
17 November 2018 | 1 reply
Are there any books, or sites, or webinars or anything out there about how to manage airbnb properties that anyone knows about?

24 November 2018 | 13 replies
If you need encouragement to take action come on this site .

18 November 2018 | 12 replies
It is on most sites.

29 November 2018 | 5 replies
Check the usual job posting sites (indeed, craigslist, etc.) and/or use google to make a list of brokerages and then make a pros and cons list for each.

21 November 2018 | 71 replies
Copied this basic information from another site ...

19 November 2018 | 16 replies
However, now that the taxes will be a little more complicated with the added real estate investments I have a couple questions regarding upcoming tax season:1.

20 November 2018 | 25 replies
Great that you joined the site!

18 November 2018 | 25 replies
I used to discount the Airbnb, but I just make it the same and if I get a listing on air then great if not not big loss.As far as maintaining a other site it is just a bunch of copying and pasting and uploading same pictures.I find the air site and app a little more cumbersome to navigate and find things but I would recommend using it to pick up a few more listings.

19 November 2018 | 11 replies
I find its kind of a progression.. you need a lot of capital for the note business the benefits of rentals is leverage of course.what i found was many did well as landlords then tired and just started to sell them off as they were retiring and note income worked for them.. and or they blended they had some rentals and had some notes. does not take a landlord that is suffering burnt out landlord syndrome but wants cash flow to understand how notes work.. but of course you have to choose wisely on the notes for sure.. as it relates to BP overwhelmingly the guys and gals on this site are going for bigger yields that they hope to make with NPN so they work for those.. and its not just passive income by any means its a business..

21 November 2018 | 10 replies
they were in business 20 some years took in 100 of millions in due diligence fee's at 5 to 10k a piece.. there targets were newbie developers who had bigger complicated projects that no one would fund when you have little to no experience.