
5 October 2015 | 7 replies
I closed the laptop last night and thought I know about what to pay for this, and as long as we come up with a fair payment it's a win all the way around.

26 October 2019 | 9 replies
I was wondering with those property owners who are pet friendly, what do they do to secure a win-win situation??

21 September 2015 | 11 replies
I had figured it'd be easier to just work with a wholesaler since they already had the leads but your plan may be my best bet.

21 September 2015 | 4 replies
A win/win for your next flip!

24 September 2015 | 2 replies
I currently have investments in Notes and funding of renovations for other investors for an agreed percentage of sale price profits for a win/win situation.

27 September 2015 | 6 replies
Right now, I am very active in the Rent To Own program and find it very rewarding both from a financial perspective and helping people get into their own home.It’s a win win.

28 September 2015 | 53 replies
Hiding behind contractual technicalities and perverting the law for self benefit never wins.

26 September 2015 | 5 replies
If its gone bad or stolen in one area I bet it might not be much longer for other to have it so better to have asphalts

24 September 2015 | 0 replies
It’s a win-win.

2 October 2015 | 7 replies
hi karl. sounds like you actually have a good start here in this business. bill is partly right. of all the answers here, i think he has some good advice. that being said, you need the think outside of the box here. you said you will have $80k into the place if you fix it up to basic standards, and it would be worth $150k. ok, those numbers are great. but here is an idea you don't seem to be considering. you own the house free and clear. no mortgage to anyone. you and your buddy want cash out of the deal. then your only option right now that really makes sense is to finish the place to basic standards, go refinance the place for what the bank will lend you, split that money and then rent the place out to make the payments. you get the benefit of getting all your money back, plus a few buck on the side i would bet, and when you rent it out, the tenant is making your payments. whats wrong with that idea???