
26 January 2007 | 1 reply
Having an "intern" follow them around or be around in the office might just be a pain in the rear to them.

28 January 2007 | 2 replies
Some days I'm terrified and just want to walk away and other days I'm elated that I'm finally getting into real estate.I work a standard 9-5 office job, make a decent (but by no means extraordinary--probably be classified as upper-working class or lower-middle class) wage and am a single mom with 2 teens.Anyway, that's my story.

22 February 2007 | 8 replies
I work for an amazing company that has an office in Atlanta but I am not sure where else they have offices.

2 February 2007 | 5 replies
they usually hold them in public place like Town Halls.if you visit a Town Hall - usually you'll be able to find info on upcoming foreclosures on bulletin boards - but the staff at the county office/town hall will have nothing to do with the process.Legal Notices are used to make sure that the auction is a public "hearing" so to speak.

6 February 2007 | 4 replies
in the long run also - if your business expands and begins to purchase real estate (for offices etc.) then Corp is better - it affords the greatest seperation (ownership is severalty with corp, one owner) - although LLC accomplishes the same type of limited liability.

6 February 2007 | 3 replies
I'm a loan officer, real estate agent, investor and anything that can make me some money.I'm just looking to network online a little bit, I mean if mostly everybody is online looking for real estate and mortgages, why not be there and give them a helping hand right.

6 February 2007 | 9 replies
Here is a direct quote from Washington DC's Office of Tax and Revenue:"Legal fees due and owing to the Tax Sale purchaser should only be paid after the taxes, assessments, fees, and other costs to the District of Columbia have been paid".Stay blessedKen

6 January 2021 | 1 reply
I have consistently found eBay/Froogle as good source from small sized supplies.

10 February 2007 | 3 replies
Sure, you will have a steady supply of listings, but the will ask you to drop your commision up front, and if a buyer comes in lower than expected on a purhcase price, the selling agent is typically the first comm to get cut.

20 February 2007 | 4 replies
I called a friend of mine in the roofing supply business to get a delivery set up.