
5 October 2015 | 5 replies
Do your due diligence and ask about such things as how long have they been in business, are alternative assets their sole focus, are they BBB accredited and rated, are they a regulated financial institution, have they ever been sanctioned by any regulatory bodies, how many accounts and how much in assets do they administer?
11 May 2016 | 16 replies
Interesting ... these fellows might be ahead of themselves as I believe crowd funding in Canada is still only open to accredited investors (for real estate anyway).

5 October 2015 | 9 replies
There are also crowdfunding websites like RealtyMogul, Patch of Land, FundRise, etc that allow accredited investors to participate passively in deals they underwrite.Once you figure that out, you can determine your next step.
7 October 2015 | 13 replies
I am in California; im Non accredited.

5 January 2016 | 78 replies
They also have an A+ rating with the BBB which not many real estate investing educational companies can obtain (unless they buy the accreditation).

22 October 2015 | 56 replies
I would follow some of the crowd funding portals that will start to allow non accrediteds and then be choosy as to who you invest with..

1 February 2016 | 10 replies
I was already disillusioned by the public school anyway, as I wasn't helping kids succeed their own personal best as I was teaching them to make neat little circles in ABCD boxes on stated-mandated tests, so I quit teaching and began homeschooling my daughter (the way a kid naturally learns) and started a transcription business.

10 May 2016 | 11 replies
I see the remote rehab has the same risk as other HI profit ventures .. and for instance in offering memorandums that are for accredited investors there is a disclaimer that says only do this if you can afford to lose the money and not change your lifestyle.

4 May 2016 | 3 replies
@Matt Smith, if you're an accredited investor, you might consider reinvestment into DSTs.

14 January 2016 | 0 replies
To me this sounds like an accreditation-lite requirement, about a quarter of the full accredited investor requirement that most RE crowdfunding sites have.