
26 October 2016 | 17 replies
I am positive law enforcement has priorities above kids playing in a common area and accidentally knocking over a flower pot.

8 January 2017 | 22 replies
I have gotten houses all kinds of ways, from simply listening to a quick pitch at a real estate club, auctions, direct mail to door knocking on a house about to go into foreclosure.

27 October 2016 | 22 replies
.- Keep in mind forming an LLC will knock you out from all conventional lenders, as they do not lend to LLC's.

27 October 2016 | 9 replies
I wouldn't knock it and the only think I would add is to consider how much it costs to repair and maintain them.

19 April 2018 | 12 replies
If you can pay the $40,000 for the premium package without blinking, then maybe these so called coaches can put you in contact with syndicates or other deals that require hundreds of thousands to play.If one struggles to get $10k, or $5k, or even $1k for a seminar - the best bet is to keep saving and learn in the school of hard knocks.

24 October 2016 | 6 replies
Anything else is considered unpaid and will be treated as such; we don't send anyone out to knock on doors to collect cash, checks, money orders, or anything else.

24 October 2016 | 9 replies
As I understand it the primary reason to put your real estate business in to LLCs is asset protection to limit your personal liability.If something happened (knock on wood) and a property of yours got sued (rightfully or not) and you owned the property traditionally, you could be sued for any amount of your personal assets (house, car, wage garnishment...).

28 October 2016 | 8 replies
Drive for dollars, door knock, send out yellow letters.

16 January 2017 | 7 replies
@Gustavo Munoz Castro Driving for dollars, word of mouth, referrals, purchasing lists, skip tracing, door knocking, MLS data mining, etc.

9 March 2017 | 5 replies
I have thought about knocking on the doors of the neighbors to see if they know who the owner is.