
10 November 2009 | 7 replies
One demonstration of this is the concept of ‘barriers to entry.’ I remember when I was back in school and this was just some business vocab word, but coming through the real estate battery and seeing many of our members struggle with it, it seems to have its place.All the time i see investors get hung up on a certain aspect of investing, some buy courses and never put together a deal while other investors buy a course and slingshot themselves into a deal.

15 July 2009 | 11 replies
I used to have trouble with drunk college kids stealing or beating up my metal signs.Then I designed this neat setup with a long wire and a hidden car battery......

18 August 2009 | 6 replies
Furthermore, have the addendum say that it's the tenant's responsibility to test them monthly and install new batteries.

25 April 2011 | 46 replies
that can be anything from cars without tags to domestic battery to murder. and 1 arrest in 5 years is pretty low.

24 April 2020 | 37 replies
Most of you may already know this but if your power source is not locked they will turn off the breaker then wait for your battery to die to your alarm and enter your home.

1 September 2010 | 13 replies
unfortunately, you can never control what a tenant puts down a drain....whether you're on septic or city sewer, grease, diapers, batteries, etc. will always cause problems for youi always mess that damn quote button up
17 October 2010 | 8 replies
Thanks Kevin, definitely looking forward to recharging my batteries.

11 November 2010 | 22 replies
Your fire point is actually valid and I didn't really think of that (but I did think of invisible mouse traps and I am pretty sure no one else would have thought of that).With that being said I would send a couple guys from your crew over to screw some plywood up over the easiest opens to break in with.You may even want to get some cheap battery operated motion sensor lights that may scare them if they see the lights turn on.

25 October 2009 | 2 replies
The charger on my Craftsman just died; it was a crappy drill where the batteries never could hold a charge for long anyway.

30 July 2011 | 10 replies
With out a security deposit, we would not entertain improved repairs, only necessary ones.When we newely acquire a property we walked each unit with a hair dryer (checking electrical outlets), broom (unclog garbage disposals), and smoke dectors ( tell tenants not to take the batteries out).