
14 October 2012 | 7 replies
I am young in this game of real estate but any hints (I know some of your investment secrets are just that, secrets) would be much appreciated!

22 April 2014 | 6 replies
If we want cheap money I guess that is the game we have to play.
17 October 2012 | 5 replies
Creative is the name of the game, especially these days!

2 November 2012 | 16 replies
The back end of that search is far more powerful than what we've been using previously, and over time, we expect our results to improve drastically as we tweak our algorithm.Additionally, as you may have noticed, the site's search box no longer gives you the option to select various areas of the site to search.

5 January 2013 | 24 replies
Since probate deals have been my game for twenty+ years, I'm accustom to hearing this question.

18 October 2012 | 7 replies
If you are referring to the window title SEARCH, that is not the one I am missing.The previous search engine had a drop down box that allowed you to select a member by name and then it took me to the members site to see his/her most current posts.

24 October 2012 | 2 replies
If my ultimate buyer's goal is to own a salon with units (arghh) then thel opportunity could be to buy at big discount, stop the contractor bleeding, re-sell the property subject to the existing first and wrap it with a second after getting either a big down payment or other major skin-in-the-game consideration from the ultimate buyer.

19 October 2012 | 20 replies
They had been foreclosed on in another town in 2003, so they know how to play the foreclosure game apparently.So even though a notice of foreclosure hasn't yet been filed, it could be that they are going to do a "rent and bail" rather than the "buy and bail" that others have done.

23 October 2012 | 18 replies
I think if you do your intial homework and dont just throw blind offers at everything but pick a select few that work on paper first this would be a good solution saving you as well as your realtor time.

28 October 2012 | 41 replies
Any program promising highly specialized courses isn't worth your time because the game changes over time - having a solid ground floor allows you to adapt and keep up, and also apply your skills across industries.