
22 June 2018 | 15 replies
You need processes to ensure emails don't get lost, someone can monitor responses, etc.At 20 emails a day, I would make sure you have a good process to receive them and respond.

28 November 2017 | 48 replies
You do have 8 saves on Zillow which could mean there are 8 people interested enough in your property to monitor it.

26 November 2017 | 8 replies
I'm the type of person that would also do a 2nd monitor for my home laptop setup, obviously for on the go that's not feasible.
13 July 2018 | 6 replies
A good tactic is to monitor properties in your target area and watch for houses that are listed 2-3 months without any price reductions.

17 October 2013 | 12 replies
Every market is different and you really do have to closely monitor cost per deal.

9 August 2009 | 3 replies
There are more changes along these lines to come. 3 - Monitored Topics Upgraded - When you click on the list of watched forum threads on the right of the dashboard, instead of just seeing a list of those topics that you follow, you will see a list of those topics, showing the most recently updated first.

1 September 2009 | 3 replies
I just came across this tid bit of info and decided to share with any NY investors.
"Paterson also signed Amanda's Law, which requires that carbon monoxide detectors be installed in all homes. Under the old law, carb...

14 October 2013 | 2 replies
Well, I just noted I've been voted up a couple of times. That feels great.
However, I couldn't find a way to see the posts that I've made that have been voted up. On the same note, it'd be great if there was...

20 March 2007 | 8 replies
[/b]A few reasons: 1) the people promoting this often have dozens of properties, many of them owned outright, and use LLCs to insulate against personal liability and also to circumvent different state or local laws monitoring owners with more than a certain number of properties. 2) many people don't know what they're talking about and get excited about how easy it is to "start" an LLC which takes about 90 seconds and a $100-$500 filing fee in most states; their assets are not protected unless several requirements are met and most newbie investor LLCs don't meet the proper requirements. 3) People misunderstand how much liability protection you actually get with an LLC. 4) Lawyers, accountants, and "start your company" companies all get paid if you start an LLC whether or not it protects you so they have a vested interest in promoting their creation.

19 February 2016 | 38 replies
Telling them what to do is a deep legal battle which noone wants to touch, you can't really prove it, if you're not monitoring them by the minute/hour, then I don't believe it is solid, safe bet on that is give them a clear and detailed scope as part of the contract (no employer-employee engagement there yet), and then monitor progress, everything you don't like, you issue a correction notice.