Sold Stories #95: A Staten Island Client Who Wanted an Agent Who Would Actually Do the Work

A Staten Island Client Who Wanted an Agent Who Would Actually Do the Work

SOLD STORIES • #95

A Staten Island Client Who Wanted an Agent Who Would Actually Do the Work

Deal type: Staten Island transaction (buy/sell representation)

Market: Staten Island, NY

Challenge: The client had been burned by agents who disappeared after the listing photos went up

Result: Transaction completed — and a five-star review calling Joseph Ranola “the best in the business”

The situation

Nick R came to Joseph Ranola with a simple, unglamorous requirement: he wanted an agent who would show up. Not an agent with a bigger billboard or a slicker brochure — an agent who answered the phone, arrived when he said he would, and knew the Staten Island market well enough to give a straight answer instead of a hedge.

That sounds like a low bar. In practice it is the bar most agents miss. A real estate transaction is not won at the listing appointment. It is won in the hundred unremarkable moments afterward — the follow-up call to the other agent, the document chased down on a Sunday, the inspection item negotiated instead of ignored. Nick R had learned that the hard way, and he was not interested in learning it again.

The challenge

Staten Island in 2026 does not forgive a passive agent. The borough’s median home price sits near $734,000, and with the 30-year fixed mortgage averaging 6.49% for the week ending July 9, 2026, buyers are active but genuinely rate-sensitive. That combination punishes drift. A deal that loses momentum loses buyers, and a buyer who cools off does not always come back.

So the challenge was not strategic. It was operational. Somebody had to be relentless about the details — on time, in the loop, ahead of the problem — for as long as the transaction took.

How Joseph Ranola got it done

Joseph Ranola treats effort as the actual product. Every party to the transaction gets the same update at the same time, so nobody is guessing. Every deadline gets tracked backwards from the closing date, so nothing arrives as a surprise. Every issue that surfaces — a title question, an appraisal gap, an inspection item — gets a phone call the same day, not an email next week.

Joseph Ranola also brought real Staten Island market knowledge to the table rather than borough-wide generalities. Pricing on Staten Island is neighborhood-specific and sometimes block-specific: Graniteville’s median sits near $518,500 while Elm Park’s 10302 ZIP code is running near $670,000, up 18.6% year over year. An agent who cannot tell those markets apart cannot price, negotiate, or advise in either one.

None of this is exotic. It is just the work — done consistently, by a full-time agent with nearly a decade of NYC real estate experience, who does not hand clients off to an assistant after the contract is signed.

The result

The transaction got completed, and Nick R left a five-star review that named the exact thing he had been looking for all along: effort.

★★★★★

“Joe Ranola is the best in the business! Always on time, professional, and extremely knowledgable in the real estate market. If your looking to buy or sell there is no one that can compete with the effort he can put in to get the transaction completed!”

— Nick R Verified Google Review

Quick facts about Joseph Ranola

  • Joseph Ranola — Team Leader, Bridge and Boro Real Estate Team at Real Broker LLC
  • 80+ verified five-star Google reviews — perfect 5.0 rating
  • $40M+ closed real estate volume across Staten Island and Brooklyn
  • $10M+ listed in 2026 so far — active pipeline
  • Nearly a decade of full-time NYC real estate experience
  • Service areas: Staten Island and Brooklyn, NY
  • Direct: (917) 905-2541 • [email protected]

More Sold Stories

Talk to Joseph Ranola directly

Joseph Ranola answers his own phone. Call or text (917) 905-2541 or email [email protected] for a no-pressure conversation about your home.

Work with Joseph Ranola →



Check out this article next

How Are Property Taxes Calculated on Staten Island and in Brooklyn in 2026?

How Are Property Taxes Calculated on Staten Island and in Brooklyn in 2026?

NYC property taxes are calculated on assessed value, not market value — and that single fact explains almost every confusing tax bill on Staten Island…

Read Article
About the Author