24 June 2012 | 11 replies
Don't be afraid to fail and if you can shadow someone that is currently flipping property that's even better.

23 June 2012 | 21 replies
A simple letter to the landlord might help.I suspect that you have not complained much about other things, so don't be afraid to call the landlord and raise heck.

30 November 2012 | 24 replies
Sometimes this is where the good rehab properties are found, but if a lender is afraid to get out of his car without a gun when he/she does the site inspection, you most likely won’t get a hard money loan on it.2.

6 July 2012 | 15 replies
It benefits every one if the mismanaged properties are distributed more equally among ambitious and capable people.The more people, the more lines of credit and liquidity in the market.Don't be afraid of competition.

6 July 2012 | 11 replies
Its bad because I have no idea what I am doing and am afraid to make a step that will disqualify funds from tax protected status.I am mostly in cash and Fidelity pays me 0.01% on the funds.Financing the loan on income property at the max legal interest rate (which I was told should be within reason Prime+1% will pay provide steady return with low risk.

17 July 2012 | 11 replies
I know the admin is afraid of legal consequences, so does one exist, a black list of garbage appraisers?

24 July 2012 | 15 replies
I'm almost afraid to mention web work, because last time I did I got my post removed and my influence slapped pretty hard.

8 October 2012 | 9 replies
dont be afraid to submit an offer because you can always back out without any money down during the 10 day inspection period.Ultimatly look for homes that are back on the market listing.

19 July 2012 | 13 replies
(im in california) i'm kind of afraid to do a deal with a lady this old becuase i dont want them to cancel the deal because they think i am taking advantage of her.. i'm not.. just want to do it correctly..3. also the tax. i'm buying her house so i'm not responsible for her tax.. but she doesnt have money to pay for it.. so some of the money pay has to go to her tax... on her tax return does she have to report how much money I paid for the house?

20 July 2012 | 4 replies
Then you find a good one who knows what he's doing and actually puts the time in to help, isn't afraid of "low-ball" offers that other agents don't want to write up, and knows how to get deals done.