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All Forum Posts by: Matt Chestnut

Matt Chestnut has started 5 posts and replied 12 times.

Post: Seeking Input - How to Leverage Experience

Matt ChestnutPosted
  • Seattle, WA
  • Posts 12
  • Votes 6
Thanks for the great thoughts Jonathan - fully agree with the comments. To answer the question yes - target market would be the greater Seattle area, which can be expanded to the Northwest as necessary (I've operated in most of the NW markets, but based in Seattle metro). Great idea to focus and add value there, leading me to another question - by masterminds and investors are you referring to local REAs, etc? In other words - where do I find these multifam groups/investors to add value to? Thanks again for helping me get the juices flowing here!

Post: Seeking Input - How to Leverage Experience

Matt ChestnutPosted
  • Seattle, WA
  • Posts 12
  • Votes 6

Good morning team -

I'm hoping for input from your creative minds as I'm seeking to chart a course. To keep it concise - I've been working for some of the largest multifamily property mgmt and development companies for the past 15 years of my career, most recently managing a portfolio of properties over 2k units with a value exceeding $2B. Its been a great ride, and I'm trying to figure out how to leverage and convert that experience into a RE investment side hustle that eventually creates a career offramp. I'm wrestling with the common things including limitation of time, capital, and overall limiting beliefs. My career to date speaks towards getting involved with multifamily investment, but I'm really open anything on the spectrum at this point including single family. I just want to get traction and some forward momentum. I'd love to hear your immediate reactions to where I'm at, and any thoughts or suggestions on how to move the ball forward and/or any available resources that you know would be helpful. Thanks in advance! - Matt

Thanks guys for the quick responses -

@Michael Orlando - deal is in eastern WA in the town I grew up in. Metrics are looking good to answer your question, thus my interest in figuring out if I can put the pieces together.

Looking to acquire my first multifam property, owner financed. Requires a $350K down payment that I don't have, and I'm hoping to learn what to do/what my options are in this type of situation and how to take the best course of action. Do I go find equity, get a non-secured loan, get a 2nd? Thanks in advance for your feedback/advice!

Post: COVID-19 Impact on Your Seattle RE Business?

Matt ChestnutPosted
  • Seattle, WA
  • Posts 12
  • Votes 6

From a property management standpoint, Covid-19 has introduced four major impacts to my business:

1. New staffing model - we have divided our property teams into two block shifts to create staffing distancing and separation. The intent behind this idea was to give everyone lower exposure to one another, and to prevent an entire property team from needing to quarantine and by doing so leaving no team members to look after their respective property if that were to happen. Teams are still getting full weekly hours (which included 10 hours/week training/assignments from home), so this is by no means a cost savings strategy.

2. Virtual Leasing - we have completely transitioned to virtual leasing, using a combination of existing marketing assets (professional property photography, videos, and 360 tours) while rolling out a best practice program for our staff to utilize mobile devices (pads and phones) to create available unit specific tours. In addition, staff are also encouraged to conduct live virtual tours via scheduled video calls with prospects. 

3. Introduction of rent deferment payment plans - we have quickly shifted to allowing residents experiencing hardship to enter into a rent deferment payment plan, giving them the opportunity to spread their amount due in April to future months as they navigate unanticipated financial hardship.

4. Loss of revenue - combined with the payment plans, we are seeing a spike in skip/lease break activity as residents are forced to make sudden and unexpected life decisions. A number of these include moving out of the city/state.

Future outlook - from my viewpoint, the severity of the impact on the management side of the business hinges almost entirely on how long the government requires stay at home/shelter in place. The longer this mandate is in place, the greater the ripple effect. Leasing traffic and velocity is approximately 10% of typical levels, which at this time of the year in the Seattle are trending upwards toward the seasonal highs that we experience in May/June. Rents are frozen in place and in a number of cases declining to create an occupancy buffer to hedge against unexpected skip/lease break/income shortfalls. With this in mind, I think best case scenario is that our rental market plateaus for the remainder of the year as we re-stabilize which is a huge departure from the 5-6% rent growth previously forecast for our market in 2020.

On the positive side, the industry has been forced to depend on virtual leasing which is already yielding surprisingly positive results. This was an area of innovation that the industry was slowly starting to adopt but I wouldn't say was considered best practice. I think the creativity and availability for prospects to see available homes on demand will ultimately create a higher level of service for future residents as they weight their options, and will also likely lead to gains in staffing cost efficiencies for owners. Additionally I believe this will allow management companies a greater opportunity to centralize some of their leasing activity workflow as a larger percentage of leasing traffic shifts to an online touring model. 

@Ryan Daigle

Yes correct - I’m organizing friend/family interest in multifamily investment real estate in the Seattle area from a sponsor/syndication standpoint. PPM was feeling overkill, but I’ve had some people recommend that to me. I think a partnership agreement is the route I’m after as you suggest.

@Carl Fischer - thanks, will do just that

@Ryan Daigle

Thanks for the suggestion - I’m specifically trying to understand at what point you incorporate a PPM vs a partnership agreement. My understanding is that a PPM is an ‘ultimate’ partnership agreement, and covers all bases, but comes with a more substantial price tag.

Can anyone point me to best practice resource for a partnership agreement, private placement memorandum (PPM), and/or other critical documents that need to be in order for the purposes of something as buying a piece of investment property with a business partner, or as complicated as function as a sponsor syndicating a piece of investment real estate? I'd greatly appreciate the help!

Post: Where should I go to get a good Landing Page

Matt ChestnutPosted
  • Seattle, WA
  • Posts 12
  • Votes 6

Sayo - 

For landing page and all internet marketing related itesm - I recommend the resources page on Pat Flynn's blog: http://www.smartpassiveincome.com/resources/

Pat is the man, and has tons of great content that can help you.