
11 February 2025 | 3 replies
It's basically built on top of WordPress core and they made it simple and easy to navigate.Where in wordpress, you have to get some plugins (some are also monthly paid) to achieve the same kind of functionality.As @Todd Heitner mentioned, SEO is not just about having a good hosting/platform and features, it's about utilizing the features in a way so your brand has visibility and people that come into your website gets proper value of their time spent.Here's a table comparison for you that I wrote earlier:Now whether you have a carrot or a wordpress site, for SEO, you will need:- Website Credibility (Personalisation)- On Page SEO (Keywords, Titles, Meta Tags, Description, Image ALT Tags & Optimization etc)- Monthly Content Publishing (Regular Blogs & Location Pages)- Monthly OFF Page SEO (Citations, BacklinksNow if you consider the cost, end of the day it's quite same for both the platforms.But if you are starting fresh, I see no point of having their 180$ plan, you can continue with 89$/month plan from carrot and assign someone in your team to put regular blog posts and update the location pages.

4 February 2025 | 14 replies
Items such as this that could be easily replaced by almost any LL at a very minimal cost, will turn into a $135 aggravation at best if you overlook it!

23 January 2025 | 6 replies
I’m sure you won’t be verbally assaulted about how greedy you are Basically they were gifted $60-$120k tax free.

18 February 2025 | 7 replies
Basically dollar cost averaging.

1 February 2025 | 1 reply
Feel free to comment below or shoot me a message or colleague request.

1 February 2025 | 3 replies
We agreed, and then they informed us after the fact that the cost end up being $2,000.00 because it was "so dirty."

5 February 2025 | 4 replies
I can send you a free guest pass to our general meeting next week and you can network with a couple hundred local investors and meet all kinds of vendors with hard money, private money, trades, title and wholesalers.

1 February 2025 | 9 replies
Simply put, we start off with the As Repaired/Completed Value (ARV), then subtract from that number a reasonable profit, the rehab cost (scope of work), which we've gotten good at, a contingency reserve for any "unexpecteds", our cost of capital/carrying costs (interest and costs of the leverage used), and our costs/fees on the buy and sell sides of a flip.

31 January 2025 | 8 replies
Feel free to download it here and reach out to me with any feedback: https://apps.apple.com/us/app/biggerpockets/id6736392302

3 February 2025 | 2 replies
Feel free to reach out if you’ve got more questions.