What Online Behavior Tells You About Buyer Readiness
This article breaks down what that behavior means, how to interpret it, and how to act on it before they disappear.

Austin Beverigde
Tennessee
, Goliath Teammate
When it comes to understanding buyer motivation online, most investors are looking at the wrong metrics.
They’ll stare at page views. They’ll refresh their inboxes. They’ll ask “why hasn’t this guy replied?” or “why did she open but not click?”
But the real gold is in a specific combo:
Low bounce + high click
If you’re seeing this pattern in your listings, deal pages, or buyer outreach…
You’ve got a live one.
This article breaks down what that behavior means, how to interpret it, and how to act on it before they disappear.
First: What Do “Bounce” and “Click” Actually Mean?
Let’s define it clearly, without the jargon.
Bounce: Someone lands on your page, looks around for a few seconds, then exits without taking action. No scroll. No click. No opt-in. No reply.
Click: They engage. They go deeper. They click a link, open an attachment, download something, ask a question, or hit “reply.”
So:
High bounce = low intent
High click = high curiosity
But when someone bounces quickly, you still don’t really know why.
The magic is in the combination.
The Power of Low Bounce + High Click
When someone sticks around and takes action?
That tells you something critical:
They’re not just browsing. They’re evaluating.
This combo behavior usually means the buyer is in the “seriously considering” stage. They’re not just curious, they’re qualifying the deal in real time.
What Low Bounce + High Click Means Psychologically
If you’re seeing this combo, here’s what it tells you about the buyer:
1. They’re Focused, Not Distracted
People bounce for lots of reasons:
Bad mobile layout
Long load times
Ugly design
Wrong timing
No clear value upfront
But when bounce is low, it means:
They arrived at the right time
The message felt relevant
Their brain said “this might be worth my attention”
That’s the first filter of motivation, and they passed it.
2. They’re “Screening for Fit”
High click-through means they’re looking for confirmation.
They want to know:
Is this in my buy box?
Does the rehab look doable?
Can I trust the source?
Is the price high, low, or right?
Will this work for my exit strategy?
That’s not casual behavior. That’s buyer-mode.
3. They’re Considering Next Steps (Quietly)
Buyers don’t always reply immediately.
But clicking means they’re mentally asking:
“Could I flip this?”
“Should I send this to my partner?”
“What’s my max number on this?”
“How fast could I move if I needed to?”
In other words, they’re mentally test-driving the deal.
Where You’ll See This Combo in Action
You’ll often see this pattern show up in these places:
1. Deal Landing Pages
If you’re sending out novation or wholesale deals via links:
A low bounce rate means the buyer didn’t back out
A high click-through (e.g. photos, comps, inspection docs) means they’re digging in
Watch behavior like:
Clicking 3+ property photos
Downloading the rehab budget
Clicking “schedule a walkthrough”
Visiting your “about” or “FAQ” section
This is prime motivation.
2. Email Campaigns (Dispo or Buyer Sequences)
If you’re sending property blasts:
A buyer who opens your email and bounces? Cold
A buyer who clicks your deal page, then hits reply or clicks again? Hot
Pay attention to:
Open → Click → Download → Silence
That’s someone watching, not ignoring
3. SMS/Chat Links
If you text out deals or drop links in chat:
Most buyers will glance, maybe screenshot
But if they click through and stay on page?
And especially if they revisit the link?
You’ve got a motivated buyer deciding silently.
4. Property Portals (If You List Retail)
For novation flips, if you list on Zillow or Redfin:
Someone clicks the listing and bounces in 5 sec = meh
Someone stays for 2+ minutes, clicks through 3 photos, scrolls to agent info, maybe even clicks “contact”? = gold
Even if they don’t fill the form, their behavior says they’re deciding.
How to Act on It
You’ve spotted the pattern.
Now what?
Here’s how to convert that buyer before the window closes.
1. Trigger a Personal Follow-Up , Quickly
If you can identify the user or segment (email, phone, name, IP, cookie, etc.), send this type of message:
“Saw you checked out the [Main St deal]. Just checking if you had any questions about it, or if you want a quick walkthrough of the numbers?”
Keep it casual, not aggressive.
Your job is to re-open the loop they were closing in their head.
2. Use the “What’s Holding You Back?” Nudge
This works especially well if they clicked but didn’t reply.
“A lot of buyers are looking at this one. Curious, anything you were hoping to see that wasn’t there?”
This does 3 things:
Makes them feel seen
Invites feedback
Reframes you as helpful, not pushy
3. Offer One Extra Bit of Value
They clicked for a reason, build on it.
Offer something like:
Contractor access
More photos
An updated comp sheet
A “what would it rent for?” estimate
A video walkthrough link
The more tailored, the better.
4. Create a Shortlist Tag in Your CRM
If you can track low-bounce, high-click users, tag them.
Even if they don’t act today, they’re:
Engaged
Evaluating
The right profile
Keep them on a hotlist for future deals.
5. Don’t Treat Them Like a Cold Lead Later
If this buyer ghosts, don’t start from zero next time.
Follow up later with:
“Saw you checked out the one on 7th Ave a while back. Got a new one with similar numbers, want me to send it over?”
This shows you track what matters, and makes them feel like a priority.
Bonus: What If You Can’t Track Individual Users?
If you don’t have a CRM or analytics that can pinpoint individual behavior, look at segment-level data.
For example:
Emails to your “A” list of cash buyers = 10% click rate + low bounce = high motivation group
Deals about “light cosmetic flips” = always high engagement = send more of those
Buyers who engage during weekday mornings = more serious than those who only click Sunday nights
Patterns reveal opportunity.
Common Misinterpretations (Don’t Fall for These)
Let’s clear up a few myths that mess up investor follow-up.
Myth #1: “They Didn’t Reply, So They’re Not Interested”
False.
Most buyers are in their head for 24–72 hours before they reply.
Sometimes longer.
Clicking is intent. Silence doesn’t always mean “no.”
Myth #2: “Open Rate Is All That Matters”
False.
Open rate tells you your subject line worked. Click + time on page tells you the deal worked.
If you’re not tracking clicks and bounce, you’re flying blind.
Myth #3: “Clicks = Serious Buyers Only”
False.
Some clicks are just curiosity, but click + low bounce = evaluation.
This is when motivation is shifting. Catch it.
The New Rule of Buyer Motivation
Forget what they say.
Watch what they do.
If they click and disappear, but spent 90 seconds on page?
If they asked zero questions, but viewed your photos twice?
If they didn’t reply, but clicked on the “Contract Template” link?
They’re not cold. They’re cautious. And they’re waiting for you to help them move forward.