23 June 2016 | 3 replies
I just recently attended a 3-day real estate investment session provided through Scott Yancey's organization.

9 July 2016 | 3 replies
For the salesperson course I suggest taking a cram session a day or two you take the exam for the FL specific information.

2 July 2016 | 4 replies
There place was packed, and they start the session allowing people to bring up current available properties and share their latest success stories.

6 July 2016 | 9 replies
@Bryan Otteson, we were told about married couples still being regarded as a single member llc from an education session with Aaron Laughlin, Laughlin Associates.
30 January 2019 | 9 replies
Tre Brickley I just attended the 3 day session in Seattle.

29 June 2016 | 7 replies
If you're on my newsletter and reach out to me for a strategy session, I can dig a little more into your unique situation and see what we can find for you on a one on one basis.Good luck, hope to see you in the Sub30k mastermind group to answer more questions!

28 June 2016 | 6 replies
We are definitely going to do a I have/I want session, but are hoping for some other ideas from other group facilitators/real estate instructors on how to keep the group engaged.

14 July 2016 | 18 replies
Martin , but may speak at a break-out session or something.

19 July 2016 | 10 replies
@Tony Castronovo I don't have any rehab experience but attended a meet-up session in Katy few months back and they had Elijah Randall from Fastrack remodeling that does GC work and it felt with his business model he knew what he was talking about.

27 May 2020 | 8 replies
Of course, there are analogies between Scrum and a contractor team -- the "Product Owner" is the house owner, the "Scrum Master" is the GC or project manager and the "Development Team" is the contractors -- and the planning and communication requirements for Scrum have some general best practices that apply in many other areas (including rehabbing), but the analogy doesn't extend much past that.The overhead associated with having Scrum Planning Sessions, Daily Scrums, Sprint Reviews, Maintaining Product Backlogs, etc. is just ridiculous in any typical house rehab scenario, and unless you want to triple the time it takes to rehab (and likely triple the cost of your contractors based on the time they'll spend on-site), I wouldn't recommend trying it.Now, the person you're getting this information from most likely took the Scrum model, and pulled about 5% of that model out and said, "I'm going to apply this VERY SMALL subset of Scrum techniques to flipping to make my contractors more effective."