
1 October 2012 | 4 replies
If you are either, get it in writing, on a referral contract. 4.
1 October 2012 | 4 replies
I will likely add company procedures in here when I finish writing them.
4 October 2012 | 18 replies
If you find a buyer, write up a contract and put the contract into escrow.

5 October 2012 | 14 replies
I had spent a lot of time writing the copy for my company's listing.

10 November 2012 | 17 replies
The inspectors were going to be laid off as well; the village made a decision to have them inspect EVERY HOUSE that went into foreclosure BEFORE it went on the market.They would even go in the crawlspace (apparently, they didn't have much else to do with their time) & write up EVERYTHING.So what happens?

7 November 2013 | 11 replies
Just to be legal (in CA), you need write to the tenant that you're cancelling the card, and give them the new method of payment in advance.

8 October 2012 | 12 replies
I had my GC (who is my uncle) just write up all the different labor costs for me on paper so I don't have to wait for him to be free to look at a house.

7 October 2012 | 12 replies
Write out the body, your phone number and everything except the owner name.

8 October 2012 | 6 replies
(This is a very important question - too much detail to go into)This is just 30% of the work for one deal that continues to give indications it is a good deal, most of the time (95%) you will not get this far before you ween them out of your sights.It is called due diligence.I could write a whole book on this alone but this is it a nutshell, which really doesn't encompass everything that needs to be done to see if this is a good deal to invest your time into.Time is money and money is time.Don't chase everything you see or do not try the shot gun approach, hoping one sticks...

14 October 2012 | 11 replies
While I can understand to have the happy feeling of not writing that check to the bank every month, consider this decision approach:Look at the available investments.- Refi the mortgage has a return of about 4.6% (less refi fees)- Paying off the mortgage has 7.8%, but not really, because he could refi and only pay 3.2%, so the return is 3.2%.