
22 February 2014 | 33 replies
We all take some pride in what we take down as a deal, I've done my share thinking I got a heck of a deal and 2 years later finding it wasn't as great as anticipated, success often lies in not losing with a decent return if you get enough of them.

24 January 2014 | 17 replies
You might check city ordinances to see if they have any rules, such as maximum 2 people per bedroom.If this is a family, breaking them up could result in losing the tenant.

13 January 2015 | 23 replies
We could potentially learn both simultaneously without losing comeplete focus on wholesaling.)

4 March 2014 | 9 replies
However, that amount of excess is recent due to my wife becoming full time where she works, so no nest egg built up yet.

27 January 2014 | 9 replies
Even if you lose, the fact that you filed suit is now public record for anybody who cares to check public records for this.

30 January 2014 | 11 replies
That puts the salesperson in the position of providing those numbers or losing the contact, and once you've got them you can do your analysis.It's also a way to get past what can be a point of conflict while maintaining a very upbeat and positive contact.

25 January 2014 | 8 replies
Don't just use too much water, as the envelopes will become damp and lose it's clean shape.

18 December 2014 | 13 replies
The land has been in the family a long time, so they don't want to lose the land to someone outside the family.

25 January 2014 | 6 replies
I'd just give her the money so you don't end up losing both of your tenants.

21 September 2015 | 19 replies
You have to tell the seller UNLESS I can perform very detailed due diligence on this property and see ALL units I have to plan for the worst and you will lose equity for what I can pay because I can't validate things.The better records and validation the better my offer can be.