As an aspiring real estate investor, you may feel lacking in
knowledge about building a successful business. It might seem like the days of
managing employees, having a constant flow of deals and leads or even just
having enough money to invest with are too far off to see. But every successful
real estate investor was once where you are.
The following lessons about maintaining effective business
strategies, getting the most out of your deals, building a team, maintaining
good relations with your money partners and much more that I wish I had known
from day one.
1. Find the deal before anything else.
Many people will teach you how to do deals, but very few
people will teach you how to find deals.
Finding deals should be the primary function of your
business. It’s really what all of real estate investing comes down to. It’s the
most profitable part of the business, and when you have a piece of discounted
real estate under contract, you’ll find that all your other concerns tend to
magically vanish. That’s the power of controlling a “real deal.”
2. Remember, consistency beats competition.
Consistent hard work beats everything. It beats investors
who have more talent, resources or experience than you. To put it succinctly,
consistent hard work beats everything when everything else doesn’t work hard
consistently. In other words, running a business is just like training for a
marathon. Small, daily goals are the most effective route to your ultimate
success.
Track and measure your lead-generating activities. You can
have more success than anyone else if you just put in the time and effort on
the right tasks. If you keep up on your daily goals, the outcome will take care
of itself. Anyone can do it, but most people won’t — and therein lies your
opportunity.
3. Document and systematize everything.
Until you document and systematize the operations of your
business, you will forever be stuck as a one-man band. Your growth and income
will be limited by what you can accomplish as a self-employed individual. To
begin experiencing the financial independence that real estate promises, you
must first document and systematize everything in your business. Then, you must
delegate — but be careful not to abdicate. Your documentation and systems will
allow you to delegate tasks to other individuals without losing your clarity
and control over the business.
However, using systems doesn’t mean you can become
completely uninvolved in your business and fail to manage those systems.
Documentation and systems aren’t sexy, but they’re the essential building
blocks of a business that will run with or without your direct participation.
4. Buy more and sell less.
Make it your intent to hold every property you can. If
you’re pressed for cash, you may need to flip occasionally, and that’s OK. Cash
pays the bills and keeps the business running. But the more you hold onto
properties, the more money you’ll make in the long run and, perhaps counter
intuitively, the faster you’ll make it.
Ask any of the old guys at your next club meeting, “If you
were to do it all over again, what would you have done differently?” The answer
you’ll hear over and over is, “I wish I’d bought more and sold less.”
5. Under promise and over deliver.
When it comes to partnerships, joint ventures and working
with money partners, prepare them for the worst. In fact, you should almost
talk them out of doing business with you. People often initially “understand”
that many variables are in play and that risk comes with the territory, but
when things go south, it’s very easy to forget and feel cheated in the end. To
avoid this, heavily under promise yourself to your partners. You’ll end up on
the right side of the equation more times than not, especially as you gain
experience.
Don’t let this scare you away from partnerships entirely —
using other people’s money is how you get truly wealthy. But no matter how
experienced you are, there will always be risk. Additionally, don’t borrow more
money than you can use.
Many people complain about not having enough money to work
with, but you can have too much money as well. If you borrow too much and can’t
find enough deals to put all that money to work, you’re in trouble, as your
partner will still expect a return on that money.
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