@Jay Hinrichs i've been fortunate enough to save up a nice little chunk of capital from working my butt off my first few years out of college (will be around $750-$800k after I exit a couple sfh I own in the next couple months). I would never put coaching on a credit card, I think that would be a bad idea. I am a real estate broker and I actually own a real estate school so I am very well-versed in residential lingo and I am picking up more and more on the multi-fam/syndication lingo the more I read/listen. I do recognize that I can't/shouldn't do my first deal or really any deal for that matter alone. But it's critical to use someones borrowed credibility as a co-sponsor on my first deal. If I sign up for coaching, I'm the type that will be all-in, I'm either all-in or all-out, just my personality. I did the same thing as a young real estate agent and quickly scaled from a rookie with $0 in annual GCI to nearly $400k in annual GCI.
@Ola Dantis Thank you for your feedback, I feel as though I have obsessed over the syndication space enough for the past month or two that I can at the very least speak the language, and now I'm at the point where I need to further educate myself practically, get more entrenched in education and hop in a few deals, even if just passively at first to get real life experience. Ideally I'd like to get in on a deal as a KP with fannie and freddie financing to get into the fannie and freddie club