
3 October 2017 | 7 replies
It's a business and you have to treat it that way.You start early in the day and potentially have appointments at night when people come home from work, either to meet with sellers or to take buyer's out.You can set your own hours, but ultimately, you have to work around everyone's schedule.

16 September 2017 | 20 replies
That's why I'm asking the question.So, if the Buyer is a Customer and not a Client, but I represent the Seller as a client, I still have to treat the Buyer with honesty and ethically.HOWEVER, if I tell the Buyers that I will be a Bidder as well and I know their bids, and then I disclose my bid, won't this cause the Buyers to think twice about bidding above me?

19 September 2017 | 9 replies
Dropping property out of a limited liability company that is treated as a partnership for income tax purposes and then immediately selling and structuring a 1031 Exchange transaction will create risk since the individuals never acquired the title with the intent to hold for rental or investment purposes.

16 September 2017 | 1 reply
I want to get a clearer idea of what travel expenses I can write off, but I don't want to get into a gray area of risky tax practices, so here's my question: If I'm in town for a week, can I treat the first three days as a work trip and the rest as personal time, and write of the airfare and business costs with confidence that I'm not muddying the waters?

18 September 2017 | 17 replies
Everything over 740 is treated the same.- Thus, 100% of credit reports for people with rock-solid credit say "too many credit inquiries," even if there is literally only one credit inquiry in the last two years.

18 September 2017 | 5 replies
Also, if someone treats you like garbage and scoffs because you don't have "enough income" versus saying, here's what we can do to get you there.

16 September 2017 | 1 reply
It will also help but may not be determinative if the other party agrees to your valuation and will agree to treat it for their tax purposes at that agreed upon price.
11 April 2020 | 10 replies
have fun and keep a score card of your success (add up equity until you hit a million dollarstenants - your new responsibilities - treat them like customers - they'll pay your mortgages if you dodo not associate yourself with a mentor or buy expensive real estate programs unless you know for sure that the instructor or mentor has a reasonable large net worth and is qualified to teach you what you need!

5 December 2020 | 8 replies
There are many ways to treat insect problems, without needing to bring in a pest management company.Whether or not the problem is coming from the drains, now would be a good idea to do proactive pest management maintenance. 1.

23 October 2018 | 2 replies
I had my pest control company come out to treat the problem and they concluded that we had a GERMAN ROACH infestation.