
23 June 2018 | 33 replies
That said, the employment trends are solid and the demographic trends where a vast majority of the 90 million millennials don’t own homes but will eventually buy as they build families, tells me there could be solid floor to any market correction here.

27 April 2018 | 27 replies
Fortunately, “*******” is not a protected demographic under our civil rights laws, even here in California.

9 February 2018 | 8 replies
I also think farmhouse style adds a nice touch if you have the right demographic (millenial-Gen Xers).

12 April 2018 | 8 replies
I know an agent that works the rest of Houston and deals with investors mostly, she can be of some help if you are able to narrow things down a bit (age,bed,bath,demographic,hoa, strike price, exit if any...etc)Best of luck and hope to see you in town
3 October 2017 | 10 replies
Hacking a single family also depend on the demographics of your area..who would potential renters likely be---students?

18 May 2017 | 2 replies
The demographics of the city still point to strong potential future growth.

7 March 2018 | 25 replies
I would advise you to do a lot of research about what demographics people in your area are mailing to... then DONT mail to those people.

5 December 2017 | 55 replies
I have worked with buyers from both locations when buying rentals in San Antonio.As far as where to invest I always tell people to follow the demographics on where people are moving and projected to move.

17 November 2021 | 9 replies
I am interpreting this as you are not shy to invest in any part of Jacksonville, but it's so big/spread out and many neighborhoods are so different as you know -- not just demographics, but schools, crime, businesses, etc., so there must certainly be some places to stay away from, for example?

5 January 2020 | 35 replies
It is important to study demographics to determine growth areas.