
15 October 2013 | 52 replies
I live on podcasts/audiobooks for my daily commute and I wouldn't be in real estate if I hadn't randomly downloaded Millionaire REI by Gary Keller on a whim.Great job Marty Boardman, Joshua Dorkin, and Brandon Turner!

21 January 2013 | 10 replies
. $200,000 in mold repairs due to years of moisture and a personal injury suit - not covered by insurance.Oh yeah, call me, please, Mr.

25 January 2013 | 28 replies
:)Name your poison....bring a sling, remember, I do curls almost daily :)

3 March 2013 | 6 replies
Find out what makes their lives difficult and what brings PAIN to them on a daily basis.

23 January 2013 | 8 replies
Best of luck, and keep posting your ad, but try and post it daily.
18 January 2014 | 19 replies
., which costs you about 200 dollars a year (you even need to file a small return for it).For daily rental you get 50-60% split on the revenue.For weekly rental you get 80% split on the revenue.My own experience there is only with daily rental from which the income is very low (about 3%) because of high POA fee and high tax rate.I heard from a friend that weekly rental generates a lot more income for him.

25 January 2013 | 1 reply
We are looking for someone who updates daily or close to that.

30 January 2013 | 5 replies
no. if i did, i'd never buy any of the houses i have. mine are built in the 50's, so they have asbestos basement tiles, probably some coats of paint with lead in them (if they painted before 1978), and what basement does not have some moisture or mildew (unless you are holmes on homes).

25 January 2013 | 15 replies
But that's not for me.To see what your competition is charging for rent:Look at Craigslist for rent adsLook at newspaper ads both dailys and weeklysCall on For Rent signsLook at www,huduser.org for the average rents for your areaIf the market won't bear what you are charging for rent then it needs to be lowered.Vacancy is one of your biggest expenses that LL often overlook.

17 April 2013 | 9 replies
I have worked as a service provider to the HOA industry for many years and having been to literally hundreds of meetings I can tell you that some are like babysitting dozens of adults for 3-4 hours every month (and that doesn't even include the calls/emails you get on a daily basis).