Archive for May 2013

15 Type of Houses to Avoid

Posted on May 1, 2013 by

Over the past 30 plus years I have learned that there are some different types of houses I shouldn’t have bought. Each of these types of houses gave me a financial seminar I didn’t really want to take but because of my inexperience at the time I made mistakes I don’t want you to have to make. Here are some of the different types of houses you should definitely avoid until you have some experience under your belt.

1. Houses located on a Busy Street.

Houses located on a busy street will definitely be hard to rent or sell simply because very few people want to have to listen to the noise of traffic day and night and have to back out into traffic every time they want to go anywhere. Another problem with houses located on a busy street is the danger of their children going into the street and being hit by a fast moving car. Houses on busy streets are not anything I want to invest money into that will definitely be hard to sell and set on the market for weeks or even months before they sell eating up my profits in holding costs.

2. Houses with small front yards.

Houses with small front yards are like houses on busy streets they place the house too close to traffic and noise will be a problem for anyone who lives there. Another problem with houses with small front yards is there isn’t room enough to have landscaping to enhance the looks of the property. Most homebuyers want a front yard to distance themselves from the street and the traffic and have a place to landscape and a place for their children to play. Read More→

In recent Washington State Supreme Court decision (Bain v. MERS), the court ruled that the Mortgage Electronic Registration System (MERS) is not and cannot be a legal beneficiary under Washington State Law.  In effect only the legal holder of the note, the real creditor, has the power to appoint a substitute trustee in order to transact such legal actions as a foreclosure.

The court asserted that the power of sale of a property is a significant one and trustees have tended to ignore their duties and obligations.  The court believed it was time to swing a little bit of the power back to the side of the borrower.

Essentially, the court ruled that the lenders could not continue to routinely ignore the state’s laws regarding the recording of deeds and then turn around and use the same set of state laws to foreclose on a borrower.  The court also left the door open for those with legal grievances to ask for compensatory damages against MERS and those who used MERS in wrongful foreclosures.

The court made this decision in part because MERS never has anything to do with the actual financial transaction.  It never handles any of the money in the loan process, and it never has anyone on staff with personal knowledge of the principal for whom they are acting.  Therefore, MERS has no standing when it comes to a foreclosure. Read More→

My First Real Estate Mistake

Posted on May 1, 2013 by

My first property turned out to be my first mistake in the real estate business and one of the best lessons I ever learned.

I am a pilot by trade. I graduated college and went straight into the flight academy. I flew and instructed there until my first real job as a corporate pilot for a medical supply company in Macon, GA. When I quit that full time job to go into real estate full time I had saved up $10,000 and had one deal under my belt. My first deal…a duplex which cash flowed $300 dollars a month. It was the best deal I ever did because it got me going in the business and now I have almost 400 units and 8 employees. I also made one giant mistake!

Always place the deal in context of the surrounding market. I analyzed the deal like I was taught and it did cash flow accordingly. I closed on the deal for $40K. Shortly after I attended my first REIA meeting in which I was promptly told “you’re an idiot!” Unfortunately I had to agree with the person that was telling me this. He and his friends had been buying similar duplexes in the neighborhood for $20K! I paid twice what the property was actually worth. Read More→

Mentoring

Posted on May 1, 2013 by

One thing everyone knows or should know about me by now is that I always make sure each transaction I participate in is a win-win situation. I do this to insure that the people I do business with continue to come back, become my walking billboards and think about me any time they have another deal. Many of these individuals also continue to work with me because I taught them much of what they use today make money.

I do not sell courses, books, or have any packages to sell. In fact, all the mentoring I have done to date has technically been for free. Obviously, the reason for training someone is in the hopes that they will pick up a fraction of what you teach them and find deals. You end up with deals and they make money for finding them, it does not get easier than that. Keep in mind that although it may not cost you money, it does cost time and time is money. A few months ago, an individual that I had mentored and assisted in earning $20,000+ in a matter of a few months stole a deal I negotiated and paid me ZERO. This taught me a lesson I had not followed before which is, “Be very selective in who you choose to mentor.” Although we would like to believe everyone has good intentions there are individuals out there that do not believe in win-win situations and they must be avoided. Read More→

Method Number Three: Call Ads

I know this doesn’t sound appealing but if you’ll do it my way, you’ll probably grow to love it. You see, I don’t want you to call ads, I want you to get someone else to do it for you. Someone who will do it every night because it’s their job and you’re paying them. Here’s how it works. It’s so simple.

Get the Property Information Sheet out of my course or one of my Boot Camp manuals and have someone call all of the Sunday FSBO ads every Monday night between 6-9 p.m. Have them fill out the basic information you need to determine if you want to call the seller back.

Frankly all I need is the asking price, the estimated value, and the loan balance, condition of the property, name, and phone number, address and whether or not it’s listed with a Realtor. With this information, I can prescreen the prospect sheet in 5 seconds and make my decision to follow up or not. I can’t get into prescreening here so if you don’t know how to do this, I’d suggest you fix that before getting real serious about generating leads on houses when you can’t spot a deal when it appears. Read More→

Deal or No Deal?

Posted on May 1, 2013 by

I’m excited. I am using new techniques and they are working!

Where do I learn new techniques? Recently I took training because I know that change is one of the key factors of staying ahead of changes in the economy, the market, and life in general. I chose trainings about lease options and 0% owner financing. Each of these gave me a new in my tool in my belt – a tool to help me to make more money.

But understand, for any scenario to work, I MUST know my plan.

I assume that you want what I want: to maximize my profit potential. So, we are interested only in the properties that will help us do this. We must make choices with this in mind.

Here is a scenario to show you concrete ways of deciding… Read More→

In our last issue, I’d promised to deliver to you a fast, easy, and FREE way of getting a good chunk of motivated Seller Leads, so that you could start filling your pipeline full of deals, in order to avoid the dreaded condition known as “One-Deal-Itis!”  Sound familiar?  Great! We’re all caught up.

In this issue, you’re going to learn exactly what information you need to compile about each lead you’re going after. Remember, we’re targeting For Sale By Owner leads (aka FSBOs), and we’ve also selected Craigslist.com as a source for those leads.

But let me also point out that there are many other sites you can use to gather a nice list of leads, such as Fsbo.com, ForSaleByOwner.com (yes, they’re separate sites), Owners.com, and others.

You’re also about to get a sweet script to use when calling these FSBO leads.

Ready? Here we go… Read More→

It is the goal of this column to answer questions about QuickBooks and how it is used in the REI arena. Know how to record transactions in the proper way and have your set of books in good shape when it comes time for taxes. It is our intention to do this by you the members submitting questions to Karen@smallbusinessadvisor.biz, and getting answers here in this column.

Q: P&L report does not match with Sales Report – how do I fix this?

A: An apparent discrepancy between P&L and Sales Reports can trace to one or more of several issues, including, but not limited:

  1. The accounting bases of the reports do not match.
  2. Sales items point to incorrect sales accounts
  3. The P&L report includes transactions that do not use items (e.g. The Expense Tab on a bill or a journal entry).
  4. List or transaction damage in the company data file.

Read More→