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Updated over 5 years ago, 07/01/2019
Adding tenants on facebook!
Tenants add me on FB
- do I accept?
Why or why not?
Thanks again guys
Originally posted by @Charlie Moore:
@Heather Schmidtknecht
Isn’t that discriminatory
Only if the information you use is in regards to race, color, religion, sex, disability, familial status, or national origin.
Smokers, partiers, drug users, **** fighters, animal abusers, hateful people, etc., are not protected classes.
I wouldn't do it....This is a business and you do not want to give a tenet anymore info about you than they need.
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Originally posted by @Charlie Moore:
Tenants add me on FB
- do I accept?
Why or why not?
Thanks again guys
Do you run your business on your Facebook or is it just for personal reasons? Me my business is social medial, for example I've got about 50,000 Instagram followers so there's all sorts of random folks there. So in that case add them and everyone else you can. If you don't do any business on it and just use it for personal reasons I'd say no, keep that separate from your personal life. Tenants are not now nor will they ever be your friends.
Just an FYI( I didn't read all the responses so it might have been said), they likely got a request from Facebook to find all their friends by using their email contacts. Likely they didn't mean to include you or want to add you on Facebook. Anyway, I always deny these requests. I usually get them on LinkedIn which uses similar methods.
@James Wise
It’s personal
But drop your Instagram, I want to follow you ! Thanks!
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Originally posted by @Charlie Moore:
@James Wise
It’s personal
But drop your Instagram, I want to follow you ! Thanks!
lol, you'll have to google it or go to my BP profile. BP rules would prohibit me from dropping it here.
As evidenced by the replies, there seems to be a huge fear in "them" knowing you. It's honestly quite comical. I work in the public sector and it's the same. Common factor in both is that no one seems to have any real examples of how a horrible tenant/customer ruined their life through knowing who they were.
If you're doing your due diligence in selecting the right tenant, why not? Everyone knows who their mortgage company is and who to talk to at the bank with any questions. Everyone knows who owns Amazon, Google, Chick-fil-A, local businesses, and literally every other business in the world.
At least every other BP podcast talks about trust and relationships making the difference in deals, and every podcast ends with giving ways to connect with the guest speaker. I don't get this whole mindset that tenants are terrible humans out to get the landlords and "we" have to separate ourselves from "them".
Even in this thread it was admitted that a landlord/property manager uses Facebook in screening tenants. What if tenants are simply doing the same to screen landlords? I know I would.
- Real Estate Broker
- Cleveland Dayton Cincinnati Toledo Columbus & Akron, OH
- 18,801
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Originally posted by @Trey Burns:
As evidenced by the replies, there seems to be a huge fear in "them" knowing you. It's honestly quite comical. I work in the public sector and it's the same. Common factor in both is that no one seems to have any real examples of how a horrible tenant/customer ruined their life through knowing who they were.
If you're doing your due diligence in selecting the right tenant, why not? Everyone knows who their mortgage company is and who to talk to at the bank with any questions. Everyone knows who owns Amazon, Google, Chick-fil-A, local businesses, and literally every other business in the world.
At least every other BP podcast talks about trust and relationships making the difference in deals, and every podcast ends with giving ways to connect with the guest speaker. I don't get this whole mindset that tenants are terrible humans out to get the landlords and "we" have to separate ourselves from "them".
Even in this thread it was admitted that a landlord/property manager uses Facebook in screening tenants. What if tenants are simply doing the same to screen landlords? I know I would.
Well for the record I have a real life example of a bad tenant trying to ruin my life. Had one dude who was able to find out where I lived so he could try to burn my house down. Had to get the police involved it was a whole thing, total pain in the butt.....So moral of the story is yes, it does happen. But again as I mentioned earlier I am much more in the public eye than 99% of landords out there.
Originally posted by @Trey Burns:
As evidenced by the replies, there seems to be a huge fear in "them" knowing you. It's honestly quite comical. I work in the public sector and it's the same. Common factor in both is that no one seems to have any real examples of how a horrible tenant/customer ruined their life through knowing who they were.
If you're doing your due diligence in selecting the right tenant, why not? Everyone knows who their mortgage company is and who to talk to at the bank with any questions. Everyone knows who owns Amazon, Google, Chick-fil-A, local businesses, and literally every other business in the world.
At least every other BP podcast talks about trust and relationships making the difference in deals, and every podcast ends with giving ways to connect with the guest speaker. I don't get this whole mindset that tenants are terrible humans out to get the landlords and "we" have to separate ourselves from "them".
Even in this thread it was admitted that a landlord/property manager uses Facebook in screening tenants. What if tenants are simply doing the same to screen landlords? I know I would.
So naive...
I don't have to worry about this because I got rid of Facebook 3 years ago. It's worthless.
You don't want tenants to know where you live, if you're married, kids, etc. No good comes from that.
It's a business, they're not your friend unfortunately.
- Peter Tverdov
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