
2 August 2018 | 15 replies
Would love to have a meet and greet with you sometime next week to gain some insight on what works in Jackson and what don’t.
29 September 2018 | 3 replies
Until you meet outside Lender's seasoning requirements, couldn't you be your own bank?

1 August 2018 | 4 replies
Talk to bankers and real estate folks about local attorney’s, then go meet them.

13 December 2018 | 25 replies
In my part of the country an upgrade to a system can get pricy, we're talking about new civil engineering plans, permits, meetings with the town, excavators, and new landscaping, its a process....So I have to ask, are you sure you have a private septic system?

1 August 2018 | 1 reply
You will meet a lot of great people, and many of them will help you along the way as you get started.

31 July 2018 | 1 reply
Hey @Juan Chavez,She could access the equity by selling the entire property or bringing in a partner who would like to buy into the equity in exchange for cashflow.Why not put together a small package on your Mom, her income, the property's historical financials and a plan for the way forward and take it to 5 bankers for in person meetings?
30 July 2018 | 0 replies
I am delving into this real estate business (flipping/wholesaling) and am eager to network and meet people.

3 September 2020 | 6 replies
Overall, assuming there is enough demand to meet these numbers and we can buy at these still very depressed prices, it seems like it would be a low floor and low maintenance investment, generate moderate returns for the next 5-10 years, and have very high potential ceiling in the event the area experiences a comeback which many special interests are already working towards.

1 August 2018 | 5 replies
There is probable at least one person at the meeting who does hard money lending, and they will have local references you can talk to about the experience.

22 June 2019 | 35 replies
But we were thinking that after 6 months to a year we'll be looking to purchase somewhere else and this duplex will cashflow but not nearly enough to meet the 1% rule.