
1 March 2006 | 22 replies
Well, requiring people to register in order to use the site could result in a 4,000,000 per year database of people (assuming a 50% internet usage by home shoppers/seller and an 80% sign-on rate).

23 February 2006 | 3 replies
All depends on what you negotiate.As a general rule of thumb if you use a property manager you will pay: -1 month's rent for Managment fees (rent collection, maintenance, financial, etc) -1 month's rent for Listing fees (advertising, screening tenants, lease signing)So, the easy-sneezy solution will cost you 2 months (16%-24%) of your rental income each year for a normal propert under a one year lease.

4 March 2006 | 12 replies
Lucy,I would suggest that you go into a Realtor Broker office (preferrably a big one that has a lot of signs around where you live) and ask to talk with the Broker or a Manager directly.

26 March 2006 | 5 replies
Maybe you can just find some web sites that let you list land online, or just put them on ebay and see what happens .. you can also create signs around town that say "land for sale" .. with a number and directions, maybe an address ... post in forums, and local bulletin boards around town ..

20 March 2006 | 3 replies
I'm not personally affiliated with the group but I signed up for free notification years ago and occasionally run across good deals thru them.Another good place for leads is in the MLS searches: Back on the Market, Price Changes, Expired Lists ect..

13 April 2007 | 6 replies
Hey, Just signed up for this excellent website today, I was told to check biggerpockets out and I have been reading all week!

13 March 2006 | 10 replies
How would I go about finding the deals to sign up(same method as for lease options?)

22 March 2006 | 1 reply
However, in my world every check I've ever gotten or written had a DOLLAR SIGN ($), not a PERCENT SIGN (%).

23 March 2006 | 1 reply
They signed all the papers at close, but never checked to be sure the rate in the docs matched those I had been promised.

7 April 2006 | 2 replies
Many of these home buyers did not understand what they were signing up for when they agreed to a 1, 2 or 3 year ARM product.