19 April 2016 | 16 replies
I have learned that a national "expert trainer" is advising new real estate investors to create bogus ads on free websites to help them learn who the real buyers are.

3 August 2016 | 60 replies
It is crazy to imply that there is just one "right way" to invest (your way) and anybody that does it different is wrong ... real estate is local, and the advise and strategy that work in one market may not work well in another, and visa versa; that doesn't mean it is wrong, just that it is wrong for that market.

12 August 2016 | 32 replies
Your post implies that you want a career in real estate and a college education is not necessary to have a rewarding and successful career in real estate.

17 September 2016 | 1 reply
I'm not implying I would be that partner, but rather this would be an exercise to position yourself in "the space" where you would want to be.

13 September 2023 | 7 replies
This treatment (to a lesser extent) is something to expect from all contractors- Greece why you only believe 10% of what they tell you.My (totally unofficial, free, no warranties expressed or implied) opinion is that you should cut this contractor loose and either find a GC willing to bump you up in the queue in exchange for a cost premium, or learn to do it yourself.

26 January 2017 | 10 replies
That's not what I was implying.

13 June 2014 | 12 replies
And I learned the hard way, that a LREP doesn't imply they are not criminals and won't operate in their best interests, not yours.

17 February 2015 | 14 replies
There is nothing in the above that implied unfair treatment due to disability, and it is beyond their rights to force the landlord to install fences, especially if its against HOA regulations.

2 May 2017 | 14 replies
And after looking at their website, I can see now that its not implied either.

3 May 2017 | 13 replies
I'm an agent with a lady and her baby and you cannot refuse renting your room to a lady with a child and by the way the bed in one room would have to go in storage from the looks of the pic to make room for the baby's crib, walker, etc.Usually the calls go on with the caller repeating their scripted quotes and how refusal to show them our room will result in visits from 'officials' and charges filed etc.. all within a total call duration of just 1-2 mins or so (while we reiterate we're not okay with co-ed bathrooming in our household, nor making modications as we're probably relocating after graduation).Of course, we are compassionate about persons with disabilities but since when did offering a spare room or two in our own household turn into some sort of implied legal 'boxing ring' climate?