The Psychology Behind Buyers Who Say “I’ll Know It When I See It”
This article breaks down what’s really going on when a buyer says, “I’ll know it when I see it,” and gives you practical tools to uncover what they actually want and guide them to clarity.
Every investor has their own language, and sometimes that language is frustratingly vague.
One of the most ambiguous (and common) phrases you’ll hear when speaking with buyer leads is:
“I’ll know it when I see it.”
On the surface, it seems harmless, even polite. But for wholesalers and acquisition pros, it’s maddening.
Is the buyer serious?
Do they even have a buy box?
Are you wasting time sending them deals they’ll never buy?
This article breaks down what’s really going on when a buyer says, “I’ll know it when I see it,” and gives you practical tools to:
Uncover what they actually want
Guide them to clarity
Avoid wasting time on tire-kickers
Turn vague buyers into repeat closers
Let’s dig in.
What This Phrase Actually Means
Buyers rarely say things for no reason. The phrase “I’ll know it when I see it” may sound noncommittal, but it usually falls into one of the following psychological buckets:
1. They Lack a Clear Investment Strategy
These buyers aren’t dumb, they’re just early. They haven’t bought enough deals (or any) to know what works for them. So instead of defining clear criteria, they rely on gut feeling.
This is especially common in:
New investors
BRRRR hopefuls without lending lined up
Burned-out agents trying to “switch” to investing
Cash buyers who inherited money but not investing knowledge
They’re looking for confidence. And they haven’t found it yet.
2. They’re Avoiding Commitment
Some buyers are afraid to say what they want because it:
Limits their options
Exposes them to being “sold”
Makes them feel pinned down
So they hide behind ambiguity. This gives them a safe psychological out: they never have to admit they passed on a great deal, because they never claimed to be looking for anything specific.
This is usually a defense mechanism against hard sales pressure or past regret.
3. They’re Hunting Unicorns
These buyers have very specific criteria, but they think revealing it will make you “markup” the deal or cherry-pick it yourself.
So they speak vaguely until they spot something that matches their hidden checklist. These are the “needle in a haystack” types.
If you hit the bullseye, they’ll buy. If not? They’ll keep “waiting to see.”
Why This Behavior Wastes Your Time
A buyer who won’t commit to a buy box, timeline, or criteria is nearly impossible to serve effectively.
You can’t:
Filter your list for what they want
Comp deals that match their goals
Predict objections
Know when they’re serious vs. stalling
And worst of all?
You may start blaming yourself for not “finding the right deal”, when in reality, the buyer was never ready to begin with.
That’s why learning to decode this phrase is critical.
How to Get Past the Vagueness: 5 Buyer Psychology Levers
Here are five techniques you can use to uncover what a “I’ll know it when I see it” buyer really wants.
1. Ask for Anti-Goals
Instead of forcing them to tell you what they want, flip it:
“I totally get it, a lot of investors say that. Out of curiosity, is there anything that’s an instant turn-off for you? A deal you’d never touch?”
This helps you:
Identify deal-killers
Clarify their buy box by exclusion
Understand risk aversion without confrontation
Even vague buyers usually know what they don’t want.
2. Present Two Extremes
Create a quick A/B test to force clarity:
“Let me throw two extremes at you: one is a rough property in a rough zip, but the numbers are juicy. The other is turnkey in a better area but thinner margins. Which one pulls you in more?”
They’ll lean one way.
That lean is gold, it signals their comfort zone and helps you narrow future options.
3. Ask About Their Past Deals (or Lack Thereof)
For experienced buyers:
“What’s a deal you bought recently that felt right?”
For new buyers:
“Have you walked any properties recently that felt close to what you wanted? Even if you didn’t buy?”
This reveals patterns in:
Condition preferences
Price sensitivity
Risk tolerance
Emotional triggers (what “felt right”)
4. Dig Into Their Exit Strategy
Even if they won’t commit to a property type, they usually know what they want the outcome to be.
“What are you hoping to do with your next investment, flip it, rent it, Airbnb it, wholesale it…?”
Then reverse-engineer their preferences from that.
Flip = fast timeline, cosmetic work preferred, strong resale comp support
BRRRR = strong rent comps, stable area, solid ARV
Buy-and-hold = cash flow, low maintenance, tenant demand
Wholesale = spread, assignability, investor-friendly title
Suddenly, you have a roadmap.
5. Give Permission to Change Later
Sometimes buyers stay vague because they’re afraid of boxing themselves in. Give them an out:
“Totally fine if your criteria evolve over time. But it’d help me a ton to get a starting point, even just your top 3 preferences. We can adjust as we go.”
This reduces the pressure and opens the door to cooperation.
Body Language and Tone Clues
The phrase “I’ll know it when I see it” can mean wildly different things depending on how they say it.
Red Flag Tone: Shrug, deflection, low eye contact
Likely stalling
Doesn’t know what they want (yet)
May be info-gathering, not serious
Neutral Tone: Curious, calm, open-ended
May be early in the process
Needs guidance
Possible new relationship if nurtured right
Green Flag Tone: Confident, grounded, smiling
Likely experienced
Waiting for a rare type of deal
May test you first, but become a loyal buyer
When to Push, When to Let Go
You don’t have time to chase ghosts.
Use this rule of thumb:
Buyer Clarity Level | Ask More Questions? | Send Deals? | Keep on List? |
Has specific zip/type | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes | ✅ Definitely |
Shares anti-goals only | ✅ Lightly probe | ✅ With filters | ✅ Shortlist |
“I’ll know it…” with no details | ⚠️ Probe once | ❌ Don’t waste deals | ❌ Archive until re-qualified |
You’re not being rude by moving them off your list. You’re respecting your time.
How to Warm Up a Cold “I’ll Know It” Buyer
If a buyer says the phrase, but you sense potential, here’s a step-by-step approach:
Step 1: Build Credibility Fast
Show them you’re active and know your market
Mention recent deals you moved and how fast
Ask for their input before you send anything
Step 2: Use the “3-Deal” Rule
Tell them:
“I’ll send you just 3 deals this month, and I’d love quick feedback so I know how to improve the next ones.”
This frames your relationship as collaborative, not transactional.
Step 3: Ask for a Soft Score
After each deal, ask:
“On a scale of 1–10, how close was this to something you’d buy?”
If they give a 4 or higher, keep tweaking.
If it’s all 1s and 2s? Archive or reprioritize.
The Bigger Lesson: Buyers Are Human
Many buyers don’t know how to articulate what they want.
They’re scared of:
Being wrong
Wasting time
Looking dumb
Getting sold
So they default to vague language. Your job isn’t to push, it’s to gently guide them into clarity.
That’s what makes you more than a wholesaler, it makes you a pro.
Final Takeaways
If a buyer says, “I’ll know it when I see it,” here’s your plan:
Don’t panic, it’s a common stall rooted in psychology, not disrespect.
Use questions to uncover anti-goals, leanings, and exit strategies.
Test engagement by offering a few curated deals and asking for reactions.
Watch for tone, it tells you more than their words.
Prioritize clarity, focus your energy on buyers who give feedback, and refine as they go.
And most of all?
Protect your time.
Not every buyer will be a fit today. But by staying curious, professional, and empathetic, you’ll build a reputation as someone who’s easy to work with, and that alone will filter the serious from the vague over time.
Written By:

Austin Beveridge
Chief Operating Officer
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