
28 November 2016 | 3 replies
No issues.Upon speaking with him on the phone, he seemed generally disinterested and at times slightly offensive.

8 December 2016 | 15 replies
https://www.biggerpockets.com/blogs/8070/53186-dont-delay-be-offensive-todaySee my new blog post about low-ball offers, and how not even the SELLERS always know when they are about to accept an offer.

19 December 2018 | 23 replies
In terms of enforcing..I don't usually enforce it until the 2nd offense.

25 September 2016 | 7 replies
I do not mean to sound offensive either.
2 February 2016 | 24 replies
No offense but I assume you don't have any loss prevention training or experience, and I assume you won't want to take on liability if something in my house does go missing while you show it.

10 February 2016 | 29 replies
If anyone is interested in researching this topic they should look at this brief video by PBShttp://www.pbs.org/wgbh/frontline/film/retirement-...Also, this website may help you can dissect the funds prospectus.
2 March 2016 | 10 replies
No offense meant but your job sounds a bit like a MLM gig.
24 July 2016 | 69 replies
When I ask granny to down size it's almost offensive to her.

6 August 2016 | 36 replies
Not trying to be offensive to any GC's here... just trying to talk this one out and find solutions.

1 August 2023 | 30 replies
Originally posted by :Thanks for sharing and helping me think a few moves in advance.Upon further reflection and to extend the analogy ... not only is it important to think a few moves in advance, but it is also important to understand that different pieces move in different ways and have different value at different times; some are good at offense, some are good for defense, no single piece is good or bad, the more pieces you know how to play and preserve or strategically sacrifice the better, it is seeing and knowing how to play the board that matters, and being humble enough to think in percentages with multiple exits rather than absolutes in one ... sorry if you don't care for semi-vague analogies, but I'd personally rather not try to provide answers but find more value in asking interesting questions and posing semi-vague analogies ... answers give information that has a myopic context and limited shelf life, while interesting questions and analogies (hopefully) spark interesting thoughts and interesting discussion ultimately leading to wisdom that helps you, helps me, and helps the community.