
19 July 2014 | 18 replies
@John Montgomery Congrats on getting close to negotiating your first deal...I would say the most important thing is to "know your objective"...There are a lot of great answers on this thread, but ultimately we are all making "shots in the dark" as to the best option for you because it's our perspective...This is still valuable, but can become very confusing because you don't know each person's perspective...MY Suggestion is to know your goal over the next 3-5 years...I will let you know a little about my perspective...I am a Rehabber and Have Been Buying and Rehabbing over the past 8 years here in Chicago...I've been in your shoes...I wanted to be the Big Shot and rehab deals straight out the gate(Little to No Money & No Experience but a few REI Boot Camps- basically No Experience)...To say I've had a lot of Failures during my 14 years of being involved in studying REI is an Understatement...If I was starting all over again, and my objective is to be able to build a robust REI Biz that can allow me to rehab 6-12 homes a year, wholesale 2-3 properties per month, and build a rental portfolio...I would first focus on getting good at one objective first...Generally most people start out wholesaling because it doesn't require the money or experience rehabbing or landlording requires...I would start with Wholesaling...go find 5-10 very good rehabbers and find out their Criteria for a Great Deal...Commit to building Value for them and ultimately a great relationship.With this you will already have buyers lined up, you know what areas to look for properties in, and you can research public record and see what they are paying for properties on the acquisition(and also ask them, but keep them honest by researching public record)...At this point become the best wholesaler to these rehabbers...you will learn a lot just in this process alone...How to evaluate Comps, Repair Values, Neighborhoods, etc...Which a great wholesaler will know how to do...It will make your deals easier to sell...Ultimately I would see which one of these Rehabber will be open to the idea of partnering/mentoring me on how to get into that arena...They may even allow you to follow the progress of their deals...Every deal has its surprises and over the course of 10-20 deals you will get a real life idea of what those surprises are, and even understand the "reason why" you calculate certain contingencies into deals and also what are the most costly mistakes or repairs to look for and avoid on deals...The value of this Experience will accelerate your learning curve...In my experience one mistake for a beginner can cost you a ton of money and even put you out of the rehab business.There is no way you can learn all the mistakes you must avoid by reading a book or taking a 3-day training program.

18 July 2014 | 0 replies
My name is Kyle and I'm pretty fresh to real estate investing.

24 July 2014 | 42 replies
@Nat Chan Sounds like a stellar PM from my perspective as well.

4 December 2016 | 17 replies
Perhaps a realtor can pitch in from his or her perspective.

27 July 2014 | 7 replies
I have contacted other mortgage brokers to get additional perspectives.

13 August 2014 | 7 replies
An architect can help from a strictly spacial perspective, but they're generally constrained by other items in many locales.

31 July 2014 | 24 replies
I know a few people who flip houses and build new homes here in Hawaii but I have yet to meet a buy and hold investor in state.Thanks for giving me perspective!

29 July 2014 | 12 replies
I really appreciate your perspective on pit bulls.

29 July 2014 | 15 replies
I'd hate to refi into a higher rate, but I assume it would be wise from a CYA perspective if I were to hold onto the property.If I need to include more information in order to receive a response, I'm happy to do so.Thank you so much for your time and I look forward to your replies.

21 October 2017 | 211 replies
These are a nightmare from a management perspective and can require 50hrs/month in May and August.