
28 April 2019 | 4 replies
@Dilman Recinos Realtor.com receives a direct MLS feed, so I'd say that's the most accurate.Trulia is owned by Zillow.Zillow receives SOME MLS feeds, but not all.
28 April 2019 | 3 replies
You can also subscribe to the BP YouTube channel and listen to them there.

2 May 2019 | 8 replies
I have a website nurangedevelopment.com and would appreciate feed back on what people think of it.

5 May 2019 | 4 replies
Repair Estimation/Budgeting - Ability to create detailed Scopes of Work & repair costs budgetsBudget Tracking - Ability to track your actual expenses against your initial budgetScheduling - Ability to create a project plan & track project progressChecklists/To Dos - Ability to track daily to-dos and checklists of items that need to be completedCalendars - Ideally all of your Schedules & To-Dos feed into a Calendar that you can use to manage all of your projects in one location.Document Management - Place to store project documents and photosHere are some Project Management tools that you might consider: Trello/Asana/Zoho Projects/Basecamp - General project management software that includes tasks, Gantt scheduling, calendars, project forums, document storage & team collaboration tools.
1 May 2019 | 1 reply
One benefit of using its site is the close relationship realtors have with the Multiple Listing System (MLS) that provides data feeds used by most sites on this list.

16 May 2019 | 15 replies
Later is doable, but harder.In the overall, like with all marketing channels, calling is mostly a game of numbers - successful investors are the ones to cover up a lot of ground consistently and manage to follow up their leads until they are ready to sell

11 May 2019 | 8 replies
If anyone has some great recommendations of property managers that they have worked with and are happy with, I would greatly appreciate some feed back.

30 April 2019 | 85 replies
If you don't like that, the appropriate channel to complain about it is through your elected representative.#2 - You are missing a tax deduction annually by not claiming allowable deprecation - so you are paying more each year than you need to.#3 - When you sell, the IRS requires you account for the depreciation claimed along the way, or depreciation you should have taken along the way (for people like yourself who ignore the rule), so you are required to pay at sale.#4 - If you refuse to do these things, you are committing tax fraud - Annually by overstating your income each year, and finally by understating your capital gain at sale.#5 - I'm going to guess part of your confusion is caused by the "two-touch".

7 July 2017 | 5 replies
She has a weekly radio show on Wednesdays at https://www.wmkvfm.org/innercircle.php (also available as a podcast on iTunes and she has a YouTube channel).I think she'd be a great person to connect with since you're local to the area and she's been investing in the area for decades.