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Results (10,000+)
Jimmy Lieu Should I assemble real estate team before purchasing property?
22 February 2019 | 8 replies
residential home and multifamily is two different things. you can control your environment with a lot of discipline. i recommend spending a good amount of hours reading and listing to podcast, then on your days off check out the properties you interested in investing. you can learn really really fast, you can be above average in a few months depending on how much work you willing to put out. also what is your financial situation, and how is that first investment do for you if it goes wrong. it is all relative, if your market is cheaper and you can afford to buy and hold without needing cash flow. there's enough tools out there you can quickly learn to minimize risk. if have a good profession, i would recommend buy at places not where you want to live, but areas that you don't want to live, it usually yield a higher return. i am not talking about the ghettos where they have shooting every night, but hard working class that just trying to put food on the table for their family. if you doing single family and try to minimize risk by doing your homework, you don't need all these people. just start slow, one person will recommend you to another and you will slowly find people that works for you. you can't build a team if you never work with them, you have to go through the pain of getting burn by people and you will find the one that will become your team. good luck!
Chan K. Landlord – Tool or Device to Detect Pipe Burst or Constant Runnin
29 July 2019 | 6 replies
Pain in the rear when it happens, but a tool isn’t going to find it unfortunately.
Phil Sharp Which geographies to invest in for buy-and-hold
4 December 2018 | 8 replies
@Phil Sharp Hey man!
Enrico Bertini House hacking with a family of 5 in NYC?
27 November 2018 | 8 replies
Think sharp objects and debris everywhere on top of drywall dust covering everything you own.
Maria Amaro In Escrow and Buyers Want to Rent
28 November 2018 | 35 replies
Make them see your pain and what you're allowing them to do is really a large sacrifice for you (because it is!!).
Nick Rutkowski Owning a Historic Building? Good Idea or Not?
22 November 2018 | 3 replies
But a PAIN to work on.
Jonathan A. Flipping partnership going to court on debate of renovation costs
23 June 2019 | 131 replies
You are the money and controlling partner so you will be against the wall providing documentation etc.. what a pain in the a**.Maybe Show your numbers to them and offer them a couple thousand bucks to go away.
Sydney Tiffany Asking a Realtor why a property is sold
23 November 2018 | 10 replies
Whether it's properly priced will depend on the seller's motivation, and how well they can see their own motivation vs the pain of not selling. 
Brandon Hurlburt Question on next move
23 November 2018 | 1 reply
I'm just not sure if once i get to say 30+ doors if it will be too much of a pain in the butt.
Amy Thatcher Eviction at Christmas: Scrooge or Good Business?
28 November 2018 | 29 replies
I have never had to evict anyone,  guess my tenant screenings skills are sharp.