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Updated 12 months ago on . Most recent reply

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4
Posts
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Jacqueline Gonzalez
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Virginia Beach, VA
5
Votes |
4
Posts

How to become an investor-friendly agent

Jacqueline Gonzalez
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Virginia Beach, VA
Posted

I have had investors contact me recently, but they are new. Some of the jargon is unfamiliar. Their methods of determining whether it's a good value differ (i.e., ARV - I understand this method). Also, some base their offer price on the repair price (i.e., $50/sq ft - seems too low), which makes no sense to me. I'll tell them how many houses we should see, i.e., 4-5 homes, and I'll get a list for over 20 houses! Are there any resources here that can help me create an investor-friendly agent environment so I'm not turning away investors due to misunderstandings on both our parts? Thanks for your responses in advance.

Most Popular Reply

User Stats

3,347
Posts
2,344
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Caleb Brown
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Kansas City
2,344
Votes |
3,347
Posts
Caleb Brown
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Kansas City
Replied

As an agent you need to understand deals and how to analyze them. What I mean by that is learn the different areas and sub markets. Learn what the rents and ARV's are in various areas. Investors hate when agents set them up on auto emails and send junk deals. Also have relationships with a few GC's and PM's. These are vital for investors. I look through listings on or off market and then send them out with #'s. Then I check them out(most of my clients aren't local). During inspections you do due diligence. That could be inspections, getting scope of work, chatting with various PM's, etc. If there are any meetups attend those. As you learn you'll grow and be able to help more clients.

  • Caleb Brown

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