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All Forum Posts by: Oscarr Douglas

Oscarr Douglas has started 3 posts and replied 12 times.

Quote from @Truett Kerby:

Hey Oscarr, my understanding of a buy box in real estate is your own personal criteria that you use for your specific investing strategy. For example, my buy box is single family homes in the Wolfforth area in an A or B class neighborhood that will appreciate. Feel free to ask any questions and let me know your thoughts!


 Okay, that makes sense. It sounds like there could be a ton of buy boxes and those buy boxes could change over time. I will need to take some time and really think about what I would want to purchase and why. I appreciate you being generous with your time and your willingness to respond.

Hello,

my name is Oscarr and I relatively new Realtor but I want to one day become an investor. I am curious, what is a buy box? I hear that in a lot of the podcasts I have listened too and I have seen it in a ton of books/articles I have read. Is it as simple as I buy 3bed 2bath homes or is it more complex than that? I understand that this may be a very broad question but I appreciate any and all responses!

Quote from @Benjamin Carver:

Fantastic post man! First year is TOUGH. Especially in this market. But when a lot of agents give half the effort and flake out, those who keep their eyes on long-term goals, sacrifice and forget the income part in the short-term, and do the daily stuff that is proven to work - those are the agents who will take us into the next decade of real estate. Let's be those agents! 

What's your top sources for lead gen? I cold-call realty leads and website traffic, we partner with zillow flex for hot leads, and I'm building up a social media right now.


 I have door knocked and more recently cold called. I feel like I am more productive when I cold call but I have no data that backs that up. I think ultimately, I have been focusing on the relationship rather than the outcome. When I do that, door knocking and cold calling have worked for me. I am considering working on social but I find that I struggle with maintaining focus when I add in other lead generators.

Quote from @Eric Jubeck:
Quote from @Oscarr Douglas:

I have no clue if this post will be of any value but I would like to share my experience of being an agent over the past year. I want to say that being an agent can be very hard. I was not aware of how many different ways you could go about building your business. I also think it is important to understand that you are VERY MUCH building your own business. What does that mean? 

1. You have to show up and be ready to learn. How you do business is more important than how much business you do. Preparation, planning, and learning are vital. I have made a ton of mistakes, from how I handled conversations with clients and agents, to not being disciplined in the day-to-day. Prospecting, follow-up, and business organization are all massive components of the business that could and should be broken down into manageable daily tasks. Door knocking, cold calling, social media, etc. None of these business builders mean anything if you can't commit some kind of time to implement, fail, adjust, and implement again. At least that has been my experience.

2. The Dunning-Kruger effect is very real. My first deal is in the top 5 most stressful processes I have ever been through. I did a terrible job of setting expectations, I missed issues that could and should have been addressed early, and I generally thought I knew more than I did. My point is that podcasts and reading books help with the learning curve but they don't make you an expert. I will die on this hill, and if you don't agree, that is fine with me. Experience will always be more important than book knowledge. Please do not misunderstand what I am trying to say, knowledge is powerful but only when you combine it with action. Just be self-aware enough to accept you won't have everything ironed out. 

3. You can only control what you can control. It sounds so dumb when I say that out loud but I believe this to be true. I spent too many hours stressing about stuff I had ZERO control over. I was worried about things like my client's finances and what the other agent was doing. Are they making the best financial choice? Why won't they answer my phone calls? Did I do something wrong? Do they want to back out of the deal? I would go on and on about different scenarios that never happened. Do what you can to the best of your ability and address things ahead of time if you can. Other than that, pieces will fall where they fall. 

I may not be qualified to give advice but these are some of the takeaways from my first year as an agent. Do with this information what you want. I know the market has drastically changed since I got licensed but I look forward to my second full year. I imagine I am going to learn just as much, if not more than I did this past year.


 Hey Oscarr, thanks for sharing and congrats on getting through the first year. There are some great pieces shared in your post, and as you move forward and have some of the experience under your belt, now it's time to lock in and focus on what will drive your business!!! Many agents get distracted by the next shiny object, they don't follow the Pareto Principle, no time blocking or strict adherence to their scheduling, and ultimately they end up trying to do too many things at once...especially with lead generation! Now you should know what your top sources are, so do nothing but that, and do it consistently at a high level!


 Thank you for the encouragement, I had to look up the Pareto Principle, I had never heard of it. It does make me rethink how I go about prioritizing my day-to-day. I will look at my schedule and begin to weed out pointless "work".  

Quote from @Eliott Elias:

Do you work the Amarillo market? I may have a deal I need your help with sir. 


 Amarillo is a little further than I normally work but I am always happy to look at a deal to see how I can help.

I have no clue if this post will be of any value but I would like to share my experience of being an agent over the past year. I want to say that being an agent can be very hard. I was not aware of how many different ways you could go about building your business. I also think it is important to understand that you are VERY MUCH building your own business. What does that mean? 

1. You have to show up and be ready to learn. How you do business is more important than how much business you do. Preparation, planning, and learning are vital. I have made a ton of mistakes, from how I handled conversations with clients and agents, to not being disciplined in the day-to-day. Prospecting, follow-up, and business organization are all massive components of the business that could and should be broken down into manageable daily tasks. Door knocking, cold calling, social media, etc. None of these business builders mean anything if you can't commit some kind of time to implement, fail, adjust, and implement again. At least that has been my experience.

2. The Dunning-Kruger effect is very real. My first deal is in the top 5 most stressful processes I have ever been through. I did a terrible job of setting expectations, I missed issues that could and should have been addressed early, and I generally thought I knew more than I did. My point is that podcasts and reading books help with the learning curve but they don't make you an expert. I will die on this hill, and if you don't agree, that is fine with me. Experience will always be more important than book knowledge. Please do not misunderstand what I am trying to say, knowledge is powerful but only when you combine it with action. Just be self-aware enough to accept you won't have everything ironed out. 

3. You can only control what you can control. It sounds so dumb when I say that out loud but I believe this to be true. I spent too many hours stressing about stuff I had ZERO control over. I was worried about things like my client's finances and what the other agent was doing. Are they making the best financial choice? Why won't they answer my phone calls? Did I do something wrong? Do they want to back out of the deal? I would go on and on about different scenarios that never happened. Do what you can to the best of your ability and address things ahead of time if you can. Other than that, pieces will fall where they fall. 

I may not be qualified to give advice but these are some of the takeaways from my first year as an agent. Do with this information what you want. I know the market has drastically changed since I got licensed but I look forward to my second full year. I imagine I am going to learn just as much, if not more than I did this past year.

Post: My wife and I feel stuck.

Oscarr DouglasPosted
  • Posts 12
  • Votes 6
Quote from @Alecia Loveless:

@Oscarr Douglas Keep up the good work. I would strongly recommend building your own team and self managing as you only have 1 unit. I have 20 now and self manage. Most of my tenant issues are quickly taken care of, they either email, text, or call. In 3 years I have only had one middle of the night emergency when a pipe froze and burst in the middle of the night. It was in my duplex, I house hack, and had my tenant and I been able to find the water shut off it would have been a small problem that could have been solved in the morning. It ended up taking a while longer but that’s a different story.

You will learn a great deal about the process of running your business and owning real estate through self management as well as building connections for yourself as a realtor.

I’d recommend saving your money towards your next down payment and to continue scouring the market. There’s plenty of great deals out there you just have to analyze a lot and be very familiar with your target market.

Don’t over leverage yourself and get too much into debt with mortgages on them. Make sure you’re saving enough for your reserves when you buy and that you’ve got enough cash flow for worst case scenario.

You can do this! You’ve already done the hard part.


 Fortunately, my wife has a lot more emotional maturity than me. She is very level headed and helps remind me that buying today or in a year isn't going to make or break us. We want to play the long game so we will continue to save and look at properties as the become available. 


In regards to managing, I know BP has good resources, is that where you started?

Post: My wife and I feel stuck.

Oscarr DouglasPosted
  • Posts 12
  • Votes 6
Quote from @Henry Clark:

Love listening to Dave Ramsey.

A.  One of his topics is building your snowball.  Do the property management yourself.       
B. Live like no one else so you can live like no one else. You could ask your wife to work more, but I wouldn't. Recommend you get a night time job stocking shelves or night watchman. That way you can still do REI and daycare. Or get a day job with daycare and do REI on the side. Daycare would only be every other week. Work weekends.

C.  Start looking at house-hacking a duplex or 4 plex.

While your child is young push it hard.  As mentioned above no one knows your total situation. Just evaluate and adapt to what fits you.  


 I will definitely look into managing our own properties. I haven't bought any of the self-managing books that BP offers but I will make sure to look into them. I have started looking at jobs and I am sure I will find one that works with our schedule. 

We have been looking at a number of duplexes but haven't found anything that fits our buy box. We won't give up though, we know the right deal is out there.

Post: My wife and I feel stuck.

Oscarr DouglasPosted
  • Posts 12
  • Votes 6

@Randall Alan

We give up about a %31 of our profit. I can think of a number of entry level jobs where I would make more money while I work on building my client list. You are probably right about paying for childcare if it means I am able to work a second job. I will make sure to talk with my wife and look into current prices for daycare. Thank you for your responses and time, I hope to have an update in the future.

Post: My wife and I feel stuck.

Oscarr DouglasPosted
  • Posts 12
  • Votes 6

@Travis Turner

I am happy to connect. I have seen your name around town and on Zillow, so I imagine you are busy. What is the best way to contact?