Believe The Dream: What Is All The Hype Surrounding Real Estate Investing Really About?

July 19, 2011 by Kenny Santos  
Filed under Real Estate Investing

Real Estate Investing

The best reason for investing in real estate is that it actually works! Real estate investing proves that the American dream is still very much alive. What other avenue can an individual begin in virtually any circumstance in life and build an empire of wealth in a relatively short period of time? Real estate investing does not discriminate against education levels, class, age, or region. You do not need a college degree to understand the fundamentals of real estate investing. You do not need to have a high-paying job or already be wealthy to get started. It can create enormous amounts of wealth for any person who is simply willing to follow the system. There is no need to re-invent the wheel; systems are in place that have been proven for investors in any circumstance or economic condition. You?ve heard similar claims so many times now that they almost sound clich?. Well, even the most skeptical critic will soon see the power of real estate investing as the avenue you?ve been looking for to change your life ? that is, if you choose to get started.

All you need to start investing in real estate is determination, self discipline, creative thinking, willingness to work hard, confidence and a dream. The dream is the most important element. The dream?s power will make the other qualities come naturally. Have you ever struggled to follow through with a project you?ve started? It may not be because you?re lazy or lack self discipline, but because you never had the appropriate motivation. Perhaps the goal wasn?t that interesting to you to begin with, or perhaps you never really believed you could attain it. It is important for you to realize what is attainable so that your dream is not limited. Realizing that you can live a life of abundance makes it possible for you to have the ultimate dream.

I?m not talking about the dream of a nice house, fancy clothes and a sports car in the driveway. The dream I?m referring to is much larger?all-encompassing. It is the dream of freedom. You may think, ?This is the United States. I am free.? Let me ask you, do you own your time? Can you wake up in the morning and spontaneously decide that it is a good day to take the family out on the boat? Can you leave for that month vacation in Hawaii you?ve always wanted to take? Can you sit at home and read a book from cover to cover? Can you take the piano lessons that you always wanted but never had the time or money to take? Can you go back to school for the college degree that you never completed? Can you stay home and raise your children? If you are like most people in this country, you cannot. If you are like most people in this country, you do not own much sunlight in your life. You wake up just before the sun rises, go to work, return home just as it sets and retreat to bed. Then you wake up and repeat the process again and again until, if you?re lucky, you?re 65 years old and you retire?too tired and too old to do all those things that you put on hold until you had ?some time.? You are not free until you own your time. Time is the most valuable amenity that wealth can buy. That dream, the ability to own your time, is really the essence of the American dream. Ironically, it is a dream that few people attain, yet it is readily accessible to all. Using real estate as the vehicle, you can become wealthy, buy your time, and know how it feels to live your dream and be free.

—-
Mark Pratt is a member of a real estate investing company called http://www.myreiteam.com. He specializes in all types of real estate investing, including foreclosures, short sales, and multiple units. His website provides real estate investing software that allows you to track, analyze, and evaluate your properties.

Can Real Estate Investing Make You Rich?

April 14, 2011 by Kenny Santos  
Filed under Real Estate Investing

If you are going to get rich, you may have to give up everything you ever learned in school and from your parents and start from scratch. Now that’s not a definite by any means. You may not have to start over. If someone along the line taught you, for instance that it doesn’t actually take money to make money, then you may already be on the right track.

That’s right. Robert Kiyosaki, author of the Rich Dad book series, said it exactly like this: ?It doesn’t take money to make money. I often hear people say it takes money to make money. I disagree. We had no money when we started and we were also in debt. It also doesn’t take a formal education.?

He then mentioned Bill Gates as someone who never completed a college education. Which would you rather have, a collection of doctorates or Bill Gates’ money?

What it does take, Kiyosaki says, is determination and a willingness to learn quickly. But you also have to know what to do with your talents and, most importantly, to know which part of the Cash Flow Quadrant to generate your income from.

The Cash Flow Quadrant is an icon taught to him by his best friend’s father, a man to whom he refers in his books as his ?rich dad.? It is an illustration of what his rich dad called the four different types of people in relation to money: Employees, the Self-employed, Businesspeople and Investors. Each quadrant comes with its own outlook on the world. The outlook of those in the B and I quadrants are the ones that help make them rich.

When Kiyosaki says you need to be willing to learn quickly, he doesn’t mean go back to school to improve your job skills. He means you should learn about investing, preferably investing in real estate. The rich dad on whom he based his books was a real estate investor. You can get rich investing in real estate because everything else depends on it. At the beginning of his book Cash Flow Quadrant, he pointed out how so many of Hawaii’s businesses were sitting atop real estate that his rich dad owned.

But he doesn’t just mean you have to learn the nuts and bolts of investing. You do have to learn about those things, at least to the point that you are able to intelligently choose a professional to help you with your investments. But more importantly than that, you have to learn how to think like an investor, and possibly a bit like a business person too.

That is a far cry from thinking like a Self-employed person. According to Kiyosaki, a self-employed person is someone who owns a job, not a business. You don’t own a true business, he said, unless you can leave it for a year and return to find it still making money for you. Businesspeople, he said, know better than to try to do everything themselves. In order to save time and money, they hire people to do the things they can’t do or don’t have time to do. That’s why hiring a qualified real estate professional to guide you in your decisions can be a good investment in and of itself.

However you decide to do it, learning the nuts and bolts of real estate investing yourself or by hiring a qualified person to advise you, it is definitely time for you to move to the I quadrant?that is, if being rich is something you’d like to consider.

Investment Property Specialist - Alex Anderson Connects Real Estate Investors With High-Quality Investment Properties. Get A Free Copy Of, “The Investor’s Rental Guide” at: http://www.GreatInvestmentProperty.com

Can Real Estate Investing Make You Rich?

June 4, 2010 by Kenny Santos  
Filed under Real Estate Investing

If you are going to get rich, you may have to give up everything you ever learned in school and from your parents and start from scratch. Now that’s not a definite by any means. You may not have to start over. If someone along the line taught you, for instance that it doesn’t actually take money to make money, then you may already be on the right track.

That’s right. Robert Kiyosaki, author of the Rich Dad book series, said it exactly like this: ?It doesn’t take money to make money. I often hear people say it takes money to make money. I disagree. We had no money when we started and we were also in debt. It also doesn’t take a formal education.?

He then mentioned Bill Gates as someone who never completed a college education. Which would you rather have, a collection of doctorates or Bill Gates’ money?

What it does take, Kiyosaki says, is determination and a willingness to learn quickly. But you also have to know what to do with your talents and, most importantly, to know which part of the Cash Flow Quadrant to generate your income from.

The Cash Flow Quadrant is an icon taught to him by his best friend’s father, a man to whom he refers in his books as his ?rich dad.? It is an illustration of what his rich dad called the four different types of people in relation to money: Employees, the Self-employed, Businesspeople and Investors. Each quadrant comes with its own outlook on the world. The outlook of those in the B and I quadrants are the ones that help make them rich.

When Kiyosaki says you need to be willing to learn quickly, he doesn’t mean go back to school to improve your job skills. He means you should learn about investing, preferably investing in real estate. The rich dad on whom he based his books was a real estate investor. You can get rich investing in real estate because everything else depends on it. At the beginning of his book Cash Flow Quadrant, he pointed out how so many of Hawaii’s businesses were sitting atop real estate that his rich dad owned.

But he doesn’t just mean you have to learn the nuts and bolts of investing. You do have to learn about those things, at least to the point that you are able to intelligently choose a professional to help you with your investments. But more importantly than that, you have to learn how to think like an investor, and possibly a bit like a business person too.

That is a far cry from thinking like a Self-employed person. According to Kiyosaki, a self-employed person is someone who owns a job, not a business. You don’t own a true business, he said, unless you can leave it for a year and return to find it still making money for you. Businesspeople, he said, know better than to try to do everything themselves. In order to save time and money, they hire people to do the things they can’t do or don’t have time to do. That’s why hiring a qualified real estate professional to guide you in your decisions can be a good investment in and of itself.

However you decide to do it, learning the nuts and bolts of real estate investing yourself or by hiring a qualified person to advise you, it is definitely time for you to move to the I quadrant?that is, if being rich is something you’d like to consider.

Investment Property Specialist - Alex Anderson Connects Real Estate Investors With High-Quality Investment Properties. Get A Free Copy Of, “The Investor’s Rental Guide” at: http://www.GreatInvestmentProperty.com

Real Estate Investing Can Make You Rich

December 24, 2009 by Kenny Santos  
Filed under Real Estate Investing

If you are going to get rich, you may have to give up everything you ever learned in school and from your parents and start from scratch. Now that’s not a definite by any means. You may not have to start over. If someone along the line taught you, for instance that it doesn’t actually take money to make money, then you may already be on the right track.

That’s right. Robert Kiyosaki, author of the Rich Dad book series, said it exactly like this: ?It doesn’t take money to make money. I often hear people say it takes money to make money. I disagree. We had no money when we started and we were also in debt. It also doesn’t take a formal education.?

He then mentioned Bill Gates as someone who never completed a college education. Which would you rather have, a collection of doctorates or Bill Gates’ money?

What it does take, Kiyosaki says, is determination and a willingness to learn quickly. But you also have to know what to do with your talents and, most importantly, to know which part of the Cash Flow Quadrant to generate your income from.

The Cash Flow Quadrant is an icon taught to him by his best friend’s father, a man to whom he refers in his books as his ?rich dad.? It is an illustration of what his rich dad called the four different types of people in relation to money: Employees, the Self-employed, Businesspeople and Investors. Each quadrant comes with its own outlook on the world. The outlook of those in the B and I quadrants are the ones that help make them rich.

When Kiyosaki says you need to be willing to learn quickly, he doesn’t mean go back to school to improve your job skills. He means you should learn about investing, preferably investing in real estate. The rich dad on whom he based his books was a real estate investor. You can get rich investing in real estate because everything else depends on it. At the beginning of his book Cash Flow Quadrant, he pointed out how so many of Hawaii’s businesses were sitting atop real estate that his rich dad owned.

But he doesn’t just mean you have to learn the nuts and bolts of investing. You do have to learn about those things, at least to the point that you are able to intelligently choose a professional to help you with your investments. But more importantly than that, you have to learn how to think like an investor, and possibly a bit like a business person too.

That is a far cry from thinking like a Self-employed person. According to Kiyosaki, a self-employed person is someone who owns a job, not a business. You don’t own a true business, he said, unless you can leave it for a year and return to find it still making money for you. Businesspeople, he said, know better than to try to do everything themselves. In order to save time and money, they hire people to do the things they can’t do or don’t have time to do. That’s why hiring a qualified real estate professional to guide you in your decisions can be a good investment in and of itself.

However you decide to do it, learning the nuts and bolts of real estate investing yourself or by hiring a qualified person to advise you, it is definitely time for you to move to the I quadrant?that is, if being rich is something you’d like to consider.

About the Author:

Investment Property Specialist - Alex Anderson Connects Real Estate Investors With High-Quality Investment Properties. Get A Free Copy Of, “The Investor’s Rental Guide” at: www.GreatInvestmentProperty.com

3 Real Estate Investing Myths

November 28, 2009 by Kenny Santos  
Filed under Real Estate Investing

People are very entertaining if you just take time to listen to what they say and observe how they act. After all, that’s why reality television shows are so popular. Now you can watch people from the comfort of your living room chair.

The things they do and say are so highly entertaining because people so often react based on emotion. Often, that emotion is fear. Throw in a little laziness and a willingness to believe whatever they hear that justifies their fear and there you have them?the two most wealth-preventing myths about real estate investing that were ever conceived. And those two are the parents of the third.

Those myths are, of course, fear-based. They are also myths that would not exist if it were human nature to educate themselves about a thing before making up their minds about it.

What are those myths?

1.Real estate is a gamble.
2.Real estate is risky.
3.There is no way I can possibly invest in real estate.

Naturally, Myth No. 2 follows logically from Myth No. 1. Assuming, of course, that logic goes into the thinking at all when someone determines these things.

Robert Kiyosaki, author of the Rich Dad book series, said that there are people out there who honestly believe that real estate investing?or any type of investing at all, really?is all about luck. These types of investors throw their money at anything that looks good to them. But they haven’t taken the time to educate themselves on what is a good investment. So what ?looks good? to them is based on a purely emotional reaction?or worse?a guess.

Real estate investment cannot be accurately compared with, say, Black Jack or Roulette because those games are guessing games. Real estate investment is not a guessing game. Real estate investment involves looking at financial documents and determining from them where you should spend your money. It’s not about guessing?it’s about reading.

And Myth No. 3, well…that’s the biggest myth of all. Anyone at all can invest in real estate, if they are willing to take those first important steps: Make sure you have the capital by increasing your wealth, which is generally done by building a business system, and educate yourself in the process of investing.

There’s the rub. Most people are simply not willing to take those preliminary steps. They think they are wasting time if they attempt to learn something. The extra money they have is burning a hole in their pocket and they can’t wait to throw it away. So that is exactly what they do.

There is risk, of course. Anytime someone sets out to learn a new skill?even investing?they will make a few wrong moves. But that is all part of the process. As time goes on, you will get better at it. So of course, you shouldn’t toss your life savings into the pot. Simply start out small and work your way up, as you would with anything. Kiyosaki compares it to piloting an air plane. It’s not something you would consider doing if you had never been in the cockpit. But with time and lessons and practice, it becomes something you can do with ease and confidence?something you can do safely. But you must invest the time to learn how.

What really is a risk, Kiyosaki said, is neglecting to educate yourself. When you neglect your financial education you are losing more money than you can imagine?not only the money you invest if you choose to leap without looking, but also the money you will never make if you choose not to leap at all.

About the Author:

Alex Anderson Helps Regular-People (Just Like You) To Successfully Invest In Real Estate. Enroll In Her FREE, Educational “Investment Property Program” At: www.GreatInvestmentProperty.com

3 Real Estate Investing Myths

November 20, 2009 by Kenny Santos  
Filed under Real Estate Investing

People are very entertaining if you just take time to listen to what they say and observe how they act. After all, that’s why reality television shows are so popular. Now you can watch people from the comfort of your living room chair.

The things they do and say are so highly entertaining because people so often react based on emotion. Often, that emotion is fear. Throw in a little laziness and a willingness to believe whatever they hear that justifies their fear and there you have them?the two most wealth-preventing myths about real estate investing that were ever conceived. And those two are the parents of the third.

Those myths are, of course, fear-based. They are also myths that would not exist if it were human nature to educate themselves about a thing before making up their minds about it.

What are those myths?

1.Real estate is a gamble.
2.Real estate is risky.
3.There is no way I can possibly invest in real estate.

Naturally, Myth No. 2 follows logically from Myth No. 1. Assuming, of course, that logic goes into the thinking at all when someone determines these things.

Robert Kiyosaki, author of the Rich Dad book series, said that there are people out there who honestly believe that real estate investing?or any type of investing at all, really?is all about luck. These types of investors throw their money at anything that looks good to them. But they haven’t taken the time to educate themselves on what is a good investment. So what ?looks good? to them is based on a purely emotional reaction?or worse?a guess.

Real estate investment cannot be accurately compared with, say, Black Jack or Roulette because those games are guessing games. Real estate investment is not a guessing game. Real estate investment involves looking at financial documents and determining from them where you should spend your money. It’s not about guessing?it’s about reading.

And Myth No. 3, well…that’s the biggest myth of all. Anyone at all can invest in real estate, if they are willing to take those first important steps: Make sure you have the capital by increasing your wealth, which is generally done by building a business system, and educate yourself in the process of investing.

There’s the rub. Most people are simply not willing to take those preliminary steps. They think they are wasting time if they attempt to learn something. The extra money they have is burning a hole in their pocket and they can’t wait to throw it away. So that is exactly what they do.

There is risk, of course. Anytime someone sets out to learn a new skill?even investing?they will make a few wrong moves. But that is all part of the process. As time goes on, you will get better at it. So of course, you shouldn’t toss your life savings into the pot. Simply start out small and work your way up, as you would with anything. Kiyosaki compares it to piloting an air plane. It’s not something you would consider doing if you had never been in the cockpit. But with time and lessons and practice, it becomes something you can do with ease and confidence?something you can do safely. But you must invest the time to learn how.

What really is a risk, Kiyosaki said, is neglecting to educate yourself. When you neglect your financial education you are losing more money than you can imagine?not only the money you invest if you choose to leap without looking, but also the money you will never make if you choose not to leap at all.

About the Author:

Alex Anderson Helps Regular-People (Just Like You) To Successfully Invest In Real Estate. Enroll In Her FREE, Educational “Investment Property Program” At: www.GreatInvestmentProperty.com

Believe The Dream: What Is All The Hype Surrounding Real Estate Investing Really About?

November 13, 2009 by Kenny Santos  
Filed under Real Estate Investing

Real Estate Investing

The best reason for investing in real estate is that it actually works! Real estate investing proves that the American dream is still very much alive. What other avenue can an individual begin in virtually any circumstance in life and build an empire of wealth in a relatively short period of time? Real estate investing does not discriminate against education levels, class, age, or region. You do not need a college degree to understand the fundamentals of real estate investing. You do not need to have a high-paying job or already be wealthy to get started. It can create enormous amounts of wealth for any person who is simply willing to follow the system. There is no need to re-invent the wheel; systems are in place that have been proven for investors in any circumstance or economic condition. You?ve heard similar claims so many times now that they almost sound clich?. Well, even the most skeptical critic will soon see the power of real estate investing as the avenue you?ve been looking for to change your life ? that is, if you choose to get started.

All you need to start investing in real estate is determination, self discipline, creative thinking, willingness to work hard, confidence and a dream. The dream is the most important element. The dream?s power will make the other qualities come naturally. Have you ever struggled to follow through with a project you?ve started? It may not be because you?re lazy or lack self discipline, but because you never had the appropriate motivation. Perhaps the goal wasn?t that interesting to you to begin with, or perhaps you never really believed you could attain it. It is important for you to realize what is attainable so that your dream is not limited. Realizing that you can live a life of abundance makes it possible for you to have the ultimate dream.

I?m not talking about the dream of a nice house, fancy clothes and a sports car in the driveway. The dream I?m referring to is much larger?all-encompassing. It is the dream of freedom. You may think, ?This is the United States. I am free.? Let me ask you, do you own your time? Can you wake up in the morning and spontaneously decide that it is a good day to take the family out on the boat? Can you leave for that month vacation in Hawaii you?ve always wanted to take? Can you sit at home and read a book from cover to cover? Can you take the piano lessons that you always wanted but never had the time or money to take? Can you go back to school for the college degree that you never completed? Can you stay home and raise your children? If you are like most people in this country, you cannot. If you are like most people in this country, you do not own much sunlight in your life. You wake up just before the sun rises, go to work, return home just as it sets and retreat to bed. Then you wake up and repeat the process again and again until, if you?re lucky, you?re 65 years old and you retire?too tired and too old to do all those things that you put on hold until you had ?some time.? You are not free until you own your time. Time is the most valuable amenity that wealth can buy. That dream, the ability to own your time, is really the essence of the American dream. Ironically, it is a dream that few people attain, yet it is readily accessible to all. Using real estate as the vehicle, you can become wealthy, buy your time, and know how it feels to live your dream and be free.

—-
Mark Pratt is a member of a real estate investing company called http://www.myreiteam.com. He specializes in all types of real estate investing, including foreclosures, short sales, and multiple units. His website provides real estate investing software that allows you to track, analyze, and evaluate your properties.

Believe The Dream: What Is All The Hype Surrounding Real Estate Investing Really About?

September 20, 2009 by Kenny Santos  
Filed under Real Estate Investing

Real Estate Investing

The best reason for investing in real estate is that it actually works! Real estate investing proves that the American dream is still very much alive. What other avenue can an individual begin in virtually any circumstance in life and build an empire of wealth in a relatively short period of time? Real estate investing does not discriminate against education levels, class, age, or region. You do not need a college degree to understand the fundamentals of real estate investing. You do not need to have a high-paying job or already be wealthy to get started. It can create enormous amounts of wealth for any person who is simply willing to follow the system. There is no need to re-invent the wheel; systems are in place that have been proven for investors in any circumstance or economic condition. You?ve heard similar claims so many times now that they almost sound clich?. Well, even the most skeptical critic will soon see the power of real estate investing as the avenue you?ve been looking for to change your life ? that is, if you choose to get started.

All you need to start investing in real estate is determination, self discipline, creative thinking, willingness to work hard, confidence and a dream. The dream is the most important element. The dream?s power will make the other qualities come naturally. Have you ever struggled to follow through with a project you?ve started? It may not be because you?re lazy or lack self discipline, but because you never had the appropriate motivation. Perhaps the goal wasn?t that interesting to you to begin with, or perhaps you never really believed you could attain it. It is important for you to realize what is attainable so that your dream is not limited. Realizing that you can live a life of abundance makes it possible for you to have the ultimate dream.

I?m not talking about the dream of a nice house, fancy clothes and a sports car in the driveway. The dream I?m referring to is much larger?all-encompassing. It is the dream of freedom. You may think, ?This is the United States. I am free.? Let me ask you, do you own your time? Can you wake up in the morning and spontaneously decide that it is a good day to take the family out on the boat? Can you leave for that month vacation in Hawaii you?ve always wanted to take? Can you sit at home and read a book from cover to cover? Can you take the piano lessons that you always wanted but never had the time or money to take? Can you go back to school for the college degree that you never completed? Can you stay home and raise your children? If you are like most people in this country, you cannot. If you are like most people in this country, you do not own much sunlight in your life. You wake up just before the sun rises, go to work, return home just as it sets and retreat to bed. Then you wake up and repeat the process again and again until, if you?re lucky, you?re 65 years old and you retire?too tired and too old to do all those things that you put on hold until you had ?some time.? You are not free until you own your time. Time is the most valuable amenity that wealth can buy. That dream, the ability to own your time, is really the essence of the American dream. Ironically, it is a dream that few people attain, yet it is readily accessible to all. Using real estate as the vehicle, you can become wealthy, buy your time, and know how it feels to live your dream and be free.

—-
Mark Pratt is a member of a real estate investing company called http://www.myreiteam.com. He specializes in all types of real estate investing, including foreclosures, short sales, and multiple units. His website provides real estate investing software that allows you to track, analyze, and evaluate your properties.

Real Estate Investing Can Make You Rich

July 29, 2009 by Kenny Santos  
Filed under Real Estate Investing

If you are going to get rich, you may have to give up everything you ever learned in school and from your parents and start from scratch. Now that’s not a definite by any means. You may not have to start over. If someone along the line taught you, for instance that it doesn’t actually take money to make money, then you may already be on the right track.

That’s right. Robert Kiyosaki, author of the Rich Dad book series, said it exactly like this: ?It doesn’t take money to make money. I often hear people say it takes money to make money. I disagree. We had no money when we started and we were also in debt. It also doesn’t take a formal education.?

He then mentioned Bill Gates as someone who never completed a college education. Which would you rather have, a collection of doctorates or Bill Gates’ money?

What it does take, Kiyosaki says, is determination and a willingness to learn quickly. But you also have to know what to do with your talents and, most importantly, to know which part of the Cash Flow Quadrant to generate your income from.

The Cash Flow Quadrant is an icon taught to him by his best friend’s father, a man to whom he refers in his books as his ?rich dad.? It is an illustration of what his rich dad called the four different types of people in relation to money: Employees, the Self-employed, Businesspeople and Investors. Each quadrant comes with its own outlook on the world. The outlook of those in the B and I quadrants are the ones that help make them rich.

When Kiyosaki says you need to be willing to learn quickly, he doesn’t mean go back to school to improve your job skills. He means you should learn about investing, preferably investing in real estate. The rich dad on whom he based his books was a real estate investor. You can get rich investing in real estate because everything else depends on it. At the beginning of his book Cash Flow Quadrant, he pointed out how so many of Hawaii’s businesses were sitting atop real estate that his rich dad owned.

But he doesn’t just mean you have to learn the nuts and bolts of investing. You do have to learn about those things, at least to the point that you are able to intelligently choose a professional to help you with your investments. But more importantly than that, you have to learn how to think like an investor, and possibly a bit like a business person too.

That is a far cry from thinking like a Self-employed person. According to Kiyosaki, a self-employed person is someone who owns a job, not a business. You don’t own a true business, he said, unless you can leave it for a year and return to find it still making money for you. Businesspeople, he said, know better than to try to do everything themselves. In order to save time and money, they hire people to do the things they can’t do or don’t have time to do. That’s why hiring a qualified real estate professional to guide you in your decisions can be a good investment in and of itself.

However you decide to do it, learning the nuts and bolts of real estate investing yourself or by hiring a qualified person to advise you, it is definitely time for you to move to the I quadrant?that is, if being rich is something you’d like to consider.

About the Author:

Investment Property Specialist - Alex Anderson Connects Real Estate Investors With High-Quality Investment Properties. Get A Free Copy Of, “The Investor’s Rental Guide” at: www.GreatInvestmentProperty.com

3 Real Estate Investing Myths

May 10, 2009 by Kenny Santos  
Filed under Real Estate Investing

People are very entertaining if you just take time to listen to what they say and observe how they act. After all, that’s why reality television shows are so popular. Now you can watch people from the comfort of your living room chair.

The things they do and say are so highly entertaining because people so often react based on emotion. Often, that emotion is fear. Throw in a little laziness and a willingness to believe whatever they hear that justifies their fear and there you have them?the two most wealth-preventing myths about real estate investing that were ever conceived. And those two are the parents of the third.

Those myths are, of course, fear-based. They are also myths that would not exist if it were human nature to educate themselves about a thing before making up their minds about it.

What are those myths?

1.Real estate is a gamble.
2.Real estate is risky.
3.There is no way I can possibly invest in real estate.

Naturally, Myth No. 2 follows logically from Myth No. 1. Assuming, of course, that logic goes into the thinking at all when someone determines these things.

Robert Kiyosaki, author of the Rich Dad book series, said that there are people out there who honestly believe that real estate investing?or any type of investing at all, really?is all about luck. These types of investors throw their money at anything that looks good to them. But they haven’t taken the time to educate themselves on what is a good investment. So what ?looks good? to them is based on a purely emotional reaction?or worse?a guess.

Real estate investment cannot be accurately compared with, say, Black Jack or Roulette because those games are guessing games. Real estate investment is not a guessing game. Real estate investment involves looking at financial documents and determining from them where you should spend your money. It’s not about guessing?it’s about reading.

And Myth No. 3, well…that’s the biggest myth of all. Anyone at all can invest in real estate, if they are willing to take those first important steps: Make sure you have the capital by increasing your wealth, which is generally done by building a business system, and educate yourself in the process of investing.

There’s the rub. Most people are simply not willing to take those preliminary steps. They think they are wasting time if they attempt to learn something. The extra money they have is burning a hole in their pocket and they can’t wait to throw it away. So that is exactly what they do.

There is risk, of course. Anytime someone sets out to learn a new skill?even investing?they will make a few wrong moves. But that is all part of the process. As time goes on, you will get better at it. So of course, you shouldn’t toss your life savings into the pot. Simply start out small and work your way up, as you would with anything. Kiyosaki compares it to piloting an air plane. It’s not something you would consider doing if you had never been in the cockpit. But with time and lessons and practice, it becomes something you can do with ease and confidence?something you can do safely. But you must invest the time to learn how.

What really is a risk, Kiyosaki said, is neglecting to educate yourself. When you neglect your financial education you are losing more money than you can imagine?not only the money you invest if you choose to leap without looking, but also the money you will never make if you choose not to leap at all.

About the Author:

Alex Anderson Helps Regular-People (Just Like You) To Successfully Invest In Real Estate. Enroll In Her FREE, Educational “Investment Property Program” At: www.GreatInvestmentProperty.com

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