The cold calling script, the discovery call framework, the negotiation principles, and the objection handlers that turn phone conversations into signed contracts.
Zach Ginn has cold-called his way to millions of dollars in wholesale fees — starting from a dorm room in college where he was hitting $10,000 per month purely from cold calls. Over seven years of testing scripts — guru scripts, Jordan Belfort-style scripts, casual scripts, aggressive scripts — he landed on the same conclusion every time: the simpler the script, the better the results. What he uses today is two sentences. That is it.
Most people assume a cold calling script needs to be complex — a multi-step introduction, a value proposition, a soft close. The opposite is true. The longer and more salesy your opening, the faster the seller mentally checks out. Your only goal on a cold call is to find out if the person is interested in a cash offer on their property. Everything else is noise.
The reason this script works, Ginn explains, is twofold. First, it gets to the point immediately — no wasted time, higher call volume, faster filtering of unmotivated sellers. Second, it is not salesy. You are not telling them anything. You are asking. You are an interviewer, not a salesperson. The motivated seller who has been thinking about selling will say yes. The one who has no interest will say no. Your job is just to find the ones who say yes.
Before you dial, you need three answers ready — because motivated sellers will ask them, and stumbling on any of them destroys your credibility instantly. Ginn calls these the confidence foundations: who you are, what you want, and why you want it.
"My name is [name] and me and my partner are looking to buy a couple more properties in the area for cash." Simple. Professional. True.
"I'm looking to buy some houses in the area. If you're not looking to sell your house, I'm not going to buy it — but I am actively looking for properties in the area." No pressure. Just honest.
"Me and my partner buy houses — sometimes we rent them out, sometimes we fix them up and flip them. It really depends on the property." Transparent, credible, not suspicious.
"I got it online from a public database." — This sounds defensive and makes the seller feel tracked or surveilled. It kills the conversation.
"My partner compiled a list of areas we're looking to buy in that fit our criteria — he gave me the list and I'm just calling to see if anyone's interested in selling. Honestly I'm not even sure exactly where he got it. If that's really important to you I can find out, but most people don't worry about it once they hear what I'm calling about."
Throwing out a number on the spot — you haven't seen the property, run comps, or estimated repairs. Any number you give is meaningless and you'll have to backtrack later.
Use the car analogy: "Before I give you an offer — have you ever bought a car? Did you test drive it first? Same thing here. I have to actually see the property before I give you an offer. I'm a man of my word — when I give you a number, it's firm. To do that I need to see it. When's a good time for me to come by?"
Getting frustrated or dismissive — this is actually a signal that the seller is thinking about it. Dismissing it shuts the door.
"That's a fair question. Usually when people sell they use the money from the sale to either buy another place or rent something temporarily. I can't really advise you on where to move — that's your call — but a lot of people in similar situations have figured it out after the sale. The cash gives you options."
Pushing hard to convince them — if they were not thinking about selling before your call, they are not a motivated seller. Pushing wastes both of your time.
"Before I called you — were you even thinking about selling, or did this come out of nowhere?" If they say no: politely end the call and move on. If they say yes or maybe: that is motivation — continue the conversation. This one question tells you everything.
When you are working with on-market properties through the MLS — the Day Zero and Old Listings strategies from Module 2 — your seller conversations happen through listing agents, not homeowners directly. The discovery call with a listing agent is a different skill set from cold calling motivated sellers, but the underlying principle is the same: you are an interviewer, not a salesperson. Your job on the first call is to gather information and build rapport — not to throw out a price.
"Hi [agent name], my name is [your name] with [your company]. I'm a real estate investor and cash buyer — I came across your listing at [address] and wanted to learn more about it."
Ask if there is anything out of the ordinary not shown in the photos. Any major repairs needed — roof, foundation, HVAC? Are the photos current or older? This directly affects your repair estimate.
Ask how activity has been on the property. Are there other offers? What is the seller's ideal timeline? You are not asking for confidential info — you are asking questions any serious buyer would ask.
End the call by saying: "I really enjoyed talking with you. I'm going to review this property with my team and get back to you within a few hours with a no-nonsense offer we can stick to. Does that sound good?" You have never once had someone say no to that.
Run comps, estimate repairs, calculate MAO, determine your offer. Then call back — "Hey [agent], I met with my team and we're excited about this property. We can come in today at $[X]. Can I have you represent us on this?" If they represent both sides, they earn double commission — a strong incentive to advocate for your offer.
When a listing agent also represents the buyer, they earn both the listing commission and the buyer's agent commission — effectively doubling their fee on the transaction. This is called dual agency and is legal in most states with proper disclosure. When you ask the listing agent to represent you, you are offering them a significant financial incentive to advocate for your offer over competing bids. This is one of the most underused advantages in on-market wholesaling.
J Scott flipped over 500 houses and negotiated on every single one — both buying and selling. His framework for negotiation is not what most people expect. It is not aggressive tactics, anchoring tricks, or high-pressure closes. It comes down to two things: rapport and information.
Rapport is about trust. When someone trusts you, they are far more likely to say yes — even to a price they were not originally planning to accept. You build rapport before you talk numbers — sometimes a half hour before, sometimes an hour. Jay's wife never showed up at a seller's house without coffee or donuts. It sounds trivial. It is not. By the time the conversation gets to money, you want the seller thinking "I like this person" — not "I need to protect myself from this investor."
Information is about understanding what the seller actually wants beyond the asking price. Most negotiations fail because both sides assume the other side only cares about money. Often — especially with distressed or motivated sellers — there is something else driving the decision. A seller who has lived in a house for 70 years and is terrified of moving does not have a money problem. They have a logistics problem. Solve the logistics problem, and you can often buy the house for significantly less than you would have paid otherwise.
"The best negotiations are two people that trust each other and like each other and want the other person to get a good deal at the same time that they get a good deal. We don't need to be employing complex strategies or hard-nosed tactics that try to trick the other side. What we want is for the two sides to come together and mutually find solutions to the problems."
After you have built rapport and the conversation feels comfortable, J Scott's most powerful question is: "What do you plan to do with the money from the sale?" This is not small talk. It is the most direct path to understanding what the seller actually needs. The answers reveal everything:
They need liquidity fast. Speed of closing matters more than maximum price. A fast all-cash close at below asking price may be exactly what they need.
They have no immediate use for the money. This opens the door to seller financing — "What if I could get you 7–8% on that money instead of 1% in a savings account?" Suddenly you have a creative deal structure that works for everyone.
Their real problem is not money — it is logistics. Offer to handle the move. Hire movers, let them leave everything behind, handle the cleanout. Now you have solved their actual problem and you can often buy at a significantly lower price.
J Scott's advice on making low offers is direct: most people do not make low offers because they are afraid of insulting the seller. This fear costs them enormously over a career. His rule is to start as low as possible without the seller walking away entirely. Find out what they owe on the mortgage — that is usually the floor where they will negotiate instead of walk. Make the offer. The worst they can say is no. And sometimes the person who held firm at $400,000 calls back six months later and accepts your $300,000 offer — because their circumstances changed.
Zach Ginn's complete cold calling breakdown — the two-sentence script, the confidence foundations, all four major objections handled, and why simpler always outperforms complex in seller conversations.
Zach Ginn · February 2024 · 7 years wholesaling, $10K/month from dorm room · Opens on YouTube (embedding disabled by creator)
J Scott · BiggerPockets Real Estate Rookie Podcast · February 2025 · 500+ flips, author of The Book on Negotiating Real Estate
If you are working as an acquisitions manager or coordinator for a real estate investment company, seller communication is your entire job. These skills — cold calling, discovery calls, objection handling, negotiation — are what you are hired for and what you are evaluated on. The two-sentence script, the confidence foundations, and J Scott's rapport-first negotiation framework are directly applicable to your daily work regardless of whether you ever wholesale a deal yourself.
As a wholesaling entrepreneur, your ability to get motivated sellers on the phone and convert those conversations into signed contracts is the core skill of the entire business. Everything else — finding leads, analyzing deals, building a buyers list — supports this moment. Practice the script out loud before you dial. Record your calls and review them. The first twenty calls will feel uncomfortable. The next hundred will feel natural. The wholesalers who succeed are the ones who make the calls anyway.
Not every motivated lead is a deal. J Scott identifies the clear signal that a negotiation is over: when the only thing the seller cares about is money, and their floor price is above your ceiling price, there is no deal. Do not spend energy trying to convince them. The motivated sellers you are looking for have both financial and non-financial problems. When money is the only issue and the math does not work, end the conversation gracefully — and leave the door open. Tell them you understand, that you are not the right buyer at this price, and that if anything changes you would love to hear from them. The circumstances that made this a no today may make it a yes in six months.
Than Merrill's Chapter 15 of the Wholesaling Bible outlines a nine-step negotiating process that mirrors everything J Scott and Zach Ginn teach: build rapport first, gather information before making any offer, understand the seller's true motivation, present your offer as a solution to their problem — not as a lowball attack on their property's value. The language matters. You are not telling a seller their house is worth less than they think. You are explaining what you can do for them and asking if that works for their situation.
Alex Martinez distinguishes between two types of calls: the discovery call and the close call. The discovery call is purely about rapport and information — you leave without giving a price. The close call is when you come back with a firm offer. When you make the close call, reference the previous conversation: "Hey [agent name] — this is [your name] with [company], we spoke a couple hours ago. I met with my team and we're very excited about this property. We can come in today at $[X], have you represent us, and close on your timeline. Does that work?" This structure — separate calls for discovery and offer — reduces the pressure on both conversations and dramatically improves acceptance rates.
Every wholesaler who has ever built a real business will tell you the same thing: the calls get easier. Your first twenty cold calls will feel awkward and scary. Your hundredth will feel routine. Your thousandth will feel like a conversation with an old friend. The script is not magic — it is a framework that removes the decision-making from an uncomfortable moment. You know what to say. You know how to handle objections. Now you just need reps. Pick up the phone and dial. The deals are on the other end.
5 questions — click your answer, then check all at once.
1. A seller immediately asks "What's your offer?" on your cold call before you have had a chance to learn anything about the property. According to Zach Ginn's framework, what is the correct response — and why?
2. J Scott says the most powerful question in seller negotiation is "What do you plan to do with the money from the sale?" A seller answers: "Honestly, I was just going to put it in savings for a few months while I figure out where to move." What opportunity does this answer reveal?
3. You are on a discovery call with a listing agent. The agent is warm and engaging. At the end of the call they say "So what are you thinking price-wise?" According to Alex Martinez's framework, what should you say?
4. J Scott describes a negotiation where a seller wanted full market value but kept rejecting all offers for months. After asking about her situation, he discovered her real problem was not money at all. What was it — and how did he close the deal?
5. Zach Ginn's two-sentence cold calling script asks "Is this the owner of 123 Main Street?" as the first question — rather than starting with an introduction. What is the specific psychological reason this opening line works better than a standard sales introduction?