
27 July 2016 | 5 replies
I would gather the data for residential sales, pending sales and homes on the market for sale.
18 February 2016 | 2 replies
As Kyle mentioned, City-Data is a great site.

18 February 2016 | 2 replies
If you ask the seller to test the soil and they do, and it comes back contaminated and the DEP has to be alerted, the seller is going to hate you.

21 February 2016 | 6 replies
@Cailyn Aune, I didn't, by any means try to discourage you from using data.
20 February 2016 | 2 replies
I have access to a triplex my parents own but pay no attention to, and I was planning on taking over the property management aspect of that to test myself and learn what I can.

23 February 2016 | 9 replies
From this data, you can utilize a website that will give you a breakdown of the percentage of homes that sold, in various price ranges, for a given zip code.

24 February 2016 | 7 replies
I bet if you data mined BP you could use this site as a trend predictor.

3 February 2017 | 1 reply
You can take the class and then sign up for the license test which is held at the University of Guam.

1 March 2016 | 17 replies
You can't always base your analysis at what the MLS data shows for rent but physically go look at it and see what you can do to increase rent to make the numbers look good.

24 February 2016 | 13 replies
Core tests with a local soils engineering firm.