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All Forum Posts by: Account Closed

Account Closed has started 6 posts and replied 69 times.

Post: What is the worst marketing sin?

Account ClosedPosted
  • Real Estate Investor
  • Cincinnati, OH
  • Posts 93
  • Votes 26

What is the worst marketing sin?



a. Being gross

b. Looking stupid

c. Being offensive

d. Being boring

e. Not being clear

[REMOVED]

Dedicated to your financial success,
Trace Trajano
[REMOVED]

Post: How do we know if our marketing is effective?

Account ClosedPosted
  • Real Estate Investor
  • Cincinnati, OH
  • Posts 93
  • Votes 26

How do we know if our marketing is effective?

It's important to know how to measure marketing effectiveness and efficiency so that you will know what's working, and how much return you're getting. The goal is to invest more money, time and effort on marketing that is working. By doing this, you get more and more results - or more and more buyers calling you or getting in touch with you on your properties for sale.

Dedicated to your financial success,
Trace Trajano

Post: What are your favorite websites?

Account ClosedPosted
  • Real Estate Investor
  • Cincinnati, OH
  • Posts 93
  • Votes 26

biggerpockets, of course
google
craigslist
backpage
youtube
facebook

Post: "Hard to find a Real Estate Mentor"

Account ClosedPosted
  • Real Estate Investor
  • Cincinnati, OH
  • Posts 93
  • Votes 26

The 3% who succeed in real estate investing all have one thing in common.


They all have mentors. Having one is crucial for your success. I had mentors when I started in real estate and even after buying several properties, I continue to have mentors today. I need their guidance and inspiration like I need oxygen. The only time I won't need a mentor is when I am dead. Seriously!

Trace Trajano
blogspot: tracetrajano

Post: Beginning Marketing?

Account ClosedPosted
  • Real Estate Investor
  • Cincinnati, OH
  • Posts 93
  • Votes 26

We use as many media as possible, depending on your target market. These are the different ways to sell properties:

1. Bandit signs
2. Online classified ads like Craigslist
3. Multiple listing service
4. Banners
5. Other listing services like "fsbo.com"
6. Newspaper classified ads
7. Flyers
8. Business cards coupled with asking for referral
9. Direct mail campaign
10. Email blast
11. Networking/ word of mouth
12. Mass media campaign such as TV & radio
13. Having your own website and doing Pay-per-click & Search engine optimization

There are many ways to market properties for sale as you can see. Be eXtreme about it...get multiple exposure every day and sooner or later that highly qualified buyer will call and buy your property.

Please see more details of extreme marketing at my blogspot: tracetrajano

Dedicated to your financial success,

Post: You make $4,000 a week working only 4 hours?

Account ClosedPosted
  • Real Estate Investor
  • Cincinnati, OH
  • Posts 93
  • Votes 26

Hey, I have found this from my mentor..."Make $4,000 working 4 hours per week?" He is going to have a webinar from a special guest who specializes in teaching how one can outsource all the minutiae so you can focus on doing deals. I thought of forwarding this to this forum.

Here's the link: [REMOVED - No advertising in this forum, and this is an ad]

Post: How to sell houses FAST in a really slow market

Account ClosedPosted
  • Real Estate Investor
  • Cincinnati, OH
  • Posts 93
  • Votes 26

Thanks for the reply Justin!

Here's Part 2:

In my last posting I described a very important principle - it's a principle that once I really got it...I am no longer worried about not being able to sell a house. In fact, quite the opposite is now true - I need to buy more houses! Why? I cannot find them fast enough for my buyers!

The principle is worth repeating here. To be able to sell houses FAST in a really SLOW market...

YOU HAVE TO FIND BUYERS FIRST.

Simple, yet profound. How do you execute this exactly? In my last posting I described that you have to build 3-4 types of buyers in your database, depending on your business. These are:

1. Landlord buyers
2. Renovators or rehabbers
3. Retail or end buyers
4. Tenant/buyers

I described in my last posting what each of these buyers need. In this blog posting, I will reveal to you the questions I ask my buyers in order to separate the serious from the merely curious. One thing I learned pretty quickly in this business is that if you don't know how to pre-screen your prospects and get to the serious and real buyers quickly, you will end up wasting a lot of time and you will start believing that this business does not work.

For more details, please go to my blogspot: tracetrajano

Dedicated to your financial success,
Trace Trajano

Post: How to sell houses FAST in a really slow market

Account ClosedPosted
  • Real Estate Investor
  • Cincinnati, OH
  • Posts 93
  • Votes 26

I don't have to tell you that selling houses nowadays is difficult and painful. The market has changed, the rules have changed. And if you don't change your strategies, then you will go by the way of the dinosaurs - extinction!

Charles Darwin said that it's not the strongest or the smartest of the animals that survive but those who are fastest to adapt to their changing environments. The market is ever changing. For starters...

1. Prices are declining. How do you evaluate what the property is worth when its value is going down?
2. Buyers are scared of buying and waiting for even better prices (because of number 1 above)
3. Financing is still hard to come by despite the bail out money and the $8,000 first time home buyers' credit. Why? Banks are stricter with their lending guidelines sometimes to the point of being illogical about it (I've heard horror stories of people with 700+ credit score and 20% downpayment being denied for loans!)

SO how do we adapt to this kind of environment? I gave a webinar to my students where I gave them, in detail 5 tips on how to sell in this market. I drew from my own experience and the experience of other real estate investors who are still selling houses in this market. In this 10-part blog post - spread out over 5 weeks, I will outline, in broad strokes, the 5 ways of selling houses FAST in this really slow real estate market.

What is TIP # 1? Tip # 1 is so simple yet profound. When I finally understood and more importantly apply this principle in my real estate investing business, all my selling troubles evaporated literally overnight. Just when the market turned around for the worst, I was trapped with 3 houses I just couldn't find buyers for. Good thing I was just wholesaling these houses so I have no loans or mortgages to carry. However, I lost my earnest money deposits on these deals. I lost $3,000. Ouch.

So what did I do differently? Tip # 1 is this - FIND BUYERS FIRST. That's right. I told you it's awefully simple yet the ramifications of this principle is profound. How do you do this exactly?

For one, depending on what you do in your real estate business, you could have three or even four different types of buyers. These are:

1. Landlords
2. Renovators
3. Retail or end buyers
4. Tenant/buyers

Landlords want houses they can renovate quickly or inexpensively so they can rent these houses with a good Return on Investment. They don't spend as much as the renovator in rehabbing these houses and they can sometimes pay a higher price than renovators. Landlords with the cash are KINGS in this market. Why? People can't get financing but they need a place to live and so they end up renting. Hence, landlords flushed with cash are making a killing in this market. They are buying low and so their cashflow and cash-on-cash return is awesome. If you're a wholesaler, how do you find landlords? Drive around and call For Rent signs. Then ask them if they're still looking for properties to rent out. Attend your local real estate investors meeting and network with landlords. Ask property management companies or leasing agents to refer you landlords that they are working with or working for. Tell them that you can provide properties to their landlords - and if they manage or lease these properties, they will generate more income. You can even give them a referral fee as an added incentive.

Renovators are also in the market albeit their numbers have significantly dropped over the past 2 years for obvious reasons. They are still out there. How do you find them? Check out Craigslist website in your area and look for keywords such as "new", "like new", "newly renovated". Renovators look for properties they can buy cheap and are in good areas where people are still buying houses. They generally don't care about the extent of rehab or renovation unlike the landlords. How else can you find these renovators? Check with real estate agents in your area. Some of these renovators list houses with real estate agents. Ask around. You can also attend foreclosure auctions. Pass out your business cards to the people bidding in these auctions. Some of these are renovators.

Retail or end buyers are buyers who will live in the properties they are buying. They pay a higher price than landlords and renovators. To them, being able to afford the monthly mortgage payment is crucial. Also, they are looking for properties that are already renovated or liveable. To them getting financing is crucial. You are looking for qualified buyers who are ready and able to buy. How do you find retail or end buyers? Ask mortgage brokers or bankers for people who are applying for mortgage loans or who are already pre-qualified. You can also ask real estate agents for any buyers they are dealing with.

Lastly, we have tenant/buyers. These buyers will pay the highest price among the 4 different buyers we've discussed. However, they can only afford to give you a small downpayment (anywhere from 1% to 5% of the sales price) and to them, like the retail buyers, being able to afford the monthly payment is crucial. The difference between them and the retail buyers is that they are technically renting the house from you with the option to buy it at some future date - typically anywhere from 1,2 or 3 years. How do you find these tenant/buyers? One way to do this is posting a "blind" ad in Craigslist like "Why rent when you can own? 3 bed/2 bath home, $1000 a month. $5,000 moves you IN even if you have bad credit!" The people who will email you back are tenant/buyer prospects.

If you take the time to look for qualified buyers first, you will save yourself valuable time and money because if you have buyers lined up, selling becomes a NON-ISSUE. In fact for me, I have 5 cash buyers (renovators) who are ready to buy 10 houses from me NOW and my problem is finding enough properties for these buyers fast enough. What a great problem to have!

SO, apply this principle right now in your own real estate business!

Dedicated to your financial success,
Trace Trajano
blogspot: tracetrajano

Post: 3 Ways to Buy Foreclosure

Account ClosedPosted
  • Real Estate Investor
  • Cincinnati, OH
  • Posts 93
  • Votes 26

There are three ways to buy foreclosures. There are pro's and con's in each of these methods...

1. You can buy the foreclosure BEFORE the foreclosure auction. This is the best time to buy the foreclosure because you have NO COMPETITION. During this step, the work you need to do is do a shortsale. The disadvantage of a shortsale is that your profit is in direct proportion to what you can negotiate with the bank and shortsales take a LOT OF TIME AND EFFORT to negotiate. Also, in a shortsale...depending on the homeowner, it's hard to tell them a shortsale is not going to help them keep their home.


2. You can buy the foreclosure DURING the foreclosure auction. This is the worst time to buy foreclosures because there is a LOT OF COMPETITION. You have amateurs who thought there are good deals during foreclosure auctions and you have representatives from the banks who will buy back the properties. The other bad part of buying properties at auctions is that you don't have an inspection contingency. In some cases, you cannot even inspect the property and estimate the repairs. Buying properties during auctions is a terrible idea specially if you're a beginner. DON'T DO IT!


3. You can buy the foreclosure AFTER the foreclosure auction. That is when the property was bought back by the bank foreclosing the property. At this stage, the property becomes an REO - which stands for Real Estate Owned. The advantage is that THERE IS VERY LITTE WORK other than making lots of offers and getting one of them to get accepted by the banks. There is some competition [SOLICITATION REMOVED]

[REMOVED]


dedicated to your financial success,

Trace Trajano
[REMOVED]