
26 June 2011 | 26 replies
I also know that that $1 taken from the employer, after its run through the government money grinder, will churn out probably $0.05 in "benefits."

26 November 2008 | 2 replies
I am assembling a 'checklist' to keep my brain from churning!

31 December 2009 | 35 replies
During 2008, I finally finished churning the inherited tenants that I had (evicting the ones that were unacceptable) and finding appropriate tenants for those units.

10 January 2009 | 11 replies
That sounds very low.And if you're new to landlording and management, your account will be open season to 'churning' by the property manager.Someone here on this site wiser than me suggested that new investors get a year or more 'seasoning' in managing their own properties to learn the ropes.Good luck.

2 April 2009 | 20 replies
well, imagine that for pot. trust big companies would come up with some phenomenal product. it would blow away the crap that gets smuggled in from mexico and canada, and the stuff that a bunch of idiots with no real qualifications or knowledge of botany are churning out of their grow houses.check this out for example:http://www.nydailynews.com/news/ny_crime/2009/03/27/2009-03-27_firefighter_sanitation_worker_arraigned_.htmldo you really think either of those idiot firefighters should be generating a product that people are going to essentially consume?

26 April 2009 | 4 replies
In my experience, there is typically a lot of churn when a new owner takes over.

22 January 2011 | 19 replies
The reason for the chatter is the constant supply of newbie Note Brokers that the late night, get rich TV seminars are churning out.

22 April 2013 | 49 replies
"Churn and burn" was a popular phrase in the '80s.

21 August 2018 | 68 replies
You should try to move that finders fee to a higher numbered month - that way, if the tenant is a dud from the start, they don't get that reward; you'll see less "churn" through sub-quality tenants IMO.

7 July 2011 | 11 replies
I will sit on the phone for you for hours, send pictures of design mock-ups, go through an endless number of emails, make sure that the product is the one you want, make edits for a while without charging you hourly, and make sure you know how to do everything you want to.Making a web site should never be a churn-and-burn process, which I guarantee what the $250 designer does.