- Final cleaning touch-up
- A task worker can serve as a greeter/sign-in coordinator
- Manage the refreshment station
- Hand out flyers and marketing materials
- Monitor different areas of the home
- Collect all signage
- Clean up and reset the property
- Lock up and secure the home
4. Real Estate Photography and Videography Coordination
Great listing photos sell homes. But coordinating a photography shoot involves more than just hiring a photographer:
- Pre-shoot preparation — Ensuring the home is photo-ready (lights on, blinds open, beds made, clutter removed, pets secured)
- Prop placement — Fresh flowers, set dining tables, arranged throw pillows
- Access coordination — Being on-site to let the photographer in and guide them through the property
Some agents even hire skilled amateur photographers through RentAHuman for initial listing photos on budget-friendly listings, saving the professional photographer for high-end properties.
5. Moving Help as a Client Perk
Here's a strategy that generates referrals like nothing else: offer your clients complimentary moving help as a closing gift.
Instead of the traditional bottle of wine or gift basket, forward-thinking agents are booking 2–4 hours of moving help through RentAHuman for their clients on move-in day. The cost is typically $150–$300, and the impact is enormous:
- Clients remember the gesture for years
- It solves a genuine pain point during a stressful time
- It generates social media posts and word-of-mouth referrals
- It differentiates you from every other agent who sends a gift card
"Every client gets 3 hours of moving help on us when they close. It costs me about $200, and I've gotten at least 10 referrals from it. Best marketing money I've ever spent." — Sarah K., Top 1% Agent, Dallas TXBook Moving Help for Your Clients →
6. Property Maintenance Between Showings
For vacant listings, maintenance is an ongoing challenge. Lawns need mowing, dust accumulates, and minor issues pop up between showings. Task workers can handle:
- Weekly lawn care during the listing period
- Bi-weekly cleaning to keep the property show-ready
- Quick fixes — Replace burned-out bulbs, tighten loose handles, touch up paint scuffs from showings
- Weather-related tasks — Snow removal, leaf cleanup, gutter clearing
- Package and mail collection to avoid the "vacant home" look
7. Marketing Material Distribution
Digital marketing dominates, but physical marketing still works — especially in hyperlocal real estate:
- Door-knocking and flyer delivery in the listing neighborhood
- Posting "Just Listed" and "Just Sold" cards to farm areas
- Distributing open house invitations to nearby homes
- Placing business cards at local businesses
- Installing and removing yard signs across multiple locations
Setting Up Your Real Estate Task Workflow
Here's how to build a repeatable system:
Step 1: Create Task Templates
Develop standardized task descriptions for your most common needs:
- Pre-listing preparation checklist
- Open house setup procedure
- Staging installation instructions
- Photography prep guide
- Post-closing cleanup checklist
Step 2: Build a Preferred Worker List
On RentAHuman, you can save workers you've had great experiences with. Over time, you'll build a reliable roster of:
- 2–3 reliable cleaners
- 1–2 staging setup helpers
- 2–3 general handypeople
- 1 landscaper
- 2–3 movers
Step 3: Budget Task Workers Into Your Listing Costs
Smart agents treat task worker costs as a business expense, not a personal expense:
| Listing Activity | Estimated Cost | ROI |
|---|
| Pre-listing prep | $200–$500 | Higher sale price |
|---|---|---|
| Staging labor | $150–$400 | Faster sale, higher price |
| Open house support | $75–$150/event | More showings, more offers |
| Photography prep | $50–$100 | Better listing presentation |
| Client moving help | $150–$300 | Referrals |
| Ongoing maintenance | $100–$200/month | Consistent showing readiness |
Against a $10,000+ commission, that's a 7–16% investment that typically increases your sale price by 5–25% and dramatically reduces your personal time investment.
Step 4: Use the RentAHuman API for Automation
For agents managing multiple listings, RentAHuman's API enables powerful automation:
- Automatically post a cleaning task 24 hours before every scheduled showing
- Schedule recurring lawn care when a listing goes active
- Trigger moving help when a deal closes
- Set up pre-listing prep from your CRM with one click
Real Numbers: Agent Case Study
Here's a real-world example of how task delegation impacts agent performance:
Before using task workers:- Listings per year: 18
- Average hours per listing: 65
- Total annual hours: 1,170
- Annual GCI: $180,000
- Effective hourly rate: $154/hr
- Listings per year: 28 (55% increase)
- Average hours per listing: 40 (38% reduction)
- Task worker costs per listing: $1,000
- Total annual task worker costs: $28,000
- Total annual hours: 1,120
- Annual GCI: $280,000
- Net after task costs: $252,000
- Effective hourly rate: $225/hr
Getting Started
If you're a real estate agent ready to leverage task workers:
1. Start with one listing — Pick your next new listing and delegate the pre-listing prep 2. Create a RentAHuman account — It's free to join and post tasks 3. Post your first task — Be detailed about what you need and when 4. Evaluate the results — Track time saved and client feedback 5. Scale gradually — Add more delegated tasks as you build confidence in the system
The agents who embrace this model aren't just saving time — they're building scalable businesses that can grow without burning out.
Ready to close more deals with less busywork? Post your first real estate task on RentAHuman →