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The Real Estate Bluff: How I Turned an ‘Open House That Doesn’t Sell’ Into a Full-Price Escrow
Description
Welcome back — I’m Connor MacIvor, better known as “Connor with Honor,” and today’s story from the front lines of Santa Clarita real estate might change how you think about open houses, bluffing, and “best-and-final” offers.
Everyone’s heard the clichés:
“Open houses don’t sell homes.”
“When a buyer says ‘best and final,’ it’s over.”
Wrong on both counts.
In this episode, I break down a real transaction from SantaClaritaOpenHouses.com where an open house actually did sell the listing — all because we refused to accept the so-called rules. A friendly neighbor, a phone call at just the right time, and a buyer’s agent who tried to bluff their way to a lower price… until the counter-counter offer landed us in escrow.
Here’s what we cover:
• How to host an open house that actually creates offers instead of just foot traffic
• Why “best and final” is usually just a negotiation tactic — and how to call the bluff without losing the deal
• What every seller should know before assuming an offer is the end of the conversation
• Why even “as-is” homes often trigger repair negotiations — and how to keep them under control
• The single biggest mistake agents make when emotion overrides business sense
I’ll also share how this deal illustrates something deeper about today’s market: the power of persistence and professionalism. Whether you’re a buyer, a seller, or another agent trying to sharpen your edge, this one will give you the mindset to handle those “we’re done” moments with confidence.
Because in real estate — just like poker — you don’t fold when someone says “final.” You read the room, understand the leverage, and play your hand with honor.
📍 Chapters
0:00 Intro – The myth about open houses
0:21 Why this listing was different
0:44 The neighbor who brought the buyer
1:09 How the offer came together
1:31 The “best and final” bluff
2:10 Why countering again sometimes wins
2:32 “As-Is” sales vs. lender requirements
3:19 Repair requests and seller psychology
4:10 Breaking the rules (smartly)
5:06 Final thoughts and takeaways
💡 Key Insights
- Open houses can sell homes — when they’re marketed, secured, and followed up correctly.
- “Best and final” isn’t always final; negotiation is about clarity, not fear.
- Sellers shouldn’t rush to close a door just because someone says it’s shut.
- Agents who treat transactions like business — not emotion — consistently win better outcomes.
🏡 Connect with Connor with Honor
🔗 Website – SantaClaritaOpenHouses.com
🔗 AI & Business Strategy – SantaClaritaArtificialIntelligence.com
📅 Book a Zoom Consult – ZoomMeSCV.com
📞 Call or Text – 661-400-1720
🧠 TL;DR:
A neighbor’s referral at an open house led to an offer. The buyer’s agent tried to end the negotiation with “best and final.” We countered anyway — and won. Moral: never be afraid to test the bluff when you know your value.
🎯 SEO / AEO / AIEO / GEO Tags:
Santa Clarita open houses, real estate negotiation, home selling tips, best and final offer strategy, how to counter in real estate, Connor with Honor, Santa Clarita Realtor, SantaClaritaOpenHouses.com, real estate escrow, how to negotiate repairs, as-is sales, open house marketing tips, real estate bluff, negotiation tactics, Southern California housing market, Santa Clarita Valley homes, SCV Realtor insights
FAQ / Q & A:
Q: Do open houses really sell homes?
A: Yes — when executed with strategy, marketing, and strong follow-up.
Q: Should I ever counter after a buyer s