Bruce D. Kowal
The Side-Hustle Timeline: How to Build Your RE Business While Working 9-5
16 January 2025 | 1 reply
.🎯 Your 6-Month Timeline:Month 1: Foundation (5-7 hours/week)Morning routine: 1 hour daily market researchEvening routine: Deal analysis practiceWeekend: BP forums & networkingKey Goal: Analyze 10 deals on paperMonth 2: Education (8-10 hours/week)Complete 1 RE courseJoin 2 local REI groupsSchedule lunch breaks with agentsKey Goal: Build your initial power team listMonth 3: Systems (10-12 hours/week)Set up deal tracking systemCreate document templatesEstablish banking relationshipsKey Goal: Ready to make offersMonth 4: Lead Generation (12-15 hours/week)Drive neighborhoods after workWeekend open housesSetup automated MLS alertsKey Goal: Generate first 5 qualified leadsNow, the Owners and Brokers you deal with may not enjoy this, but you can certainly "practice" making offers. Â
Michael Velez
Beginner Real Estate Investor
24 January 2025 | 13 replies
Starting out can be overwhelming, but it’s great that you’re getting educated early.
Chris Seveney
What is the Best Way to Grow as a Private Lender
13 January 2025 | 15 replies
Hire only “A Players”. Â
Alex Hall
Subto FHA problem
20 January 2025 | 57 replies
I don't see how they relate to wanting to educate myself or asking for reading recommendations.Â
Zach Howard
Where and how can I learn in depth about subject to, wraps etc without the fluff etc?
12 January 2025 | 2 replies
I'd like to take a deeper dive into subject to, wraps and other related things to educate myself and see whether some of these might be things I can actually utilize in my real estate journey.Â
Don Konipol
The Most DANGEROUS Real Estate Investments for the “Amateur” Investor
28 January 2025 | 23 replies
The implication that anyone who pays for college education, or works at a 9 -5 job is stupidÂ
Erika Andersen
Advice on working with a home buyer's RE agent using an hourly rate?
23 January 2025 | 8 replies
For example we pay our own income taxes, broker splits and all of our other expenses directly out of what we make including required E&O insurance, MLS dues, licensing fees, Board of Realtor dues, continuing education costs, marketing, advertising, office fees/rent, transaction coordinator/ assistant fees, health insurance, car insurance and maintenance, gas, tires, software, retirement fund, etc.We are not W2 employees with payroll taxes already taken out of our paychecks, company-paid health insurance and matching retirement account plus a guarantee of at least 40 hours paid work per week, sick pay, paid vacation… none of that.So if you’re thinking you’ll be able to pay an hourly wage typical of a W2 hourly employee like $50-85/hr… that’s definitely not going to work.
Jason Thomas
I am new and want to learn and get a deal for 2025 with good guidance
23 January 2025 | 5 replies
I HAVE BEEN TRYING TO GET INTO REALESTATE FOR A YEAR BUT LACK EDUCATION I HAVE JOINED BIGGER POCKETS TO FIND A WAY TO MAKE MY DREAMS OF REALESTATE Â HAPPEN AND START MY ROAD TO FINANCIAL FREEDOM
Thanh Lu
For owners, self management vs hiring a vacation rental company?
22 January 2025 | 16 replies
Large and national players may treat you and your property as just a number.Â
Anita Z.
Real Estate Investor Tax write-offs
10 January 2025 | 16 replies
Just keep in mind that entertainment expenses—like taking clients out for a show or a game—aren’t deductible anymore.And, yes, you can deduct 100% of your education expenses if you’re already a real estate investor.