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17 January 2018 | 10 replies
Multiply your number of leads needed by cost per conversion and you have your answer.Keep in mind that AdWords can be expensive and you may find organic methods like blogging less expensive.
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2 April 2014 | 12 replies
For those of you who don't know, the 70% rule is basically the multiplier you have for the ARV (or After Repair Value) from which you deduct the repairs and it will give you the MAO or Maximum Allowable Offer for a house you're going to acquire.
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19 April 2014 | 19 replies
When principals at the company decide what to charge for a job, they estimate the number of hours it will take for their employee to do the work, and multiply it by their hourly rate.
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14 July 2015 | 17 replies
For properties in general, the easiest way to estimate taxes is to multiply the assessed (or anticipted reassessed) value by the net mill rate, currently 2.997%.
15 April 2016 | 12 replies
all three needed; New roof, siding and windows. moderate to heavy amount of landscaping needed, new deck, possibly extra structures on property need demo'd and removed such as extra gerages, etc.when i say $$/SF I mean if i look at the MLS and see the house has 2,000 finished square feet I would take my number such as $20/SF and multiply it by the listed 2,000 so my budget for example would be $40,000.
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13 August 2011 | 22 replies
Personally, I have pretty good idea of how much my professional time is worth (from having been in the corporate world for a long time) and I use that as a baseline.Ultimately, at the end of every year, I do a quick calculation that estimates the number of hours I worked in the real estate business, and multiply that by my hourly "worth", to generate my hypothetical salary that I should have expected to take from the business.I then create my financial statements (most importantly my P&L) that counts that "salary" as an expense and analyzes the success of the business as if I had paid myself that salary.
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29 November 2013 | 10 replies
Let's say the GRM (gross rent multiplier) was 100. 100x50= $5000 adjustment in the sales comparison approach.
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1 August 2020 | 26 replies
so i multiply the assessed value by the millage rates??
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29 September 2015 | 12 replies
Nothing fancyMeasure all flooring surfaces and decide what floor I want.Depending on the flooring: I find the actual floor sq/ft price and multiply by the space.
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4 May 2015 | 35 replies
Originally posted by @Joe Cummings:Whenever I see those slideshows, I think tabloid Pretty sure Forbes has become the National Enquirer It multiplies their page views and ad views.