Real Estate Investing And Marketing Guide For Newbies

December 12, 2009 by Kenny Santos  
Filed under Real Estate Investing


 

Real Estate Investing And Marketing Guide For Newbies

Submitted By: Jason Jensen
 
 

As we all know that the economy is in a continuous state of fluctuation recently, and it?s not easy for investors to stay ahead of the trends. If you want to make money from something more reliable today and stay solid for many years to come, you might want to start investing in the real estate business.

It?s no coincidence that you see or hear something about real estate investing all over the place these days. The success stories of flipping houses, buying and selling properties are everywhere. And a lot of new investors are trying to find out how they can make money in this particular investment vehicle.

To start real estate investing, all you need to learn is a proper knowledge of how real estate works. As long as you?ve got the discipline and dedication, you can definitely start investing in real estate. Keep in mind that success is as easy (or as difficult) as finding the perfect property for you.

Location, location, location.

For a start, you must recognize the location you?re buying in. This is probably the first and the most important piece of real estate investing. Look around you. If there are many houses listed for sale in a particular area, it?s not a good idea to buy another house in the same area. Several properties in one location that aren?t being bought is a red flag for real estate investors who can see that any property they have to sell in that particular area might sit too long on the market.

You must choose the properties in prime locations that are popular for many people to live in, have some good property values and attracts a lot of home shoppers. To find this kind of information, you can talk to real estate agents or just look on the Internet to see what?s available and how much exactly the properties are being sold for. This will give you an idea, and hopefully a good plan, of what property values in any one area can be so high or low and then use it to your advantage.

Remember, it?s always better to start real estate investing in small. You can start on smaller projects one at a time until you get that feeling on how this type of investing works. And you shouldn?t spend all your money to buy the property because you are going to need some of them to improve the house. Even if you don?t have any plans to do some cosmetic changes, such as; renewing outside paint and landscaping, all other improvements can make a huge difference between selling it big and waiting to sell.

Of course, there’s no magic in real estate investing, there is no one fail-safe system that will always work all the time when you’re selling a property. One of the best marketing strategies for real estate investors is placing some classified ads.

Classified ads can be a great place to get your name in front of regular people, because many of them look at classifieds on a regular basis. You can mention in your ads that you buy and sell houses. Believe me, the number of calls you will receive might just surprise you.

So now you know that real estate investing can be a very rewarding as well as enjoyable livelihood. All you have to do is educate yourself and take some good actions!

About the Author:

There are a countless number of ordinary people like yourself who have gained back their life and freedom as we speak right now. http://www.wealthywayseducation.com/freedvd.html Find out how you can gain your own financial freedom with a 21st Century Education at http://wealthywayseducation.com/

Article Tags: estate, investing, property

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Real Estate Investing - Is There One Magic Rule?

April 19, 2009 by Kenny Santos  
Filed under Real Estate Investing

If you’ve spent much time around people who invest in Real Estate you know they all have their favorite rules. In Investment Club meetings, online chat rooms, even at the corner coffee shop, you catch snippets of conversations including phrases like,

?Location, location, location,?

?Buy low, sell high,?

?Invest in what you know,?

and many others.

While these are all important, in my experience (and that of many other seasoned investors) there is one rule that, if followed consistently, will save you from almost all of the potential pitfalls investors commonly encounter. What is this pearl of wisdom?

Simply this: YOU MAKE YOUR MONEY WHEN YOU BUY.

?What?s that,? you say? ?Everybody knows you make your money when you sell.?

?Not so fast,? I reply.

Think very carefully through what I?m about to say. Etch it into your mind and heart. Follow it faithfully and you will come close to guaranteeing your investing success. Forget it at your peril.

YOU MAKE YOUR MONEY WHEN YOU BUY. Very simply, this means that your profit is literally created at the time you purchase a property, through the price you choose to pay and the terms you negotiate in your purchase offer. There is no other time in the life cycle of an investment when you will exercise such tremendous control over your potential profit.

There is no other time when you can come so close to guaranteeing your success, and also no time when you can virtually guarantee your failure.

Buy right, for the right price and terms, and you will be able to weather virtually any unforeseen or unknown defect in the property. Sure, some of your profit may be eaten up correcting the problems, but there will still be something left for you- something to allow you to move on to your next project.

Buy wrong, spending too much on the property, and even if you do everything else right you will be hard-pressed to make money.

This Rule Almost Makes The Others Obsolete

Even if you?ve broken most or all of the other so-called ?rules? of Real Estate investing, if you follow this one magic rule, you can emerge victorious, a little wiser but unscathed by crippling losses. Let me illustrate.

Recently I purchased a single family home, and in so doing I broke many of my own rules. I bought a house nearly an hour from my home, I bought a house for the wrong reasons (I really, really liked it), and I bought a high end house in a low end neighborhood (a classic no-no). I also bought it without having a clearly defined exit strategy (another classic blunder). I just knew I could do something with this house.

Additionally the house had one of the most investor-unfriendly features I have ever had the misery to run across- an indoor swimming pool. When I wasn?t busy finding and repairing leaks in the liner, I was struggling to refill the pool using the property?s seriously overtaxed well, which I had to keep waiting for to recover. I still have nightmares about it.

This house took me three times longer to sell than I first imagined, and holding costs were eating me alive.

But? I owned this house right because I had bought it for the right price. I had foreseen that this house, with all it?s beauty and features, could also be a very difficult house to rehab, hold, and sell. Based on that, I structured my offer with plenty of room, which is a good thing, because much of that ?room? was eaten up before I was finally able to sell.

Much, but not all.

Why was I able to withstand all of those expensive problems and still walk away with a tidy profit, and some hard-won wisdom? Because I recognized and applied the first and most important rule of Real Estate investing- YOU MAKE YOUR MONEY WHEN YOU BUY.

I believe that if you will etch this principle forever in your mind, and think of it always when making your offers, you will safeguard yourself from almost all potential investing disasters (acts of God excluded).

Two Things You Must Know

To put this principle into practice, you absolutely must acquire knowledge in two key areas- market values and repair costs. While each of these is worth an article on it?s own, I will cover them briefly here.

First, market values. You must thoroughly understand the market values in the neighborhood where the property is located, so that you can project an accurate After Repair Market Value (ARMV). In other words, how much will this property sell for after all needed repairs and upgrades have been completed. While it is beyond the scope of this article to cover market value in-depth, I will simply note that the one best way to determine the ARMV of a residential property is to compare similar properties in the neighborhood which have sold recently (called comparables or ?comps?).

If you don?t know the values in the neighborhood, STOP! Don?t invest there until you have come to understand the values by looking at lots and lots of properties, and talking with Realtors and others who know the neighborhood. Then you can proceed from a position of strength, certain that you know what you are doing.

Second, repair costs.

Once you know the ARMV, you need to be able to work backwards to arrive at an offer that makes sense. To do this, you must know what any needed repairs and upgrades will cost you. You don?t need to know to the penny, but you must come reasonably close, and you can only learn to do this with experience. If you don?t have this experience, and you?re not an expert, hire one.

You will need to befriend a contractor you trust, or partner with one on a few deals. Either way, let someone who knows this stuff bring you up to speed. Get a contractor on your team.

It shouldn?t take you more than a few deals before you can walk into a home in a neighborhood you?re familiar with and, after spending no more than 10 minutes or so, know what it will cost to repair and what it will sell for after you repair it. Knowing you can do that equates to freedom and power.

How To Structure Your Offers

Armed with that kind of specialized knowledge, you will be able to confidently structure offers that others can?t, because they just don?t know what you know. Once I have this knowledge (ARMV and repair costs) I use a very simple formula to structure almost all of my offers on residential rehabs. Feel free to use this formula for your offers.

ARMV ? Repair Costs ? 30% = My Offer

Here?s an illustration. I recently looked at a single family, split level foreclosure in a middle class neighborhood I am very familiar with. Knowing the values for similar homes in that neighborhood were around $90,000, I next walked through the house and estimated repair costs to be about $12000. Here?s how I structured my offer:

ARMV ($90,000) ? Repair Costs ($12,000) = $78,000

$78,000 ? 30% ($23,400) = My Offer ($54,600)

Did it matter to me that the asking price of the house was $84,000? Not in the least. My offer (and therefore my profit) has absolutely nothing to do with how much the sellers are asking, or how much someone else might offer. My offers are based on my specialized knowledge of market values and repair costs.

If someone else wants to offer more, that?s fine by me. Their circumstances might be much different than mine. Perhaps they are going to live in the house while they repair it. Maybe they are ignorant of market values or repair costs, or both. It doesn?t matter. I won?t let their mistakes become mine, and you shouldn?t either. There are plenty of houses out there.

You?ll get plenty of offers accepted, because you know what most others don?t. You know that- YOU MAKE YOUR MONEY WHEN YOU BUY.

Now, go make more offers!

For FREE Real Estate Investor Stories visit DealFiles.com

You are welcome to share this report, unedited and in its entirety, with anyone you like. You may not remove this text. ? 2006 by Tom Dunn