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All Forum Posts by: Richard Rodriguez

Richard Rodriguez has started 11 posts and replied 36 times.

Post: How to protect my deals from thieves?!

Richard RodriguezPosted
  • Orlando, FL
  • Posts 38
  • Votes 5

Anyone else?

Post: How to protect my deals from thieves?!

Richard RodriguezPosted
  • Orlando, FL
  • Posts 38
  • Votes 5
Quote from @Eliott Elias:

You can file a memorandum of contract to could title. This is what I do, I am not suggesting it. 


Thanks for your reply. Been doing this for years but incorrectly. We have to have it signed and notoraized by the seller. That is the correct way. I'm just not sure it has enough teeth in it. Waiting to talk to an attorney. 

Post: How to protect my deals from thieves?!

Richard RodriguezPosted
  • Orlando, FL
  • Posts 38
  • Votes 5

There is an investor in my area that is having the owner sign the deed over to him while I'm in contract to purchase the property from the owner. 

I have been told that I would have to file a lawsuit against him. This investor has done this to a colleague of mine and informed me that the investor (theif) is well aware that he would be put in litigation but will end up having to be paid off. My colleague did exactly that with this investor. 

What can I do, if anything, to prevent this from happening? 

Post: New and would like some advice

Richard RodriguezPosted
  • Orlando, FL
  • Posts 38
  • Votes 5
Quote from @Drew Sygit:

@Magnus Radala

Why does everyone want to spend money chasing strangers – and ignore their own personal network?

Per this NY Times article, the average American knows around 600 people.
https://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/19/science/the-average-american-knows-how-many-people.html#:~:text=The%20average%20American%20knows%20about,do%20you%20know%20named%20Kevin%3F

Per the US Census Bureau, the average American moves 11.7 time in their life, which based upon an approximate lifespan of 84 years, works out to be about every 7 years.
https://www.census.gov/topics/population/migration/guidance/calculating-migration-expectancy.html#:~:text=Using%202007%20ACS%20data%2C%20it,one%20move%20per%20single%20year

So, if the average American knows 600 people and they each move about every 7 years, that means that the average American knows around 85 people that move in any given year.

How many of those moves do you want to be involved in?

To maximize the number of transactions you’re involved in you will need to:

  • Be Top of Mind when they think about moving - which requires consistent reminders.
  • Be seen as an Expert – which requires a consistent message and Evidence of Success stories
  • Gain their Trust – which requires communicating integrity

So, start out by listing everyone you know in an Excel spreadsheet.

Why Excel? Because later, you can easily use it as your mailing list! Create columns for Name, Street Address, City, State, Zip and then contact info: Last Contact, Relationship, Status, Email & Phone.

IMPORTANT: do NOT ask people for THEIR business, ask for referrals! Why? Because they will get defensive if they feel you are pressuring them. Remember, they can always refer themselves😊

Now, make it a goal to call at least 5-10 of these people EVERY day and ask a MAX OF THREE off the list below of who they know that:

  • Just inherited a home
  • Had a loved one pass away
  • Is behind on their mortgage or tax payments
  • Has a relative that can’t take care of their house anymore
  • Has a house they’re having trouble selling
  • Is facing bankruptcy
  • Knows a probate attorney
  • Knows a bankruptcy attorney
  • etc

Why only three off the list per contact? Because on average, we can only remember three things at a time. If you try to go over the whole list, you’ll lose the attention of an average person and they won’t remember anything!

It should only take you about a month or two to contact everyone on your list and then the tough part – you start all over again.

Why the repetition? Because it takes repetition for people to remember things and you have to be top-of-mind when they encounter a potential client for you!

Have you ever been to McDonalds? Of course you have! So, why is McDonalds still spending billions on advertising?

One more tip – people remember stories that trigger their emotions. So, tell a story of how you (or a fellow wholesaler) helped a seller out with their challenge(s). Change your story each month as different stories will resonate with different people AND use each story to emphasize one of your “who do you know…” questions.

As you start closing deals, you will need to reinvest your profits into mailing lists and other scalable activities to grow your business.

One last thing – we recommended you create a Status column on your spreadsheet, now we’ll explain why. If you find someone that seems to know a lot of people needing your services, wouldn’t it make sense to focus more resources on them? Conversely, you will run into people on your list that just seem to be a waste of time, so you’ll want to avoid them. So, create status codes for both of these and a few in-between codes to help you work smarter, not harder.

Please send us any feedback via email, as we do not use the DM feature here.
Also, if you like our response, please don’t be shy about giving us a vote😊

Excellent points. Hope everyone is paying attention to what he posted as it is top-notch advise.

I never post on BP and frequent it seldom but had a moment, and so I'll chime in for ya........

I have been strictly wholesaling for 16 years. So I'm an "old-school" operator however, I just figured out the game only 3 years ago. 

I average just shy of 6 figures per assignment fee (average house price is only 400k). 

I mainly cold call and door knock. 

I am an expert salesman. 

I underwrite every single lead and only chase absolute gems as I value every second of my life. 

I average 33% of ARV and sell only to the highest buyer and no, rehabbers are not my end buyer which allows me to maximize profits. I leave no meat on the bone as I have a different buyer pool I tap into that are willing to pay close to retail even if the property needs a lot of work.

There IS a secret sauce that YOU have to figure out for YOUR area and how YOU work. 

"Belief-systems"....you have to be cautious on what "belief-systems" you allow yourself to buy into. Everyones experience is different. I can't tell you how many people throughout the years told me, "wholesalers can only make 3-7k per day, you need a license, you don't need one, start as a birddog, don't birdog, rehabbers make more than wholesalers, don't cold call, only direct mail, and on and on". All are right and all are wrong because it depends on THEIR experience and belief-system that have programmed themselves to buy into. This can take a while to figure out. 

I also know people in this business that have been in it for 40+ years that I can run circles around because the start date to current date doesn't = vast amounts of experience though it could but it depends how much that grinded during these dates. I put in 15 hour days for many years and REALLY worked not just sat in the office. I WORKED! So 40+ years doesn't mean much unless they "put it in" and also "what they put in". Analogy.......if you only breed German shephards, that's all you know but you may have much more success breeding other breeds. 

One of the secrets to the sauce is to only do ONE thing which will make you a SPECIALIST. I know my space better than anyone in my area. I also know all my competitors whom I live no crumbs for. 

Hope this helps and to your success!

Post: Equity skimming/stripping clarification?

Richard RodriguezPosted
  • Orlando, FL
  • Posts 38
  • Votes 5
Quote from @Tom Gimer:

What kind of moron is going to sell a $300k property for $100k? They’ll do better waiting for the foreclosure surplus and have housing in the interim.


You don't know what you don't know. In all fairness, I wouldn't call these people morons. There are some incredulous situations some of these people are in. I've been doing this for a long time. ;)

Post: Equity skimming/stripping clarification?

Richard RodriguezPosted
  • Orlando, FL
  • Posts 38
  • Votes 5
Quote from @Account Closed:
Quote from @Richard Rodriguez:

Hello all,

I have just become aware of this and have watched a few videos and read some documentation about it but I'm a bit confused. 


If a property is worth 300k and the owner has a 50k mortgage but is in default (so preforeclosure), can I buy the property from him for 100? I would NOT allow the owner to remain in the property nor rent/lease from me. I'd be buying it outright from him/her. I thought this has been going on forever but equity skimming has me wondering. Is this allowed? 

Equity skimming typically means taking over someone's property and loan, promising to make the payments, simply renting out the property but not paying the mortgage as agreed. 
 

Technically it isn't whether the property is in foreclosure or not in foreclosure, (if it's Washington, Oregon, California and a handful of other states it's treated even more seriously if the property is "distressed" or likely to become distressed in the future, that could be a criminal act) usually it's more the breach of trust and making a profit while doing so.

When someone is charged with equity skimming they usually add bank fraud, wire fraud, Consumer Protection ACT, Dodd-Frank Act, deception and artifices and a couple others I can't think of at the moment. 


 Mike, I really appreciate you clearing that up for me. I thought it was the case. However, I'm just buying the property from the homeowner when they are in default without letting them stay in it or leasing it back to them. Just a clean-cut purchase and sale transaction but I found this explanation:

https://www.graysystems.com/wp...

Post: Equity skimming/stripping clarification?

Richard RodriguezPosted
  • Orlando, FL
  • Posts 38
  • Votes 5

Hello all,

I have just become aware of this and have watched a few videos and read some documentation about it but I'm a bit confused. 


If a property is worth 300k and the owner has a 50k mortgage but is in default (so preforeclosure), can I buy the property from him for 100? I would NOT allow the owner to remain in the property nor rent/lease from me. I'd be buying it outright from him/her. I thought this has been going on forever but equity skimming has me wondering. Is this allowed? 

Post: Land Trusts - Who here does them?

Richard RodriguezPosted
  • Orlando, FL
  • Posts 38
  • Votes 5

Thank you for replying @Chase Taylor! Mind if I contact you?