
22 June 2015 | 9 replies
You are at least old enough to legally enter into contracts, so I would suggest working to accumulate money, building your networks to attract investment money, and learning the business.

20 November 2014 | 5 replies
I have been a landlord for 13 years and I have always had the rule "I will only rent to people that I like and I will only manage units with people that I like" if a unit attracts people that I do not like I either sell the building or put it under property management and if I decide I do not like a tenant they are either evicted or they go to a property management company.This strategy has worked well for me... 1st I love what I do!
16 October 2017 | 25 replies
The cash advances typically carry a large fee and they won’t let you disburse 100% of the balance.I recommend using cards that have attractive balance transfer offers (I.e. the 2% or 3% of balance to transfer) and then 12-18 months of 0%.

1 January 2015 | 10 replies
I was already certain that the bottom line wasn't enough to attract a rehabber and obviously I need to do even more homework before I post anything up for sale so I won't use up bandwidth addressing each point you brought up.
19 January 2016 | 10 replies
Put an attractive top coat of paint of the walls and ceiling.
12 November 2015 | 3 replies
I'd use 10% in your numbers and then see what it actually is. 4 bedrooms gets you into either renting to families or groups of 20-somethings, where 2 and 3 bedrooms you can attract young professionals.

8 December 2015 | 6 replies
What I found is that these types of properties attract a lot of crime, have a lot of deferred maintenance issues and are generally all around unpleasant.

13 June 2012 | 11 replies
Don't do any extra work or cost to get it become like Augusta.Mow it every 2 weeks.You'll attract better tenants.

7 December 2015 | 20 replies
I think it depends on the competition and what kind of tenants you're trying to attract.

3 December 2010 | 5 replies
My obvious intention is to attract new investors.