You found the door. You skip-traced the number. Now the phone is ringing and your mouth's gone dry. Here's the thing nobody tells you about talking to motivated sellers: the goal of the first call isn't to "close" anybody. It's to find out whether you can actually help, and to be someone they'd trust to do it. Get that right and the deal handles itself. Get it wrong — rush it, pressure it, fake it — and you've burned a door you can never get back.
This is the straight version of what to actually say on that first call. People-first, honest, and on the right side of the law.
First, the honest part
How you contact a seller is regulated. Calls and texts to consumers fall under the federal Telephone Consumer Protection Act (TCPA), and the Federal Trade Commission's Telemarketing Sales Rule ties into the National Do Not Call Registry — meaning you can't just blast numbers and hope. This is educational content, not legal advice, and we're not your attorney. Before you run an outreach campaign, talk to a local real estate attorney about TCPA, the Do-Not-Call rules, and any state-specific calling and wholesaling laws where you operate. We get to the compliance details at the bottom — but it starts here, on purpose.
Mindset: you're there to help, not to take
The whole game shifts the second you stop "trying to get a deal" and start trying to understand a person with a problem. A motivated seller isn't a mark — they're someone in a situation (an inherited house they can't manage, a job two states away, a property eating them alive) who needs an option. Your job on call one is to figure out if you are one of their options.
That means you listen more than you talk. A useful target: let the seller do most of the talking. The classic negotiation literature — Roger Fisher and William Ury's Getting to Yes — frames good negotiation as separating the people from the problem and focusing on interests, not positions. You can't find someone's real interest if you're running a script over the top of them. Shut up and let them tell you what they actually need.
The 4 pillars: what you need to learn
You're not interrogating anyone. But by the end of a good first call, you want a feel for four things:
- Rapport — do they trust you enough to keep talking? This comes first and underpins everything else.
- Motivation — why are they thinking about selling, and how real is it? This is the most important pillar.
- Condition — what shape is the property actually in? You're building toward a number you can stand behind.
- Price + timeline — what do they hope to get, and when do they need to be out?
Notice the order. Most rookies blurt out "what's your lowest price?" in the first two minutes. That's backwards. Without rapport and motivation first, any number you get is meaningless — and you've signaled you only care about the deal, not the person.
Open-ended questions that actually work
The skill is asking questions that open someone up instead of shutting them down. Closed questions ("Do you want to sell?") get a yes/no and a dead end. Open-ended questions — the kind that start with what or how — invite a story. A few that earn their place:
- "What's got you thinking about selling the place?"
- "How long have you owned it?"
- "What would selling it actually do for you right now?"
- "If you could wave a wand, how would this whole thing be handled?"
- "What's the situation with the house — anybody living in it, or is it sitting?"
- "What happens if it doesn't sell?"
Then you stop talking and let the answer breathe. The silence after a good question is where the real information lives. Don't rush to fill it.
Active listening and tactical empathy
Listening isn't waiting for your turn. Active listening means showing the person you actually heard them — and it's a recognized communication and counseling skill, not a sales trick. Two moves do most of the work:
- Mirroring — repeat back the last few words they said, as a question. "Two states away?" It's a quiet nudge that says "keep going," and they usually do, often with the detail that matters.
- Labeling / tactical empathy — name the emotion you're hearing. "Sounds like this house has been a real weight." Former FBI lead hostage negotiator Chris Voss, in Never Split the Difference, built a whole method around tactical empathy — understanding and acknowledging the other side's feelings to build genuine trust. Used honestly, it makes people feel understood. Used as a manipulation, it's just a slicker lie. We do the first one.
Empathy here isn't a tactic you switch on; it's the whole posture. A seller who feels heard tells you the truth. A seller who feels handled tells you what they think gets you off the phone.
Uncovering the true motivation
"I want to sell" is never the real reason. Under it is something specific — and the deal gets built around that, not the surface. Behind the same listing you might find: an out-of-state heir who never wanted the property, a landlord done with 2 a.m. repair calls, someone facing a deadline they're embarrassed to name.
You get there by going one layer deeper than the first answer. They say "we just need it gone." You ask, gently, "what's driving the timeline?" That's where you learn whether speed, certainty, a clean as-is sale, or just being done is what they actually value. Interests, not positions — once you know the real interest, you can shape an honest offer that fits it, instead of haggling over a number in a vacuum.
And sometimes the true motivation is: there isn't one yet. That's a fine outcome. "Sounds like the timing isn't right — mind if I check back down the road?" is a real answer that keeps the door open and your reputation clean.
Talking condition and price without anchoring against yourself
Eventually you talk numbers — but carefully. Two rookie mistakes:
- Throwing out a price too early. In negotiation, the first number on the table sets the anchor for everything after — Investopedia describes anchoring as the cognitive tendency to lean too heavily on the first piece of information offered. Toss out a wild lowball and you anchor the seller against you (and look like a clown); name a number before you understand the house and you may anchor yourself into a deal that doesn't work. Let the seller share their expectation first when you can: "What were you hoping to get for it?"
- Promising a number you can't back up. Never quote a price you haven't backed out of comps and a real repair estimate. "I'd need to run the numbers and I'll be straight with you on what I can actually do" is both honest and stronger than a guess.
On condition, stay curious, not critical. You're gathering facts (roof, systems, deferred repairs, anyone living there) to build a real offer — not running the place down to soften them up. Trashing someone's house to lower the price is the exact move that gets the phone hung up on you.
Setting the appointment / the next step
End every good call with a clear, no-pressure next step. Not "so are you gonna sell to me or what?" — something concrete and easy:
- "Can I come take a look at it in person?" (the appointment is the real goal of call one)
- "Let me run the numbers tonight and call you tomorrow with something honest — does the afternoon work?"
- "No rush on your end. When would you actually want this handled by?"
A clear next step respects their time and keeps momentum without squeezing. If they're not ready, your next step is permission to follow up — and you keep that promise exactly.
TCPA, Do-Not-Call, and the honesty floor
This is the part too many people skip, and it's the part that can end you. The fundamentals:
- The Do Not Call Registry. The FTC's Telemarketing Sales Rule works with the National Do Not Call Registry to restrict unwanted telemarketing calls. Scrub your lists; understand who you can and can't legally cold-call and text.
- TCPA. The Telephone Consumer Protection Act governs telemarketing calls, auto-dialers, and texts. Penalties are real. Know the rules before you dial — and again, get a local attorney's read.
- No misrepresentation, ever. Be exactly who you are and say exactly what you do. If you intend to wholesale (assign the contract to an end buyer), don't hide it — the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau broadly warns consumers against deceptive practices, and the same principle is your ethical floor: clarity over cleverness.
- No high-pressure tactics. No fake deadlines, no "this offer's only good today," no cornering a grieving or stressed seller. We help people; we don't hunt them. A seller talked into a deal they regret is a complaint, a reversal, and a name people warn each other about.
- Money only moves through licensed title/escrow. Nobody legit asks a seller to wire funds to a personal account — and neither will you.
The honest play isn't just the legal one — it's the one that builds a name. Every seller you treat right is a referral, a reference, and a reputation you can't fake. That record is the come-up.
Frequently asked questions
What should I say in the first 10 seconds of the call?
Be human and be clear. "Hey [name], my name's [you] — I buy houses in the area off-market and I came across yours. Got a quick minute?" State who you are and why you're calling, then ask permission to keep going. No script-voice, no fake friend energy.
How do I get a nervous seller to actually open up?
Ask one open-ended question, then go quiet. Use mirroring — repeat their last few words back as a question — and label what you hear ("sounds like it's been stressful"). People open up when they feel heard, not when they feel sold. Let the silences sit.
Is it legal to cold-call motivated sellers?
It depends on how and whom you call. Federal rules — the TCPA and the FTC's Telemarketing Sales Rule tied to the National Do Not Call Registry — plus state laws govern calls and texts, and some wholesaling activity may require a license. Scrub Do-Not-Call lists and confirm the rules with a local attorney before you run any campaign.
Where Squatters fits
You don't have to learn this on a live seller's grief. Bandit, our AI deal agent, helps you draft compliant, honest outreach and pressure-test a number before you ever pick up the phone. The Deal Dojo lets you practice the seller call against an AI that plays the motivated seller — so you build the muscle before it counts, not on the call that matters. And the Block is a crew that's actually run these conversations, so you learn from people who've done it.
For the full path around this conversation, read the come-up: how to find and fund your first off-market deal and what wholesaling actually is.
Respect up front, money right behind it. Squat it. Fund it. Own it.
Want to practice the call before it's real? Start on Squatters → and run it in the Deal Dojo.
Sources
- Federal Trade Commission (FTC) — Telemarketing Sales Rule and the National Do Not Call Registry
- Federal Communications Commission / Telephone Consumer Protection Act (TCPA) — rules on telemarketing calls, auto-dialers, and texts
- Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) — guidance on avoiding deceptive and unfair consumer practices
- Roger Fisher & William Ury, Getting to Yes — principled negotiation: separate the people from the problem; focus on interests, not positions
- Chris Voss, Never Split the Difference — tactical empathy, mirroring, and labeling
- Investopedia — definition of anchoring (anchoring bias) in negotiation
Squatters is a software platform and community for real estate investors — not a law firm, broker-dealer, or investment adviser. Nothing here is legal, tax, or investment advice. Calling and texting consumers is regulated (TCPA, FTC Do-Not-Call rules) and some wholesaling activity may require a license; rules vary by state — always consult a local attorney and comply with all applicable laws.