
21 April 2013 | 11 replies
I to take on a lot myself and have found myself delegating and outsourcing more and more but the tradeoff is that my skills have grown where I find many more issues on my walkthriugh and can get such a price in that it makes perfect sense to hire out the work that is not worth my time.Good luck Steve

19 November 2015 | 26 replies
It too requires experience, knowledge, skill and technical expertise to do it well.

14 June 2013 | 6 replies
Tax planning, books set up for a business, on going bookkepping, all take different skill sets.

13 February 2014 | 10 replies
If you don't have the skills or budget to change your bottom line and offer more, it doesn't matter what other people are buying.Is it your experience that investor buyers in your market aren't making their highest and best when the market is this tight?

1 April 2014 | 11 replies
That's usually hard to do by a newbie walking in with a high degree of management skills, about all you have left is labor.Deals without skin?

16 April 2012 | 7 replies
In early February we moved her to a skilled nursing facility.

7 May 2012 | 6 replies
I literally do no work in closing these deals, my assistant takes the call, offers a soft pass and then schedules the appointment with my guy on the ground who then takes over from there.

21 May 2012 | 4 replies
Starting out I suggest you just wait on the court issues as that requires some skills in dealing with attorneys and the court system.As Michael said, you can certainly approach an owner.You might take an option and then step out of the way for a buyer, you'll need to read about this strategy, but it can be a low dollar start.But really, you need to find investors, flippers and landlords and find out what they want if these guys are to be your buyers.

7 August 2013 | 10 replies
Lookup the excellent blog posts about "are you cut out to be a wholesaler" it captures the skills needed to be successful: tenacity.

10 July 2006 | 3 replies
We consolidated our skills and formed RuzzMan LLC.