
23 July 2022 | 15 replies
You want to be the expert yes The guru ... well do you know how many people are indeed struggling with DMM, cold calling door knocking... they know FOR A FACT it is crap... and you sitting here telling everyone it works "incredibly well".. not just "it works".. but it works "incredibly well", you are doing so much damage to your credibility, just for the sake of being right.

20 July 2022 | 8 replies
Anything over $250 requires our explicit written approval with at least 2 estimates presented to us from their vendors Do you use warranty company that covers appliances like A/C, plumbing, damage, or directly do the repairs with sub contractors?

17 August 2021 | 35 replies
@Russell BrazilOriginally the house failed for appraisal due to some things that needed to be fixed when I had my contractor come out they were more damage that needed to be taken care of in order for it to pass so they decided that they weren’t going to cover the damages for the property so I wrote a letter of explanation to the mortgage lender stating that they weren’t going to do that and they issued a denial letter.

29 August 2021 | 6 replies
It worked well with an older friend, it did some lasting damage to the relationship with a family member even though we did exactly what we said we were going to do and the deal went amazing.

27 July 2021 | 2 replies
We began meeting with the seller during March 2020, the beginning of Covid, and were set to close the end of August 2020 but that was further delayed 5 months as a result of hurricane damage to the property.

11 January 2022 | 13 replies
Let's stay connected and we'll definitely do some damage:)

25 July 2022 | 13 replies
You won't have to worry about leaks, repair costs, floor damage or sanitary concerns.

29 November 2022 | 26 replies
The property manager then updates the status of the item (received, inspected, staged, damaged, etc.) when it's received.

14 August 2022 | 1 reply
Likewise, any tenant might cause damage, but lower income tenants might not have funds available to repair it regardless of responsibility.

13 May 2022 | 9 replies
@William Yeh Under non-recourse loans, the guarantor is not generally responsible for losses the lender incurs, unless they commit certain bad acts; such as fraud, waste, damage or destruction, misapplication, misrepresentation, bankruptcy, or environmental contamination.