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All Forum Posts by: Josh Bryan

Josh Bryan has started 22 posts and replied 140 times.

Post: Chicago Meetup

Josh BryanPosted
  • Aurora, IL
  • Posts 153
  • Votes 19

Just got my work schedule for next and I should be able to attend. A friend that interested in getting his first rental may join me.

Post: New Member from Chicagoland

Josh BryanPosted
  • Aurora, IL
  • Posts 153
  • Votes 19

Welcome!

Post: Chicago Meetup

Josh BryanPosted
  • Aurora, IL
  • Posts 153
  • Votes 19

I am going to try and make it. It would be nice to meet some local people.

Post: Anyone familiar with United Real Estate in Chicago?

Josh BryanPosted
  • Aurora, IL
  • Posts 153
  • Votes 19

@Matt Overbee, I plan on being an agent and doing my own deals.

Post: Anyone familiar with United Real Estate in Chicago?

Josh BryanPosted
  • Aurora, IL
  • Posts 153
  • Votes 19

@Tyler H. how do you like it? I have an appointment to speaker with the local broker tomorrow evening. Is it a place that a new agent can succeed or is it geared more toward a seasoned vet? I saw one YouTube video that made me hesitant about starting there as a newbie.

Post: Anyone familiar with United Real Estate in Chicago?

Josh BryanPosted
  • Aurora, IL
  • Posts 153
  • Votes 19

Anyone familiar with United Real Estate? Primarily the Chicago office? Their website looks good. I'm just wondering has any input. I'm looking for an agency to hang my license for the first time. Any information would be appreciated.

Post: Hello from Chicagoland area

Josh BryanPosted
  • Aurora, IL
  • Posts 153
  • Votes 19

Hello all. I have been a member at BP for a few years, but not active in a while. I just passed the state broker exam this morning and starting to interview different agencies in the western burbs. I plan on becoming more active here and hope to meet the many brilliant people in the area. I hope that I can learn a lot and also provide something as well.

Post: New broker…opinions on which agency

Josh BryanPosted
  • Aurora, IL
  • Posts 153
  • Votes 19

Hello all. I am in the process of getting my real estate broker license in Illinois. I wanted to hear the opinions from other brokers on which brokerage would be better for a newbie and why. Well known name, but lower commission splits or local, lesser known name with better commission splits? I plan on starting out part time within my circle of influence until I can save up enough to quit my full time job. All opinions or insights would be appreciated.

Post: Considering becoming an agent/broker

Josh BryanPosted
  • Aurora, IL
  • Posts 153
  • Votes 19
Originally posted by Joel Owens:
I will tell you like it is. I have been in this business going on 8 years.

I am a broker and own my commercial real estate brokerage in Georgia.

Each state is different.In Georgia you have to be licensed for at least 3 years continously active and in good standing to get a brokers license.

You can take the test in year 2 but not become a broker until the time requirement is met.

As far as reserves let me clarify a few things for you.Unlike the JOB you have now real estate is a free for all where you have expenses that run into the multiple of thousands of dollars annually even if you close on nothing.

Also the average agent it says makes about 35,000 a year.This is UNTRUE. What they do is take the top 5% earners in the field that make gross over 100k a year and combine those with the few making 40k and the many part-timers or full timers who make 20k or below (which is the majority).

The reality is 85% of new agents are out of the business within 1 year.Of the 15% that remain another 75% of those are out of the business after 3 to 5 years.

It is one of the most toughest and demanding fields out there to be successful in the marketplace. (TO BE SUCCESSFUL) is the keywords.

You will see many trainers say look at new agent (Sally Smith) in recruiting she is a MILLION DOLLAR PRODUCER.

What they don't tell you and the public is that is in sales price volume.

If you take 1 million in sales times 3% you have just made 30,000 gross commission for the year.You being a new agent you will most likely be on say a 50/50 or 60/40 split with the brokerage.

So now your commission before taxes and expenses is 15,000 to 20,000 if you are lucky.Then take away wear and tear on the car and gas ,properties you spent advertising on that didn't sell,thousands spent on licensing fees and other items and now the Million Dollar Producer is below the poverty level !!

In residential if you got a real estate license TODAY and hit the ground running you will need 3 to 4 months to get a check.

Licensed today then get a buyer.Spend a few weeks showing property.Finally get one under contract.Closing takes 2 months.You are now getting you first check if everything goes perfect in 90 days.

This is for residential.If it is for commercial checks will be larger but average closing time is 6 months instead of 3.

So if at the cell place you make 36,000 a year.You would need minimum 18,000 as reserves for 6 months of payments and to be safe 36,000.

If you have just a few K FORGET IT.

If you want get your license and put it with a per transaction company for your own investments while you feed your family.Then after maybe 1 year or so you have income to replace your JOB then you can scale down and quit.

I have 25 agents and I see this burnout cycle happen all the time.I don't want it to be YOU.

good luck

Thanks for your perspective!

Post: Considering becoming an agent/broker

Josh BryanPosted
  • Aurora, IL
  • Posts 153
  • Votes 19
Originally posted by Justin Morgan:
Josh,

Not sure how many months of reserves you would need but why not do the cell phone business and start doing RE on the side?

P.S. Now is a great time to be in the business... all the week links have fallen out.

I'm in retail sales so I usually work weekends. Won't I need to be available on weekends if I do this part time?