
5 March 2015 | 13 replies
You have to watch the lien priorities.

2 March 2015 | 9 replies
Hi Randy,I watched that this evening.

2 March 2015 | 3 replies
You gotta watch out for that pitfall :)

13 February 2019 | 7 replies
With that said, watch Brandon Turner's podcasts.

4 March 2015 | 26 replies
I always read/watch your stuff!
2 March 2015 | 1 reply
I have been thinking about real estate investing for about 2 years now have read a lot of articles and watched a lot of videos.

2 March 2015 | 6 replies
When I started buying MH's in resident owned park communities or on private land and reselling them I obtained my RE brokers license once again because of the volume I was doing.I've been a developer by default as when I do purchase a lot/parcel and replace an old home with a new one or purchase an empty lot/s and develop them out I either sell them or keep them in my rental inventory.I've been dealing in distressed MH & site/stick built properties for 20 years and do a combination of all the above so I think it prudent to keep all my licenses and qualifications current and in good standing.Lastly, I've been a construction defect, park management/owner harassment, drainage and fraud expert witness, Industry expert for the California State License Board, consumer advocate at large for various TV, Radio and printed media outlets as well as a forenencis expert and consultant for myriad state attorney's general, district attorneys offices, county, state and federal agencies for over 20 years.

10 March 2015 | 13 replies
I've been looking around the site for a while now and after listening to and watching the webinar from last week I decided I need to take some action if I'm going to get serious about this aspect of my life.My immediate goals are to finish school and land a civil engineering job.

3 March 2015 | 11 replies
(however not that high...UNLESS...due to the following:When an electric stove or an electric water heater (high electrical users) go on the fritz, it shoots a lot of current into the electrical meters and your bill can be $500 or moreWhen a water main breaks and shoots through the water main meter, your bill can be $4,000.00, (that happened to us) But this is water and not lights or gas, just using this as an example.Electrical dryers use an awful lot of electricity, and when they go bad, watch out!

2 March 2015 | 5 replies
Take Joe's advice and hook up with someone close to where you live and basically say I can give you leg work running to the courthouse, painting units, checking on properties etc. in exchange for letting me watch how you do things.Remember each no you get just means your one step closer to getting a yes.