Joe Graziani
At what point do you lower rent for vacant units?
18 January 2018 | 3 replies
Maybe you've got to revisit your ad and where you've posted it.
Steve Zubrowski
New member from Maryland
23 February 2016 | 14 replies
I think I'm going to have to revisit it to get the most out of it.
Ron Burgundy
New investor Discouraged
14 April 2017 | 11 replies
. $120K in dry powder - and maybe revisit the plan in 2018 once you have $1MM of purchasing power.
Delroy Henderson Jr
Investor from Baltimore
8 January 2016 | 10 replies
Since you are familiar with buy and hold, I added the below links to refresh your memory while you revisit a new action plan for 2016.https://www.biggerpockets.com/renewsblog/2015/03/27/financing-options-rental-property-guide/ (financing options for rentals)https://www.biggerpockets.com/renewsblog/2014/03/06/bp-podcast-060-serge-shukhat/ (0-68 rentals in 4 years)http://www.biggerpockets.com/renewsblog/2013/01/04/how-to-rent-your-house/ (house rental guide)http://www.biggerpockets.com/renewsblog/2013/02/22/buying-rental-property/ (how to buy a rental property)To be more successful, you simply have to work on the other elements to progress your REI pursuit.
Marc Lapointe
New Member
24 March 2014 | 12 replies
I am not involved in flipping right now, but enjoyed the one time I did it so much that I could see myself revisiting it over the years.
Tyler Wolgamuth
Someone that can help walk me through starting in flipping houses
12 November 2019 | 7 replies
@Tyler WolgamuthFind a few investors in your area, and reach outDo whatever you can to add value to their real estate investing goalsDon't give anyone your money, leverage a different asset (like time)Be persistentSay yes to every opportunity, and build your tool belt (acquire things that help make you more valuable, real estate license, contractor license or something like this)Treat your experiences like a school.. because it is, document what you see/ learn, take notes, journal, revisit what you document, think about the process, analyze houses.. try to organize in a g-sheet or excel the investors criteria they use, identify how they invest, what metrics they track if any, what is their average purchase price, average profit, average rehab budget, average difference between estimated rehab budget and actual rehab budget, average difference between estimated ARV and actual ARVContinue tracking this information, combining books and podcast with this.Sleep wellEat wellExercise consistently, especially exercise before or after reading or learning, and listen to a podcast while doing cardio so you retain the infoStart refining your tool belt, and sharpening only a couple tools that contribute toward your goalStart saying No to distractions or things that take away from your goalWork consistently over a long periodWork your a$$ off...Good luck, keep working hard!
Josh Miller
100 Rentals, Success Or Fraud?
13 September 2021 | 43 replies
I'll revisit John Maxwell!
Eduardo A.
Don't Think My Numbers Add Up
3 April 2011 | 19 replies
If they change the asking price then I may revisit.
Bradley Marion
Possible to grow without taking on debt?
2 February 2016 | 132 replies
Ugh, I will revisit it later today and repost after correcting.How would you suggest including principal paydown into the analysis?