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All Forum Posts by: Jared B.

Jared B. has started 1 posts and replied 5 times.

Quote from @Patrick Drury:

@Jared B.
Find a mentor. If you don't know anyone who owns rentals, cold-call investors who own multifamily in the areas, you are interested and ask about how they got started and if they could teach you. Ask how you can help them (try to add value to them, be it mowing lawns painting or other labor). You could reach out to a property management company and ask if they have any jobs available to gain experience in managing properties. Lastly, you could get your real estate license and sell real estate which is a good option. 


 Thanks Patrick! Yes finding a mentor looks really important to learn the ropes of real estate. Appreciate your advice 

Quote from @Nick Shri:
Quote from @Jared B.:

I am currently a college student going into my sophomore year. I will have little to no debt graduating out of college. I know that I want to House Hack (duplex) to start my real estate investing journey right out of college (and later invest in multifamily properties after the house hack). Right now, I'm working the summers to pay off small student loans and saving a little. 

Are there any practical steps I can take to continually grow and develop before I start investing in real estate? I've read a few books and have talked with a few family friends that are either realtors or house flippers, but I want to get more involved before I am able to gather the capital necessary to start investing. 

All advice above is great. I would recommend to find work in a RE firm as an intern to learn the ropes. You could intern as a contractor one summer, real estate broker office the other and so on. If you think of partying during your college, save that time and visit local real estate meetups or investors groups. Do a thesis in your college on real estate investing if you can.

Now, save as much $$ as you can, stay frugal. Buy a property to house hack if you can once you graduate. I understand you are still a student, but if you could borrow funds from your family and buy a property to house hack in your college town you should consider that. Rent out rooms to other college students and learn the ropes on the fly.

Wish you the best...


 Yes it seems being able to work with a RE office will definitely be beneficial. Doing a thesis on real estate, never thought of that! Great recommendation.

Quote from @Nathan Gesner:
Quote from @Jared B.:

I am currently a college student going into my sophomore year. I will have little to no debt graduating out of college. I know that I want to House Hack (duplex) to start my real estate investing journey right out of college (and later invest in multifamily properties after the house hack). Right now, I'm working the summers to pay off small student loans and saving a little. 

Are there any practical steps I can take to continually grow and develop before I start investing in real estate? I've read a few books and have talked with a few family friends that are either realtors or house flippers, but I want to get more involved before I am able to gather the capital necessary to start investing. 


Generic beginner advice:

1. Start with BiggerPockets Ultimate Beginners Guide (free). It will familiarize you with the basic terminology and benefits. Then you can read a more in-depth book like The Book On Rental Property Investing by Brandon Turneror The Unofficial Guide to Real Estate Investing by Spencer Strauss.

2. Get your finances in order. Get rid of debt, build a budget, and save. The idea that you can build wealth without putting any money into it is a recipe for disaster and the sales pitch of gurus trying to steal your money. A wise investor will not try to get rich quick with shortcuts. If you can't keep control of your personal finances, you are highly unlikely to succeed in real estate investing. Check out my personal favorite, Set For Life by Scott Trench , or The Total Money Makeover by Dave Ramsey.

3. As you read these books, watch the biggerpockets podcasts. This will help clarify and reinforce what you are reading. You can hear real-world examples of how others have built their investment portfolio and (hopefully) learn to avoid their mistakes.

4. Now you need to figure out how to find deals and pay for them. Again, the BiggerPockets store has some books for this or you can learn by watching podcasts, reading blogs, and interacting on the forum. There is a handy search bar in the upper right that makes it easy to find previous discussions, blogs, podcasts, and other resources. Biggerpockets also has a calculator you can use to analyze deals and I highly recommend you start this as soon as possible, even if you are not ready to buy. If you consistently analyze properties, it will be much easier to recognize a good deal when it shows up. Find Brandon's videos on YouTube for the "four square" method of analyzing homes and practice. It doesn't take long to learn how to spot a good deal.

5. Study the market. You can learn to do this on your own or get a rockstar REALTOR to lead the way. I highly recommend a well-qualified REALTOR that works with investors and knows how to best help you.

6. Jump in! Far too many get stuck in the "paralysis by analysis" stage, thinking they just don't know enough to get started. The truth is, you could read 100 books and still not know enough because certain things need to be learned through trial-and-error. You don't need to know everything to get started; you just need a foundation to build on and the rest will come through experience and then refining your education.

You can build a basic understanding of investing in 3-6 months. How long it takes to be financially ready is different for everyone. Once you're ready, create a goal (e.g. "I will buy at least one single-family home, duplex, triplex, or fourplex before the end of 2019") and then do it. Real estate investing is a pretty forgiving world and the average person can still make money even with some pretty big mistakes.


 I love this! Great advice Nathan! These are definitely practical steps I can start taking.

That's great advice! I definitely think that volunteering/helping out at a RE office could be beneficial. I know someone that I could get connected to do that possibly! Thanks Bruce 

I am currently a college student going into my sophomore year. I will have little to no debt graduating out of college. I know that I want to House Hack (duplex) to start my real estate investing journey right out of college (and later invest in multifamily properties after the house hack). Right now, I'm working the summers to pay off small student loans and saving a little. 

Are there any practical steps I can take to continually grow and develop before I start investing in real estate? I've read a few books and have talked with a few family friends that are either realtors or house flippers, but I want to get more involved before I am able to gather the capital necessary to start investing.