Ken M.
Creative Financing and Some Things To Know
13 January 2025 | 1 reply
My humble advice to anyone attempting to do creative finance is:Creative finance is for experienced investors who have access to capital if anything goes wrong.Learn the lawsDon't use a contract "off the internet", laws vary by state and are also regulated on a federal levelLearn the financing techniques correctlyDon’t skip parts of the processDon’t ever do a “kitchen table” closingUse the proper deedAn attorney can help you with the legal work, but the rest you are on your ownYour guru will not bail you out“Investing” in someone else’s deal by providing a small 2nd loan so the “investor” can pay for “cash to the seller” and for “closing costs” so he can do the deal is a very bad planKnow what problems can ariseLearn the responses and solutions to problems before they are neededKnow everything there is to know about Title and what that meansKnow who a "protected class" individual isLearn the "back doors"Learn human natureUnderstand timelinesUnderstand regulation enforcement (some of these "mistakes" have a 10 year statue of limitations ( they can charge you 10 years AFTER you do the transaction) and carry hefty fines and possible imprisonmentThe court doesn't accept "I didn't know" for an answer"Know that the source of the lead plays a serious role in some states and federallyKnow how much of a "profit" pushes the boundaries to invite an investigationYou can be sued by the seller if you don’t do things correctlyYou are automatically at fault if an investigator or attorney or regulator gets involved.
Nina Erlandson
Has anyone used Obie Insurance?
28 January 2025 | 56 replies
Undoubtedly, your involvement has lead to increased business funneling to Obie...Two questions:Does Obie insure free-standing mobile homes (without land)?
Eli Edwards
Course feedback or insight from Vetted Homes
19 January 2025 | 7 replies
Not all inquiries are good leads.
Jake Andronico
Just met w/ a developer - housing affordability may get much worse.
27 January 2025 | 23 replies
SF is too globally recognized and loved to go away in my opinion.
Bruce D. Kowal
The Side-Hustle Timeline: How to Build Your RE Business While Working 9-5
16 January 2025 | 1 reply
.🎯 Your 6-Month Timeline:Month 1: Foundation (5-7 hours/week)Morning routine: 1 hour daily market researchEvening routine: Deal analysis practiceWeekend: BP forums & networkingKey Goal: Analyze 10 deals on paperMonth 2: Education (8-10 hours/week)Complete 1 RE courseJoin 2 local REI groupsSchedule lunch breaks with agentsKey Goal: Build your initial power team listMonth 3: Systems (10-12 hours/week)Set up deal tracking systemCreate document templatesEstablish banking relationshipsKey Goal: Ready to make offersMonth 4: Lead Generation (12-15 hours/week)Drive neighborhoods after workWeekend open housesSetup automated MLS alertsKey Goal: Generate first 5 qualified leadsNow, the Owners and Brokers you deal with may not enjoy this, but you can certainly "practice" making offers.
Alex Minter
New to Real Estate Investing
23 January 2025 | 23 replies
You can learn to do this independently or get a rockstar REALTOR to lead the way.
Jonathan Baptiste
Any advice on finding dependable contractors
23 January 2025 | 10 replies
Just keep in mind that contractors may hesitate to attend multiple pre-inspections, especially if they lead to no work.
Deirdre Lizio
Should you pick a property manager based on price or service?
17 January 2025 | 23 replies
Our property management company is 4 years old and nearly every lead we get is from referrals.
Ilir Livadhi
New to the U.S., Experienced Renovator Looking to Start House Flipping
15 January 2025 | 10 replies
(Auctions and foreclosures can also provide great leads.)With $20K, hard money loans are a practical option, as they emphasize a property’s ARV over your financial history.
Caleb Mesquita
New to Real Estate/Looking to learn
16 January 2025 | 5 replies
You can learn to do this independently or get a rockstar REALTOR to lead the way.