
14 June 2017 | 12 replies
The reason being is that the seller doesn't have a physical reminder of your business.

14 June 2017 | 14 replies
I am a personal trainer, physical therapy technician, and I also help rehab and renovate my family's rentals.

29 June 2017 | 13 replies
Definitely fulfillment - anything that involves physical labor or administrative work I exclusively farm out in every situation.Re: mail piece - the #1 rule is that you need to have whatever mail piece you are sending have the leads name and address on the front of card.

11 July 2017 | 20 replies
Discrimination may also happen in other ways, such as when someone is offered less favorable lease terms or interest rates than others or when a physical barrier or other issue makes property inaccessible to someone who has a disability.Source of income refers to any lawful income, subsidy or benefit with which an individual supports himself or herself and his or her dependents, including, but not limited to, child support, maintenance, and any federal, state or local public assistance, medical assistance, or rental assistance program.

19 June 2017 | 2 replies
Collect the NROC in certified funds only and as a separate physical payment from first month's rent.

19 June 2017 | 27 replies
We have done this in Chico and I feel it helps motivate people, give them confidence and physically show them a deal as it is happening.

22 June 2017 | 10 replies
Its kind of hard to explain without a physical example but I tried my best to.

20 August 2017 | 12 replies
Few quick pros and cons off the top of my head, having bought seconds for a few years.Pros: - cheaper to get into (you can get high quality ones for 10-20k)- safety through diversification (you can buy more notes with the same money and spread your risk that way)- generally much higher returns (we've had a lot of notes with 100%+ returns and recently got one with 1,000%+ return)- typically don't have to deal with taxes, HOAs, and as with all notes don't have to deal much with physical propertyCons:- Less inventory available, with rising prices and more competition- Lots of underwater inventory so you often run the risk of a) getting wiped b) having note sit in the drawer for a few years- Have to deal with scum-of-the-earth bankruptcy attorneys- Requires much more interaction with the borrower, since foreclosure is rarely the optimal play- Fixed costs are killer on 2nds (ie 1 foreclosure on a 50k first is a ton cheaper than 5 foreclosures on 5 10k notes, so is servicing etc)There are a ton of pros and cons to both, and both are great.

25 May 2017 | 6 replies
the title company would have no idea the unit was expanded, they don't physically inspect it.

14 August 2017 | 17 replies
I would say first do research on areas that are close by, I invest in NJ and it has many great areas for investing and PA as well because no matter how much research you do online until you're actually physically in the area you won't get a real feel of the area.