BiggerPockets Real Estate Podcast - 382: No Money Down BRRRR Investing with Josiah Smelser (Part 1, Recorded Pre-Coronavirus)
Episode Date: May 14, 2020Today we bring you Part 1 of back-to-back episodes with real estate investor/appraiser/author/all-around good guy Josiah Smelser. This first conversation was recorded pre-coronavirus lockdown, but it'...s packed with tips you can put into action today. You'll learn how Josiah solved the #1 bottleneck in his business (capital!), allowing him to BRRRR at scale and rack up rental properties with very little money out of pocket. Even more impressive: he's doing it long-distance (The properties are in Dallas, TX and Josiah lives in Huntsville, AL.) And if that weren't enough, the guys go in-depth on appraisals – and the techniques you can use to help appraisers see your side of the story. Josiah's a longtime licensed appraiser, so he speaks from experience... and he shares his playbook for giving yourself the best chance to pull all your money out of your deal. If you like what Josiah has to say, then be sure to check it Part 2 tomorrow. We bring him back on, post-COVID-19, to discuss the serious challenges he's faced: lenders pulling out, property values dropping, and even a domestic violence issue at one of his rentals. The good news: he made it through. Tune in tomorrow to hear how! In This Episode We Cover: Why Josiah sold his properties pre-2008 crash (and why he still regrets it!) Combining hard money and private money to BRRRR with no money out of pocket How Josiah uses "boots on the ground" partners to invest at a distance Why he analyzes 8-10 deals per day Buying houses sight unseen Why BRRRR investors must keep cash reserves How to talk to appraisers (like getting out of a speeding ticket!) Why a property's list price is irrelevant Deals... on the MLS, in 2020?! The square footage trick that's made him thousands of dollars Losing out to a lower offer on a big multifamily deal And SO much more! Links from the Show BiggerPockets Forums BiggerPockets Bookstore BiggerPockets Podcast BiggerPockets Calculators Zillow Bring Brandon a Deal Brandon's Instagram Open Door Capital LLC BiggerPockets Podcast 126: From 0 to 400+ Units Through Value-Add Investing with Brian Murray BiggerPockets Podcast 212: Buying a 115-Unit Apartment Complex for No Cash Out of Pocket with Brian Murray GoBundance Check the full show notes here: https://www.biggerpockets.com/show382 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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This is the Bigger Pockets podcast, show 382, Part 1.
Take a measuring tape.
Go to Lowe's.
Buy yourself a measuring tape.
Take it with you to some of these properties you're looking at and measure the property
real quick.
Figure out the square footage and you're going to discover that some of these properties are
listed for 1,200 square feet and the thing's actually 1,600 square feet.
If you're in $100 a square foot neighborhood, that's $40,000 of value you just found.
You're listening to Bigger Pockets Radio.
Simplifying real estate for investors, large,
and small. If you're here looking to learn about real estate investing without all the hype,
you're in the right place. Stay tuned and be sure to join the millions of others who have benefited
from biggerpockets.com. Your home for real estate investing online. What's going on, everyone? It's
Brandon Turner, host of the Bigger Pockets podcast here with my co-host, Mr. David Green. David Green, man.
How's it going, man? It couldn't be going any better. I'm living the dream, brother. Are you locked in your
house still. I'm locked in my house. I get outside to go running a little bit. The sun's finally out.
But I'll tell you what I love is when I wrote long distance investing, I was mostly investing as a
police officer. So I had to figure out how do you make all the things happen that need to happen while
you're at a full-time job? How are you super efficient? How do you get other people doing the work?
And now the same thing's happening in the real estate agent world. How do you put deals together
when you can't drive and talk to people in person or sometimes you can't show homes, right?
How do you structure an offer to protect your client and get them to feel comfortable with what they're doing while working under these new regulations?
Because, oh, my God, there are such amazing opportunities for people that are still looking right now.
And it would be a shame if they didn't get something in contract.
But it's trickier.
It's absolutely outside of the norm of what you're used to.
And it forces your brain to get creative to think of solutions, maybe to question, well, why did we always do it like that in the first place?
This is kind of how innovation works.
So while I'm pacing around the pool table at my house, talking on the phone all day and having Zoom meetings,
It's halfway driving me mad because it's just horrible being at home all the time.
And the other half, it's super exciting and new because it forces you to look for new solutions.
So yeah, that's how it's going.
Adversity forces you to come up with new ideas.
Necessity is the mother of invention.
That's right.
And speaking of adversity, having you come up with new things, today's show is part one.
You heard me say that a minute ago.
Part one of a two-part series.
We're actually launching part one today, part two tomorrow with a buddy man named Josiah Smelser.
So Josiah is a real estate appraiser and real estate.
investor, also a podcast or an author. But Josiah is a good dude who does primarily the Burr strategy,
the buy rehab, rent, refinance, repeat, which if you don't know what that is, we'll get into that
a little bit in today's show. So here's the interesting thing about today's show. We recorded this show
a few months ago, I think two months ago before the COVID thing happened. And so on this episode,
like that we recorded, Josiah goes through all of like his strategy, how he did it, how he's
bought like almost $4 million of real estate using the Burr strategy, what is doing, why he's got 10
properties at one time going down, all the stuff.
And then we spend a lot of time, time about appraisals and how to talk to your lender or your
appraiser about adjusting the numbers and how to make sure you get the highest appraisal possible.
And you guys, this stuff is so important.
We didn't even know the COVID thing was going to happen.
But now that information is even more vital than ever because appraisers are getting
nervous.
They're getting like, they don't want to get in trouble for giving you a too high of a value.
So they're being way more conservative.
In fact, my own personal house just got reappraised because I'm getting refinanced done.
and it was way under where it should have been.
And so that's what's going to happen.
So this show is super timely for that reason.
But then COVID happened.
And a lot of Josiah's what was going to be just,
oh, simple, easy thing that we kind of glossed over on today's show,
just a little bit.
We didn't spend a lot of time talking about the refinance part of it.
Now suddenly became much, much, much harder.
And Josiah had to fight his way through to figure out his way through that.
That's what part two is about.
So here's the deal.
Part one is live right now.
You're listening to it.
This is part one.
part two episode 382 part two comes out tomorrow so it's a two part
two part two days if you're watching this in the way future listening to the way
future obviously you can go find show 382 part two later but listen to the show
first then go listen to that one makes sense did I explain that well enough David
green that was awesome this is like you're following the saga of Josiah
Smelzer as yes as he navigates the perilous ups and downs of real estate
investing the real estate quest all right
Oh, yes.
You're going to hear a lot about that, too, especially in part two.
Yeah, part two.
I'll talk about my new quest.
So, but before we get there, let's get to today's quick tip.
What's you got, David?
Today's quick tip is get out of binary thinking.
It's too easy for us to fall into a trap where we think this or that.
Should I do burr or should I not buy real estate?
Should I invest in real estate or should I stick all my cash under the mattress?
Should I extreme this side or should I have?
extreme that side. The better way to look at things is to understand how all the pieces
fit together as a whole and ask yourself, how much of each of these do I need in my arsenal
so that I can feel comfortable moving forward? See, the key to being successful is always making
progress. It's not always being perfect. So you're going to hear in Josiah's story how he used
different techniques for real estate investing to help him out in different parts of the journey.
He didn't put all of his eggs in one method of real estate investing. So as you're listening,
think about it in your own life.
Where am I thinking it's gotta be this or that instead of a little bit of both?
Very good.
I like it.
It's bringing on you at the last second and you delivered.
You're like the Shaquille O'Neal of the real estate quick tip world.
Are you referring to Carole being the mailman because he always delivers,
but you call me Shaquille O'Neal because he was just.
I don't know.
It was the only basketball player I could think of on a fly.
I think that's what you were doing.
Is that what they call confidence?
Is that?
Is that I didn't even know who's Carl Malone and why is he a mailman?
Like, was he actually a mailman?
No, his nickname was the mailman because he was very consistent.
Okay.
So you do know.
Wow.
All right.
With that,
let's get to the days.
By the way,
this is the same way Brandon plays poker.
He pretends to have no idea what he's doing with hopes and he will lure you into a false
sense of confidence that he can destroy you.
Because half the time in life I really don't know what I'm doing.
So if I always pretend I don't know what I'm doing.
Yeah, no one will ever take you serious.
And they'll never see you coming.
And then when you make a mistake, they won't realize you did.
Yeah, it's actually brilliant in an idiotic kind of way.
Good job.
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Without further ado, it's time to get into today's show with Josiah Smelzer.
Let's do it.
All right, Josiah, welcome to the Bigger Pockets podcast, man.
It is an honor to have you here, man.
I'm going to get pumped about today.
Man, I'm so excited to be here.
Thanks so much for having me, guys.
Yeah, so you and I got the pleasure of hanging out in person last year.
We spent a few days in Maui, masterminding, and having a great time.
And I learned a little bit about your story then, but not as much as I wanted to.
And so I'm excited to dig in a lot deeper today and find out how you got into this game
and how do you got to the powerhouse machine you are today, book, right?
and real estate investor and all that.
So podcasts or everything.
How'd you get started?
Go to the very beginning of your journey.
Yes.
So after I graduated from undergrad,
I took a job doing public accounting.
I'm in Dallas-Fort Worth.
Absolutely hated it.
Spent a year doing that.
And after that was like,
I have to do something else.
I couldn't stay in the sitting in a cubicle thing.
So I left that job and helped one of my buddies start an appraisal business.
And we started that out of the back of his house.
You know,
I was, I think,
22 years old.
He was 23.
And it was exhilarating, working for ourselves, running our own thing, being our own bosses.
And the cool thing is, and this was in Fort Worth, Texas, the cool thing is I got to go into a lot of
properties, got to be around a lot of real estate investors.
And I got to learn the Dallas-Fort Worth market, one house at a time, starting off.
So got my appraisal license in 2005 and then started just kind of gradually buying some properties
here and there.
I was single, wasn't married.
It did that up until about 2008.
and 2008, I decided to sell the properties I had, go hike the Appalachian Trail, go back to grad school.
So I sold everything, just completely dumb luck right about the time, right before the market crashed,
I dumb luck just unloaded everything.
And I had a lot of equity in the properties I had.
And looking back on it, I really wish I'd held on to everything.
Because you know how it is.
A lot of these investors that we talk with on our podcast and stuff, a lot of the guys that held on
the stuff, they make money because, you know, it's a get.
rich slow scheme. I mean, you make, you can build a lot of wealth over time doing this. So anyway,
got married after going to grad school, long story short, started listening to bigger pockets
several years ago and got interested in doing the real estate investing thing again.
So my story's, you know, a bit different because it's not like I just started. I started back in
2004, but I sold everything. Then I started over. And we have a portfolio worth about $4 million
dollars right now of one to four family properties we've got 20 properties worth about four million
bucks and we've done the lion's share of that in the last 12 months wow all right so most important
question did you really hike like you hike the whole appellation trailer what was that yeah so so
i hiked georgia to pennsylvania wow so i did i did 1100 miles in about three and a half months
so you know had everything in my backpack and you know sleeping out in the woods and went with some buddies
and it was, man, it was extraordinary.
If you've ever, if you're into that kind of thing,
I highly recommend you try the AT.
It's so much fun.
Yeah.
Yeah, someday.
I like that idea.
I like that idea of things.
You've got the beard for it.
I do.
I have the beard for it.
I was telling this buddy yesterday,
there's a book we've talked about on the show before.
It's called Wild at Heart,
and I know, David, you're a big fan of it.
I just have you read that one?
Yeah, I have.
Okay, so while I, like, you read that book and you're like,
I'm going to go shoot an elk and hike the Appalachian Trail.
Like, that's like, you read that book,
you just want to go do cool stuff like that.
Yeah.
But anyway, yeah, someday.
I had read Into the Wild, you know, this is when I was single, you know,
had money saved.
I read Into the Wild and I was like, man, I need to go do something like that.
I just need to have a life adventure.
And the AT was a blast, man.
It's like a, it's like a little family out there.
You meet all these cool people and you're hiking, you know, months,
months at a time with the same folks.
And it's really cool.
It's really cool experience.
So you wanted to go hike this trail and you happen to sell your entire portfolio
right before one of the biggest real estate crashes in the history of man. Tell me how that all worked out.
I just have to say that was lucky. I mean, I did learn a lot going into that time because I was
doing appraisal work. And I was seeing a lot of crazy things going on just on a lot of refinances
that were happening because, you know, people were refinancing houses that were, they bought
six months ago and then they're refinancing trying to pull 10 or 15 percent more equity out of
these things than they went into and they weren't renovating these. There was no value ad going on.
And we would have people call us up and say, hey, can you guys get $300,000 for me on this refi?
And we were like, that's not really how this works. And they would hang up the phone and they would
call another appraiser and find an appraiser who would do that. And that's where a lot of,
some of these, some of these bad appraisals were coming from at the time. They would find an
appraiser who was willing to just make a value. And they would, they would get that loan done,
pull that cash out and a lot of these guys, you know, had almost no equity in their properties
that that really lost their property into foreclosure at that time.
So yeah, wow.
Okay.
So let's, let's unpack this a little bit.
So since that time now, you know, the market came back, it started to climb back up and
you thought, okay, I'm going to get back into this again.
What was the first purchase then?
So we'll go to the second phase of your career.
What was the first purchase you did then?
Yeah.
So we house hacked a duplex.
My wife and I house hacked a duplex.
Just kind of what you hear on bigger pockets a lot.
we found a deal. We felt like we could move into one side that was vacant. The other side would cover a
mortgage and we could fix up the unit we were in, raise the rent, and then move out and rent that unit out
as well. We moved into the unit that we were living in, got that fixed up. The next door neighbors
moved out. So we renovated that unit as well and ended up, I mean, doubling the rents essentially
on that duplex. And after we moved out, it was a cash cow. And that was in Dallas. That was in a good
good area of Dallas, but we ended up selling that one as well and rolling that money into
some more rental properties. But that was the first one we bought. But, you know, I was a part of this
mastermind with Brandon and we were working through, you know, identifying some areas in our
business that were really our bottlenecks and what was holding us back. And I was, I was attacking
this thing from the perspective of I have this much money. This is what, this is how much I can do.
And at the mastermind, we were trying to figure out, okay, what's,
what's holding you back from really accelerating your, you're, you know, to meet your goals and
stuff. And mine was, I was bottlenecked by my own capital. And when I identified that,
I'm like, okay, well, how could I, how could I open that floodgate? And that's, and I identified,
like, I need to start figuring out how to get more money for the equity piece of these, because as you know,
you put, put money down on a deal. That money's locked in. You do your value ad. You get your refi
done. That money's locked in for a certain time period. And I only had so much money. I could only do so
any deals at once. So the, so the first, so somebody said, what would happen if you went out and got
$200,000 of private money? I was like, well, that would completely change my business.
Someone said what would happen if you got $200,000 of private money? Was that someone on the
podcast with us right now listening to it? That just sounds exactly like what someone I know would say.
I actually don't think it was Brandon. I think it was, I think it was somebody else. We were in groups and
there were a lot of really, really great investors there. I don't think that was Brandon. Brandon did say a lot of
good things. Well, Brendan, we'll take credit for that. We'll take credit for it anyway.
Don't worry. Okay, sorry. Go ahead. So somebody had said to you what would happen if you had
$200,000 of credit money. And it got your creative juices flowing. You played the what if game.
Yeah. So I said that would completely change everything in my business. So I mean, we could accelerate
everything. And so I said, okay, I'm going to try that. So literally the first person I talked to
after that conversation, that was at the mastermind. So yeah, I'll give you $200,000.
Just like that.
I was like my mind was blown.
And it has absolutely changed my entire investing experience.
So like I one thing that one thing that I will highly recommend to investors listening to this that are trying to figure out how to supercharge their business is identify the bottleneck in your business.
There's something that is that is making you go slower or causing some inertia that you can remove or fix that will absolutely supercharge your investing experience.
mine was private money. So the way we do things now, I'll identify a property that that's distressed.
And I buy most of my stuff from wholesalers. I'll buy the property with hard money. And they'll give me a 90% loan to cost loan on the property.
And then I'll use the 10% equity that's being brought in from my private money lender. So I'm buying the property with 100% of other people's money.
And then I do the value add with the hard money lender. And then I do the cash out refi, pay both those guys off.
and own the property at 75% loaned value or less.
And that's been how we've been able to do almost $4 million in deals over the last 12 months.
All right.
So that sounds amazing.
And I want to go deeper on that because a lot of people probably listen to going, wait, wait, wait,
what?
No money?
Like, so let's, let's dive in.
Maybe give us an example of how that would work, whether it's one of your previous
deals or just a hypothetical, something simple that we can kind of walk through from the
beginning.
Sure, sure.
And I also want to say that on our average deal, we are.
not getting 100% of our money back. That's the goal. That's always the goal. Some of them we get more
than we get the hard money and the private money rolled into one loan and we get some extra money back.
Most of them, we're leaving $5,000 or $10,000 in. So to compensate for that, we've actually
started flipping some as well to raise capital to give us reserves and also money for when we do our
refi. If we come up $5 or $10,000 short, that money covers that. But so let's talk about an average deal.
So an average deal, I'll get an email.
I probably look at, I probably look at eight to ten deals a day.
And it's gotten to where I can look at these really quickly.
But the average deal will say, you know, it's in an area that I already likes,
already know, okay, this is worth looking at.
And where is that, by the way?
Where do you buy?
Yeah.
So we own, so I live in Huntsville, Alabama.
We own here.
And we also own in Fort Worth, Texas.
Okay.
And I know Fort Word, Dallas, Fort Worth from my time running my appraisal business there.
So we started first here in Huntsville, and when we weren't able to find the volume of deals we wanted,
we expanded out. And we targeted Fort Worth because I know that area really well. And I've got a boots on
the ground guy there that goes into all these properties for me. We've got contractors and we've got this
whole process nailed down. But anyway, average deal. I get an email from a wholesaler. Let's say I can
get this property for 105. The property's worth 200 fixed up. So I need to be in it at 150 or
or less to be at 75% loan to value.
So I'll then pull comps because I've got access to the MLS out there.
I'll pull comps, verify that it's worth 200.
Then I'll do a quick estimate of what I think the repair costs are going to be and see
if my numbers work.
If I'm like, okay, this isn't even close.
I just discard it.
If it's close, sometimes I'll go ahead and buy it, side unseen.
I bought a lot of these side unseen.
Sometimes I'll hold off if it looks like it needs a lot of repairs, get my boots on the
ground guy to go out there with my contractor, walk through it, get a firm.
you get a good handle on what the repairs are going to be.
And then, you know, it's just basically backing into your numbers, right?
If I get it for 105, I've got closing costs of maybe $5,000.
So that would put me at $110.
I've got holding cost for my loan with my hard money lender and my private money lender.
I'll factor that in.
And then the rest is repairs.
And so I got to be at that $150.
That $150 is my target.
So if the numbers work, I'll buy it.
And that's essentially just how we've been doing these.
Yeah, that's so good.
Actually, one of the most popular Instagram posts I ever put, I put on my Instagram like last week.
It was called How to Make How to Make $50,000 in the next 90 days.
Right.
And it was just like exactly what you just said.
Like work back like figure out what it's worth when it's all fixed up.
Work backwards from that.
Factor in a $50,000 profit.
Then go out and find the, you know, basically do that exact same thing.
And so it's like real estate is so fun because we can back into our profit, at least with flipping and with Burr investing.
And really with rental properties as well, you can back into the number that you need.
And in fact, right about this time, actually, Bigger Pockets is re-releasing all of our calculators, our probe calculators to make that even easier.
Just FYI, everyone, go check it out.
We're relaunching.
I think rental came out already, flipping came out already.
And I think the burr, I think, and wholesaling are coming out shortly.
But with that idea of making that even more simple, because you can back into these numbers and then figure out what you can pay for.
And now you've got a budget.
Okay, well, now I've got to get this done for 30 grand.
And if you go inspect the property or you go and run your rehab budget and it's going to be a $70,000 rehab, okay.
Well, that means I can't pay 105 for it.
I guess I may be paying 75 for it.
Exactly.
And this goes back to that thing that I say all the time on webinars on a podcast.
Every property out there has a number that makes it a good deal.
So your job as an investor is not to blindly walk around hoping somebody like gives you a good deal and toss it in your lap and like there you go.
Like most of what we do today is just like get like you said, eight to 10 leads a day.
you run those numbers, you figure out, and every once in a while you get one that's pretty close,
but either way, every property's got a number.
Now, usually that number is way far off and not even worth pursuing, but occasionally you get one
that you can make happen.
And so what I find fascinating, though, is this idea of that you're pulling in the private
money lender to cover the basically the down payment and the rehab cost you say, or where's rehab
costs getting paid for?
Yeah, so the hard money lender is covering 90% loan to costs on the whole thing.
the private money lenders covering the 10% loan to cost plus closing cost.
Yeah.
So, you know, the closing cost will suck money out of your account just like anything else.
So we started rolling that in as well.
So we're reserving all of our cash for actual, you know, repair issues or servicing the
interest-only payments to both these lenders.
So if they'll do 90% loan to cost, let's use some basic numbers here.
You earlier we talked about that 150.
You want to be total at 150 in.
Yep.
So if they'll cut.
So 150 is a total.
amount of cost you have invested in the deal roughly.
That means a hard-main lenders are going to cover up like 135,
130-135.
135.
And then you only need 15 grand-ish from the private lender.
15 from the private money lender plus we'll say 5,000 for closing costs.
So 135 would come from the hard money lender.
15 plus five would come from the private money lender.
So we'll have a 135 loan and then a $20,000 loan.
And then we're servicing the interest-only payments out of our cash reserves.
thus the need to be really accurate on our numbers on the refi because as as you know sometimes on the
backside when you go do your refinance your appraisal comes in low and that's something I want to talk
about as well from the perspective of being an appraiser and maybe some tips and tricks to help out on
that but you know when it comes in low you got to have some reserves to get this refinance done or
else you're stuck so got to have that money to service those interest only payments along the way
and then to be able to get your refinance completed unless you can find a hard man in
lender.
They do exist out there or private money lender, which will let you basically bank all of
your payments to them until the very end.
So just like, yeah.
Yeah.
To throw that as you is like, it's actually a fairly like simple thing.
And let me explain what I mean by this.
And I never even thought about this until somebody mentioned on the podcast a few,
you, like, I don't know, four or five years ago to me that they do this.
And I was like, wait, that's a thing.
And here's what it is, guys.
Like, let's say normally you're going to pay your hard money lender $1,200 every month in
interest.
And so you pay them $1,200, then $1,200, then $1,200, then $1,200, then $1,200, $1,
or 1,200 for six months and then you, you know, then fine, you're done.
But to them, it's really the same math if they get the money monthly or if they just get a big
lump sum at the end and you just work the math out later.
And so some lenders will actually let you just make a big lump payment at the end based on
exactly how long you held the property for.
Same amount of money goes in their pocket.
Now, it's a little more risky for them to do that because they're not getting payments,
you know, along the way.
But if they're going to trust you with $135,000, what's an extra $5,000 of delayed payments
if you can work that.
And you never know what you ask.
So like the first time I learned that,
I asked the guy.
I was like,
I just asked somebody if I could do that.
And they're like,
oh yeah,
no problem.
And it was like,
wasn't even like an issue.
I'm like all that like how many times in my life have I just been paying interest
every month,
which again,
it's the same math,
but I don't have to actually pay out of the pocket while I'm working on
the flip,
which makes me just a whole lot less like stressed.
Yeah,
that's great.
And you make it one that says,
no,
I don't want to do that.
That's riskier.
At least if you default,
I got a couple payments.
and I would just say, okay, that's no problem.
But what if I gave you a couple thousand dollar bonus up front
and then I pay the rest at the end?
So you can do it your way, which is what you think is less risky,
or my way, and get an extra $1,000.
They very well may say, oh, okay, yeah, that does sound better
because I do know you're going to pay me back.
There's usually something you can give to the other person
to be willing to agree with what's better for you
if you take the time to ask them questions
and figure out what really matters to them.
They might say, no, I don't want to do that.
but very few people ever say why.
If you say why in the answer that they give you makes sense,
you can come up with a solution that would work for both of you.
Yeah, that's great when you don't have to make that payment during the actual process
because stuff comes up that you're not expecting.
That's a part of real estate investing.
You have to just welcome that fact.
It's what keeps most people from getting involved so that there's deals for people like us.
Being able to mitigate the risk that you're taking is just one more way you can increase
your success.
Yeah.
So anyway, absolutely.
I just wanted to cover that point because like it's funny because,
like the more like again, I'd never even thought about that before until somebody mentioned it.
And all of a sudden it's like, oh, that's just the thing.
Kind of like the guy I mentioned to you.
Well, like, what would happen if you got an extra $200,000?
What would that do?
Like, all of a sudden it's like, oh, like, just these little things you hear, which is the value of listening to podcasts like this and podcasts like yours.
Like, you just hear stories of people and all of a sudden you can do it.
So yeah, anyway, all right.
So I want to move on.
But you mentioned the ARV because here's a thing.
Your entire, this whole burr strategy and this, in this buy properties, either flipping,
or Bury, they really, really, really depend on nailing that ARV, that after repair value.
So if you think that price is going to worth $200,000 and the bank's going to give you a 75% loan at the end of the day on that,
that means you, like, if you want to get that $150,000, you have to hit it $200,000.
And if not, you're going to be coming out of pocket with more money.
So how do you do that?
I mean, you know the appraisal business.
So how do you make sure that you're, you hit that.
200 correctly. Yeah, so it's all going to come down on the back end to your appraised value.
So on the front end, you need to be good at pulling comps and figuring out what the value will be
based on the improvements that you're going to do. How do you do that? You got to practice at it.
I like doing it myself. If you're relying on somebody else to do this,
your numbers are only going to be as good as the job they're doing, of course. So if, you know,
if you're relying on a wholesaler's numbers, they're selling you the deal. So you're selling you.
you can assume that they're probably going to fudge the numbers to the upside, right?
Not always.
Sometimes the wholesalers are accurate on what the ARV is, but nine times out of 10 I've found
the wholesalers, ARV and mine are a bit different.
So I highly recommend having access to the multiple listing service in the area that you're
buying so you can jump on and see what's actually sold.
And I like bracketing my properties by square footage.
And let's say we've got a 1,500 square foot property.
I like starting with the smaller adjustments,
so smaller square footage difference
and then going out from there.
So if I've got a 1,500 square foot property,
and there's three comps between 1,400 and 1,600 square feet
that have sold in the last six months in my neighborhood,
similar in amenities and similar in year built and that kind of thing,
those are good comparable sales.
So I'm going to look at those first.
Let's say we find that one of them is a distressed sale.
The other two were all.
arms length. They were fixed up. There were nice properties. Those two properties are going to be
good comps for my ARV. The first property that's a distressed sale is not going to be a good comp because
I'm not planning on selling my fixed up property as a distressed sale. So you want to discard that one,
right? And David, you run comps all day long doing what you do running your team. So this is stuff you
already know. But a lot of people when they're figuring out value, they just pull every comp and
they're like, oh, well, I'm just going to put this at the top of all these comps.
They don't drill down and look at what the comps, what's going on with the comps?
Why did this one sell for higher than these others?
Why did these sell for much lower than these others?
It could be that one is on the other side of a street, a major street, and you don't need to use
those comps because you're not in the same area.
One could be the amenities.
Like, one may have a pool.
One may have, there's a lot of stuff going on with comp.
So you've got to know your comps really well.
And then, of course, sometimes you're going to nail your ARV.
and sometimes your appraiser is just going to be really conservative.
They're going to come in low anyway.
And we've even run into that as well.
So you have options in that situation as well.
But sometimes you just can't control what the appraiser's going to do.
But you can hedge your bets a lot by knowing your data really well.
Yeah.
But you are an appraiser, correct?
Yes.
Can you give our listeners a basic overall understanding of what appraisers do
and maybe a 30,000 foot overview of the big things that you want to make sure you get right
to get the appraisal you're hoping for?
Yes.
Yes, absolutely. So an appraiser is tasked with providing an opinion of market value.
So it, you know, and it gets more complicated as you get into different property types.
So I've got my commercial appraisal license, which means I can appraise residential or commercial.
And I've done both. On the residential side, since we're talking about residential investment properties,
you're looking for comparable sales. So when people ask, okay, well, what would you do in this
situation. What would you do in that? It all depends on the comparable sales there that are available.
So like I was saying, you look for the best comparable sales available and you work out from there.
Let's say you have a property that's in a really rural area and there's almost no sales around it.
David, what would you do in that situation?
If I was trying to run comps? Yeah. I would go back further to see what was there, like further back in time.
And if I couldn't find anything at that point, I'd have to go to a different rural area.
area that has a similar situation, like a little bit further away from my property than I
ideally would like. And I'm looking for similarities. Like if they're both agriculturally based,
are they both on a well? Are the lot size of the same? That's what I'd be looking into.
And then the last thing I'd say is, well, if the house was not in a rural area, so I couldn't
find a comp that was, you know, rural to rural, then I'd ask what the price per square footage would be.
And I would try to figure out based on that, a rural house is selling for more or less based on
the price per square foot. And you'd ask, you'd ask, you'd ask,
that information to come up with my price.
That's exactly right.
So if you're in a rural area and there's no sales directly around you, you have to expand
your parameters to see where the closest comparable sales are.
And then you might have to go further back in time.
So it's all about finding the most comparable sales available and figuring out what that data
is telling you.
Brandon, you're building your mobile home park thing.
It works the same with mobile home parks.
What are your comps with mobile home parks?
Well, it's other mobile home parks with similar utilities.
and then you're looking at the income stream those are producing, trying to figure out what's
the cap rate? What's, you know, what's this market data telling us about this mobile home park
based on its location, it's income producing ability, the cap rates in this area for this class of
property. In residential, it's what what's going on amenity-wise at this property? Where is this property
located? What's the square footage? Those type things. So an easy appraisal is one where there's a lot of sales
right around your subject property that happened recently that are similar in size and amenities.
So in that situation where you've got a lot of sales that happened recently, similar in size and
amenities, you're going to pull the comps that are closest to you.
Look at those comps first and that sold recently and say, okay, this is a three-bed, two-bath,
1500 square foot house.
Fixed up.
It's got granite.
It's got hardwood, you know, refinished hardwood floors, you know, refinished new bathrooms.
and that's what we're going to do with our house.
And so that one's selling for $150 a square foot.
Our house is likely to sell for $150 a square foot because we're similar in size.
That's going to be a good comp.
So did I answer your question, David, about, are you want me to pick out items that you can
renovate and get the most bang for your buck on?
Well, usually when we ask the question of how appraisers do their work or what they're doing,
it's when the appraisal comes in low.
Right.
So you thought you were going to get a value of $150,000 on your property because some wholesaler
told you that that's what it's worth.
Sure.
But then the appraiser comes back and says, no, it's worth 125 or 130.
Then everyone wants to say, well, what can I do to change the appraiser's mind?
That's usually how this whole thing comes up.
How do I make someone else see it the way that I want them to see it when maybe there
were 12 comps that all showed 125, but that wholesaler showed you the two that were for 150?
When you run into this problem, I'm trying to sell my house, my agent got me a great
offer, but then it appraised low.
or I'm trying to burr, but I got a low appraisal.
What's the best thing that people can do in that situation?
Yeah, so, I mean, there are two times that you can, I would say, help your cause.
One is going to be before the appraisal is done.
And one is going to be, once the thing comes in low, approaching the appraiser in the right way.
So you can't interfere with the appraiser's opinion of value because that's their opinion of value,
not recommending anyone do that. Some things you can do on the front end would be have the place
clean, light and bright when the appraiser goes over there to appraise it. If it smells good,
the same with selling a place. If it smells good, it's clean, it's light and bright.
That's going to make a good impression on an appraiser just like it would, a potential buyer.
Another one, when the appraiser is going in there is to have a list of the repairs that have been
completed along with cost for those repairs. So if, you know, you've replaced the AC,
you replace the roof, you just put granite countertops in, stainless steel appliances,
did all these things.
Have a list printed out with a dollar amount and those things itemized out and hand it to the
appraiser to put in their appraisal.
I love when I get that from an owner because it gives me ammunition when I submit my
appraisal to defend my opinion of value.
Another thing is print out some comps that you like and give them to the appraiser.
The appraiser doesn't have to use them, but it helps them from missing something.
Like sometimes you have a property that's in an area that doesn't have a defined neighborhood.
Okay.
You know, let's say that an appraiser comes from 30 minutes outside of your town to do the appraisal.
This happens all the time.
And they just pull comps from the neighborhood that's listed on the MLS with your property,
but that's been entered incorrectly by the agent.
Okay.
They're going to pull data.
They're not going to get all the data they need.
And they could miss some comp.
So sometimes when appraisal comes in low, the appraiser may have missed a comp.
I don't know a lot of appraisers that aren't open to looking at comps if you have good comps
that they could use that are better than what they have.
So my first question is if somebody asked me about a value, I'm like, hey, I'm trying to
use the best data available.
Do you have better data?
And if you have better data, send it to them and they can use it.
So I would say on the front end, give them the best comps you have.
And then lastly, don't be a jerk to the appraiser because they're writing your report.
And some of these guys are pretty salty and persnickety.
So, but if something comes in low on the back end, you could get your comps out and say, hey,
here's the comps I was looking at.
Here's the updates I've done.
Have we considered all this?
Like, tell me, tell me what you're seeing here.
And if you didn't use these comps I have, please explain why.
Like, I'm not upset.
I've just loved to know why, you know?
So it reminds me a little bit of, so I've got pulled over quite a bit in my life for
random things.
Usually they, I'm swerving because I'm singing so loudly to the music and I'm not paying attention.
But like, I get pulled over.
I never get tickets.
I mean, hardly ever.
Yet, like, I've got a buddy who gets a ticket, like, every month.
He has constantly gets pulled over as well.
He gets a ticket all the time.
And, and, like, he was asking me why that is.
And I was explaining what I do when a cop comes up.
And I'm like, I'm super nice.
I put my hands on the wheel.
Like, like, I'm not like, I tell him I'm going to go in my glove box now and grab something.
I'm like, and I, like, make a joke to him.
I like, I'm friendly.
And like, David, you might completely disagree with this, but it works so good.
But my brother, like, well, okay, I'll just say it's my brother-in-law.
So my brother-in-law, he's like, belligerent.
to the cop.
Like, he's instantly like, I wasn't doing anything.
You know, like, and like, every time they give them that ticket.
And so, like, if you, if you go in an appraiser, like a, like a partner, like, hey,
let's work this together.
Let's get through this together.
Let me be kind to you.
I know you've had a long day.
Let me make your life easier.
You're going to have a much better chance of getting, like, there's going to work harder
at wanting to make sure they help you versus let's just see what I can throw, you know,
throw the book at this guy.
So, yeah, there, I love that idea of like giving better data to them.
because again, they're not your enemy.
They're just doing their job.
Give them good data, be friendly.
Especially if you approach them like, hey, you suck at what you do.
Let me show you how to do your own job.
You're not going to get that far.
If you say, hey, I see what you did here.
It actually looks really smart.
Your logic is flawless.
And you start the conversation there and go on to say,
but it would really help me if you could factor these costs in.
Let me show you why.
If this doesn't happen, I'm going to be out of pocket $25,000.
and I don't have that much money.
You paint this picture for them that's like when you tell a cop, oh my God, I'm so sorry.
I was speeding.
I know I was wrong.
I should never have done it.
But if I get a $300 ticket, I'm not going to be able to feed my kids.
Now, that's a dramatic example, but some reason that makes it clear that they don't necessarily
want to hurt you, they're more likely not to.
I see, Brandon, what you said is what most people do.
They get angry and they want their emotions validated.
And they want to lash into someone else and tell them how they're wrong.
thinking that person is going to change their mind because you made them see it from your perspective.
But nobody looks from someone else's perspective when they start the relationship off on the wrong foot.
If you go in there, say, you did a great job.
I think you're a great appraiser and would really help me if you could factor these comps into the work you came up with.
This is what I was thinking. Am I wrong? Am I a complete idiot?
And the appraiser is going to say, oh, no, no, no.
Let me teach you something about how we do our job.
Oh, that's such a good technique right there.
Now they get to talk about it, right?
I use that constantly.
And at the end of that, they're going to be like, yeah, I can probably work these comps.
And let me show you how I would do that.
Boom, now you have a new appraisal that's $15,000 higher.
If people just learned that one skill, they wouldn't be on the forums complaining all the time.
This appraiser screwed me.
How do you get an appraiser that doesn't screw you type of a thing where it's really just basic
how to talk to another human being type skills that are going to get you through that problem.
Absolutely.
Have you ever had somebody that changed your mind when you did an appraisal?
Yes.
Okay, tell us more about that.
Yeah, I have exactly what we're talking about happened.
I did an appraisal.
They came to me and said, hey, we just wanted to talk about some comps, you know,
and we might have some comps you didn't see.
Okay, let's talk about it.
Send them to me.
So they sent them to me.
There were some off market sales that had happened that I didn't have access to on the
MLS that nobody had given me.
These builders hadn't given me.
That helped their case.
And so I said, thank you.
I put it in the appraisal.
I sent a revised appraisal in.
you know nine times out of 10 though that doesn't happen nine times out of 10 it's a homeowner
that's doing a refinance that wants their their property worth 300 to appraise for 400 you know and you
say hey show me the data i'm i'm not concerned with what it appraises for i'm concerned with
the market you know the market value of this thing show me the data that that supports this being
worth 400 they don't have it you know and so approach with data i would say just approach with
support for what you're saying not just a wing and a prayer and saying
hey, it's the best property in the neighborhood because I live here. You know what I'm saying?
And I'm an investor. I empathize with the investors. I know the burr process well. I empathize with
appraisers coming in low. It's happened to me. I hate it when it happens to me. The best way you can
help your case is approach with data and with tact and being nice, you know.
I think in general what you're saying is that you should know who you're talking to. And I'm just a
huge proponent. I was teaching a class last night for homebuyers and explaining how I will
absolutely present information to people completely differently than others.
That's one reason why I use the disc profile.
If you're this way, I'm going to talk to you this way.
If you're that way, I'm going to talk to you that way.
When you're talking to an appraiser, what they care about is data and numbers and facts.
That's how they arrive at their decision.
If you come to them with a sob story or a, but I love this house, I poured my blood,
sweat, and tears into it, they just don't care.
I'm sorry, but that doesn't matter.
You've got to approach that person with data.
When you're approaching your contractor, one of the things,
things I tell people is I ask them what kind of work they don't like to do, and I never ask them
to do that work. If they say they're a great contractor, but they have a bad back and they hate
laying tile, I just put laminate floors in instead. And I hear him say, oh, heck yeah. In fact,
I'll do it at a really cheap price if you're going to do that for me. Thank you for that.
Most people would never even think that that's a question that they should ask, but it makes a big
difference in your relationship with that person. But if you get into the other person's perspective
and you see where they're at, you can tailor your approach to it just like we stated earlier.
When you go to your lender and you say, hey, how can I make all my payments at the end of this deal?
Well, I'd rather not.
Okay, why not?
Well, I mean, I guess it's not really that big a deal.
It's just I like knowing when I've got money coming in every month.
Well, what if I make it worth your while and I sweeten the deal and I give you a little bit extra up front so I can pay at the end?
That's often enough to push them over.
You can't approach every human being the way you want to be approached or the way that you approach the last guy.
You've got to tailor your approach to who you're talking to.
That works in everything.
You're trying to get an off-market deal.
You're trying to buy directly from the seller.
Well, every seller's different.
They have a different story.
They have a different pain point.
They have a different motivation for why they want to get rid of that property.
You can't just say, what's the step-by-step process.
Okay, I want to follow what Brandon does and just go copy it.
Because Brandon has to tailor his approach differently to everybody that he talks to also.
That's a really wise principle.
That's why I love talking to people like you just said because you're going to tell us,
well, this is what works on me.
So I put that in my memory bank.
Okay, when I come across to Josiah, this is the way I want to approach them.
Yeah, it's, it's so true, man.
It's such a great point.
Like, know who you're talking to.
And it just goes without saying, if you want something to be reflected in its best
light and receive its best appraisal value, present it in the best light possible.
If you're trying to sell a flip, are you going to leave it full of junk and smelling bad?
And, you know, no, you're not going to do that.
Do the same thing with your appraisal.
I mean, the appraiser is going to walk in there and spend, you know, sometimes 30 minutes measuring the house, taking pictures, and they're going to leave. You don't want to make a bad impression during that time. Sometimes it takes hours, but sometimes it's, you know, you got 30 minutes to make a good impression. Then they're going to pull market data. And they're making adjustments based on the condition of that property. If, you know, the thing is a hoarder house and it's got magazines stacked up to the ceiling and dead animals in there and dingy carpet and stuff, you know, just broken stuff everywhere, they're going to factor that into the condition of the property.
So present it in the best light possible, just like you would when you're trying to sell something.
They step on a dog poop when they're in the backyard.
They're not going to like that.
That's going to be impacting their emotions when they write the appraisal.
One of the things that I learned was, I'll let you jump in a minute.
I had an appraiser who called me one time on a house that I was listing.
And he said, hey, how many offers did you get?
I was like, I got quite a few, but what makes you ask?
Well, you sold way higher than the other comp in the neighborhood.
And I'm trying to figure out how I could justify that.
I was like, oh, well, I got like 20 offers.
and all of them were, in fact, they were even higher than this one.
And we just went with this one because they wrote a better letter.
And he goes, okay, cool.
And it came in at value.
And I realized, oh, that's a thing they look at.
How many people are trying to buy in this neighborhood?
So now for my clients, when I meet the appraiser to let him in the house,
I'm like, isn't this a crazy market?
I got 14 offers on this house.
Some were even higher than this one.
Can you believe?
Right?
Before he ever even looks at the house, that's exactly where I'm setting the frame for him to look at
that direction because I learned, oh, that's how appraisers think.
That's the way that they're thinking.
Much harder to do that on a refinance because you're not getting that. Oh, everybody wants to buy my house.
Yeah, but that's smart. And that actually recently, that just happened on a deal I just appraised.
It was a fourplex. I showed up out there. The property is going per square foot above, well, slightly above the highest comp.
Okay. So this is a tough appraisal because here in Huntsville, it's just like nationwide, the real estate market is on fire.
There's not enough properties for sale. Everything is appreciating really quickly, right?
And the first thing the agent says to me is I had four offers on this.
This was a bidding war.
There was a bidding war on this property.
I had four offers above asking price.
This is the guy that got it.
Okay.
So I automatically know, and these parties aren't related either.
This is an arms link transaction.
Automatically know, the market is telling me this property is worth this.
How do I support that with the data?
And there are ways to do that.
And to what I ended up doing was making a time adjustment.
Because if you can prove that the market is a pretty,
at a certain rate, you can make a time adjustment to some of these things. So how does the property
ever appreciate in value? You know, it's got to, it's, you got to. Oh, that's so good. Yeah. How does a property
ever appreciate in value? Well, if you can show that like we have right now, we have a difficult
environment to do appraisals in right now because everything's going up in value quickly.
And there's not enough properties for sale. So it stands to reason that most sales are going to be
going at or above the highest sales cops. So how do you support that? You can support that. You can support
that with a time adjustment.
I never heard of that phrase time adjustment, but it makes so much sense.
I explain this to people all the time as a real estate agent.
This is a conversation I have almost daily is that I realize that in a completely
objective world, home values would never appreciate because the appraiser would say,
oh, the high comp is 500.
It won't go over that.
I don't care if you got 550.
It's worth 500, and the sales would all be dropping.
But that doesn't happen.
Why?
Because of the multiple offers.
The appraiser factors that in and says, oh, well, if everyone's a lot of,
everybody wants to buy it, well, I guess it is worth $5.30. So the only thing that can push a new high
value up in a neighborhood is when there's a lot of buyers in that market that all can't afford to
and are willing to pay over asking price. When do we see that happen? Seasonally, that's in the
springtime and the summertime. So for almost all my sellers, I'm telling them, if you can wait,
because when you get all these buyers, not only you're going to get a better offer and a faster
offer, the appraiser is more likely to give you the value. I can be an amazing agent and sell
your house for double what it's worth, it doesn't matter. When it appraises low, you're going to have
to sell it for whatever the value is. And what you're basically describing is, is verifying that,
yeah, that is correct from what an appraiser is looking at. And then you get into the wintertime
where you're not getting multiple offers, it's very hard for them to say it's worth more than whatever
the high comp is in the neighborhood, because it sat on the market for 90 days just to get asking
price, right? So I as an agent, I factor that in and people should be thinking about that when
they're trying to sell their house. And you're actually telling me that, right? It was just
a theory, but now it's a fact. Now you know. Hey, AJ, so when you talk about good data,
I want to bring this back to when you have good data, you're presenting good data to the appraiser
that's going to help your case, which is true. How do you get good data? If you're not a real estate
agent, you said, you know, earlier you just said get access to the MLS. Well, what does that mean?
How does somebody do that? Do they have to become an agent or can they just work through one?
No, you can definitely work through an agent. You don't have to become an agent. You just need
to have somebody that that can pull comparable sales for you or you need to be able to do it yourself
somehow. I can get access to the MLS because I'm an appraiser. You can call up your local board and ask,
how can I get access to the MLS? It depends on their rules and regulations around that. I can get access to
MLS just because I'm an appraiser. Licensed agents and brokers can get it as well. But, you know,
like if you're just an investor, you don't have access to MLS and you're in David's market and
David works with investors, I would call up David and say, hey, David, I want to buy investment
properties.
I need to be pulling comps on a regular basis.
How do I go about doing this?
Help me out.
Help me come up with a way to do this.
David may say, I got some guys on my team that want deals.
They'll help you pull comps in exchange for them being your agent.
How does that sound?
Just figure out, figure a way out to get access to it because you got to have it.
And if you're doing it based on Zillow alone, just those estimates are wildly inaccurate, you
You can't do this based on Zestimit alone.
So be able to verify things are worth what they're worth on the MLS.
I'm not saying Zillow is always wrong.
Sometimes they're right.
Sometimes they're low and people are selling stuff below what they should.
And you get a really good deal because of Zillow as well.
It's double-edgedged sword.
So David, I have a question then for you as the agent side of this.
So let's say I'm new investor.
I've never bought anything before.
I go to David Green, who's one of the most busy agents in your market.
And I say, hey, David, here's what I need.
I need you to drop everything you're doing every time.
I need a comp and I want you to send it to me within five minutes.
Go.
Now, David's not going to like that.
So, David, how do you approach, how do you want a new investor or even an established investor,
but you're more likely to work with an established investor?
But how do you, if you're a new advisor, how do you want them to approach you?
And what's going to get them primed so they do get comps from you?
Or like, how would you recommend that?
So, oh, this is such a good question.
Because I use this when I'm looking for agents out of state and it works.
And then other people come to me and say, well, I can't find a good agent.
All the agents suck.
And I'm like, well, then how do I find them if that's the case, right?
It's just that I am an agent.
So I understand what the agents are going through and I approach them in the way.
Like I know who I'm talking to like we said earlier.
I tailored the same way.
This morning before the podcast, I had a conversation with someone who said, hey, David, we talked
twice before.
It's my friend's dad.
I want to sell my house.
I'm going to 1031 into a new house.
Can we go over all these numbers?
And we had talked about me selling his house and helping him buy the new one.
So we spent 45 minutes talking on the phone about how a 1031 works, all the information,
what he asked to watch out.
His plan had a couple holes in it.
I helped him seal it.
Then what markets he should be looking to when he sells his primary, how he's not
going to pay capital gains, a very long conversation.
And at the end, he goes, yeah, I tried to sell the house directly to the tenants themselves,
but they wanted me to, they wanted to get an agent.
I don't want to pay that agent's commission, so I'm not going to do it.
And I was like, wait, why have we been talking this whole time if you're trying to sell
the house directly to the tenants yourself?
Why would you even be talking to me?
He said, oh, I know you know a lot about real estate, so I wanted you to help me.
The conversation ended right there.
I'll probably not talk to that person ever again because his words were nice, but his
action said, screw you.
I don't care about your side of this deal.
I just want to use you for what I can get.
And when agents smell that in an investor, they're just going to give them back the same energy, right?
I want you to run market data, run comms.
I want you to find all this information, but I want to use a redfin agent who's going to
discount me and give me back part of the commission when I buy the house.
or I want to go to a wholesaler and have you look at the deal, but I don't want you to be involved.
You shouldn't be asking that person to look over what you're doing if you're not going to use their
services. This is what real estate attorneys hate because everyone says, I don't want to pay a retainer,
but can I just ask you a quick question? Or the CPAs, right? I don't want to sign them
with your firm, but can you just ask me this question? Anytime you catch yourself doing that
with somebody, stop because you wouldn't want someone doing that to you. It's nobody likes that.
So the smart investor would say, hey, this is what I'm planning on doing. This is what I know.
is what I don't need to know, what would you recommend we do?
And let the agent paint a picture and you can decide would that work for me or would it
not.
I'm at the point now with my business where if you're my client, okay, you've signed a buyer
representation agreement or a listing agreement with me to buy a house or sell a house,
I will prioritize you and it's my job to build your wealth.
I will look at your deals.
I will give you advice.
I will connect you with agents and other markets.
I will try to find deals for you, whatever the case may be.
If you're just kind of sniffing around like, well, what can you do for me?
and what can you do for me?
I'm not doing any of that, right?
Because I'm a professional and I expect to be treated like a professional.
The answer to your question, Brandon, of how should you approach agents is treat them like
they're a professional.
And you should be figuring out, are they any good?
If you were going to hire a lawyer, I would say, like, what's your win-loss record?
When was the last time you had a case like mine and you won it?
You know, I wouldn't just ask him a million legal questions and then wait to make my decision
until the end.
Why don't ask you, you ask agents, how many houses are you selling?
What's the last deal you found for an investor?
on the last house you sold how much money did you get what's your strategy and they should have a lot
of information to give you they should be like oh boom boom boom and it's flowing out of their mouth because
if they're good they've they've been doing it a lot brandon if i asked you tell me about the last mobile
home park you bought you would know the numbers you know the r why you know what your investors made
or were projected to make if i ask you that question and you have no information for me you
probably don't do very many mobile home parks and it'd be a very risky deal to put money
into your fund.
That is the best way to approach someone
when you don't know yet,
is this person good?
Tell me about your experience.
Tell me about the last couple deals
and what they look like.
Now, tell me what I can expect
if I work with you.
What do you want from me
and what are you going to give me?
Boom.
We actually spent all night last night.
I did a seminar for homebuyers.
It was like 35 people that came
and they're all people that want to buy a house
with me.
And the purpose was for me to get to know them
and them to get to know
what happens when you buy a house.
But even more importantly,
do I want to work with you?
Are you just going to kill my energy and drain me and then go use another agent after
you got my knowledge or are we going to be in a good relationship?
And people here say all the time that those relationships really matter and it's
completely true.
You have to get to know the person you're dealing.
Well, one more tip there is if you approach people with honesty, like if you're brand new,
let's see you're brand new.
You don't have any deals on your belts.
You're coming at an agent.
Like I guess if I was an agent or even if somebody came to me as an investor,
and was like, hey, I know, and like, don't try to pretend that you're something you're not,
because the agent's going to see right through that.
Like, it's okay to say, hey, look, I know that I'm a new investor.
I know that you will be investing time in me to get me these comps or to answer questions for me.
I understand that that is a risk for you.
I want you to know that I acknowledge that as a risk for you.
And here's how I'm going to make sure I overcome that.
And here, you know, I've read 18 books in the past three months.
I've listened to 400 episodes of this real estate podcast.
I'm not like everyone else.
And all of a sudden that agent's like, oh, okay.
Thank you for, because again, every agent has that fear.
I'm going to spend a ton of time working for this person and they're not going to use me.
There's a gigantic waste of time and especially if you're new.
Yeah, if they step on a dog poop when they're in the backyard, they're not going to like that.
That's going to be impacting their emotions when they write the, because I promise you,
I've never met a human being yet who said, I can't sleep at night.
That guy put me in his car and drove me around to show me houses for three weekends in a row.
And then I use a different agent to buy it.
It just doesn't happen.
Nobody feels bad when that's the case.
Or I had this agent come look and tell me everything I need to do to change my house,
how he's going to sell it, what the market's doing, what the comparable sales are,
what they do to sell houses.
And then I went to my cousin and had her sell the house instead based on everything that
David just told me.
People just don't feel bad about that.
So agents, we get training specifically to look for the person that's taking advantage
of us and say no.
The same way that investors are getting training for what to look for an agent.
And you've got to realize if you think that you're saying,
slick and you think you're getting over on them, you're only getting over on the bad ones.
You're probably having a bad experience with every single agent that you end up using.
Brandon, you're 100% right. If you say, I know that I could waste your time and I really don't want to,
tell me what this would look like in a way that doesn't waste your time and doesn't mind.
If someone said that to me, I could say exactly what they're getting into. Here's what it'll
look like. Here's what we would do. Here's how it looks in the end. And if they say, oh, I would never
want to do that, then we're a bad fit. If they go, oh, that's all, that's easy.
than we're a good fit. That's probably the easiest way to start that conversation.
Yeah, so good. All right. Well, that's much more concisely than me. Good job.
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key. Terms and conditions apply. Hiring indeed is all you need. All right, Josiah, so let's go back to your story
a little bit. So you're doing these burr investing deals with no, basically no money down. Sometimes you have
to leave a little bit of money in there, which is why you're flipping houses to generate some more
cash so that way you're okay with that, which I think is super smart. You're also doing some multifamily, right?
Are you also, is the burr with the multifamily as well? Or what's that look like?
Well, so what I've been trying to do, and I've talked about this with my mentor that's kind of helping me
think through these things. But we've been making so much traction on the the burr stuff on the one to four
family deals that instead of stopping that, I'm continuing to do those because I've got the,
I've got the system in place. I've got the contractors. I've got the boots on the ground.
I've got the leads coming in. I've got the systems in place. That kind of, that doesn't require a
ton of time for me to run at this point. You should write a book called Rinse and Repeat.
I'm going to come over the book title for every episode down. Every single guest is going to have a
a book title.
You should turn to that.
Call Brandon Turner.
Tell him what you're doing in life.
And after a 30 minute call,
he'll give you the name of the book that you should write.
Rins and repeat.
A step-by-step guide to building a deal funnel that whatever.
All right.
Maybe I'll rename my book.
Yeah.
You can read and repeat.
So you're rinse and repeat.
Your current one to fours.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So we're still doing that.
And we're flipping some of those.
We're keeping some of those.
Okay.
So we started working on the multifamily thing.
I made it my goal to do.
to put together a multifamily deal and do my first syndication.
Started working on that.
Long story short,
over about two months,
found a deal in Dallas,
Fort Worth,
went and saw the thing,
just, I mean,
drilled down and nailed every number on the whole thing,
like from the rents to the,
you know,
repair numbers,
management,
insurance,
like the whole nine yards.
16 offers on the property.
We made the highest and best round.
The highest eight offers made it to the highest and best round.
And the highest and best round,
we were the highest offer and did not get the deal.
Wow.
And we did not get the deal.
We had $100,000.
So the purchase price was $6 million.
We had $100,000 earnest money going hard the first day.
Meaning if we go under contract and walk away for any reason or the thing falls apart for any reason, they get $100,000.
No questions asked.
Doesn't matter what the inspection shows or anything else.
Day one, when they sign that contract, $100,000 is going over to them.
We're not going to get that money back.
the party that won offered $50,000 less than us, but they had $250,000 earnest money going hard day one.
So I was a bit blown away that the seller decided to embrace losing $50,000 on the purchase price of the sales price in exchange for having $150,000 of extra earnest money going hard day one.
But that's what they decided to do.
So we were disappointed.
We didn't get the deal, but we worked really hard.
I learned a ton.
but yeah that's the that's the market we're in right now who was communicating to the seller you or did
have an agent no no it was just the broker the broker listing the thing was was doing that did you ask
that broker what matters most to your client do they want security do they want price what what's important
yeah we did and they gave us a heads up they said they're big on earnest money going you know going hard
day one we had less than a hundred thousand dollars earnest money originally and i have a team of people
it's not just me.
And so we went to everybody and $100,000 was the most everyone was comfortable with putting in.
So that's the most we came to the table with.
Remember, we had a $50,000 higher offer price.
They were hoping that would sway them.
And we didn't know, but they, we didn't know they'd go with the lower offer price to have the earnest money, but that's what they did.
And I'm not trying to say you did something wrong because you did what you could.
But it's more for the listener's benefit.
Listen when people talk, right?
If they tell you, what probably happened is that property probably fell out a contract at a time or two or three.
already and they were they had PTSD from we got excited we got let down we got excited we got let
down so to them the 50,000 more that they could get on the upside was not as important as the feeling
that they're not going to back out or our downside is protected and what you find is a lot of human
beings they don't know what matters to them until they've gone through a little bit of life right
when you first sell a house and you get a really good offer price on it but the offer comes in with an
inspection contingency and an appraisal contingency and then the clients back out or the buyers back out
you start to realize, oh, I got way too concerned about the price and I didn't look at the big picture.
And some of that other stuff goes up as far as how you value it.
And when you're in Josiah's position or you're the buyer trying to buy, the more you get to know about what the seller will tell you about them, their situation, what they've been through, the better you can kind of tailor your approach.
And now for Josiah, he can go to his team members and say, I don't want this to ever happen again.
We're fine in some way that we could borrow more money on the earnest money deposit so we don't get beat.
and now your business is better.
Absolutely.
Another thing, yeah, I was thinking through, okay, why did, why did this happen?
You know, because we couldn't find that it had been up for sale before.
My best, my best guess was that these guys were involved in a 1031 exchange and they had,
they had a hard, a hard date that they had to complete this transaction by.
And if this thing did fall apart, even though they get our $100,000 bucks, their other deal would
fall apart too.
And that loss was of greater monetary value than taking $50K less and having that.
that higher earnest money there.
Yeah.
So, I mean, I'm thinking in the seller's shoes, too.
Like, had I been in that boat, a $6 million property, 50 grand versus the $250 versus
the $100, I'm not sure I would have taken your offer.
I don't know, because like, especially the 1031 for sure I wouldn't have.
But sure.
Yeah, but even if not, I don't know.
I mean, there's a, like, there's a 250 difference.
I mean, there's a big difference, 250 to 100, you know, for going hard.
Sure.
So, yeah, you never really know.
And so, but the bottom line is like, I love the fact that you swung for it, right?
Like, you went for it.
You learned a ton.
It's like the same advice that you, I know you give it, David gives it to the newbie who's
trying to buy their first property.
They want to buy that duplex for $112,000.
And they get outbid and they're like, oh, man.
Like, what would we tell those people?
No, that was awesome.
You went for it.
You like, you swung.
You didn't get it this time.
But the more you do that, the better you're going to be.
So what do you got to do next time to get more of those?
And the question I was asking, and I'll, you know, again,
you know this, but like, how do you do that same thing you just did every single week going
forward? Not like I did a deal, but how do you do that every week or at least every month?
Like, how do you put that amount of effort in every single week?
Answering that question is what's going to give you consistent deals versus I did that thing.
And I know, so what is your plan for that?
Like what do you?
Yeah, I mean, I think, you know, if we're talking 10x, how do we 10x this effort?
Yeah.
You know, it's going to have to be creating a team of people doing this similar to what you've done
with your mobile home park team and David what you're doing with your your real estate team.
I only have so much time to be working on all these things.
So I'm going to have to have a team of people, you know, doing the same thing I did on this,
on this deal and kind of scale that way.
Scale the number.
I say scale, but just gives me more capacity, right, to be able to have one of these going
out every week.
So, yeah, I mean, it's certainly possible, but it's like, I got a, I got to amp up the,
the amount of effort going in to get the, to get the output.
I want.
So just this morning, we had a call.
We had our open door capital team call or mobile home park fund call.
And we're talking about acquisitions.
And we set a lead measure.
You know, we're really big on lead measures.
And, you know, we said a lead measure to make an, it was like 20, I think it was 24 letters
of intent by the end of April.
I think was what the plan was.
I might be off slightly there.
Walker would know more than I.
But I think it was 24 or 23, something like that.
And it was basically like one a week for the first month, two a week for the second
month.
And then three week for the third month.
And we're looking at that.
And the conversation came up is like the amount of work we put in that,
like of all the leads that come in,
we only actually end up analyzing about half of them.
Half of them we can just toss that without even look at them.
Of the ones we analyze,
only half of them,
we actually ended up writing a letter of intent.
And each one is taking like 15 hours to underwrite.
And so they said to me like,
like somebody else,
I don't know where it came up,
but in the conversation is we can't do 24 offers.
We're not going to be,
I mean, we can barely do one a week right now.
There's no way we can do three a week.
week. And I said, and I don't know if I said it, but the question is not, we can't do it.
It's how do we get three a week? Okay, well, we're going to need 15 legit offers every single,
like I'm sorry, legit leads every week, like solid leads that we can actually make like 15 every
week. Right now we're getting barely 15 a month. So the question was like, well, how do we get that?
And so, again, the better questions lead to better. And this works, if you're trying to buy your
first duplex, trying to buy a 50 unit. So what we did is, we launched a site, bring brandonadale.com.
That's our strategy.
And I'm actually implementing it right now here on this webinar, I mean, podcast.
Because I'm like, I'm like, if I just tell the entire world that I'm looking for mobile home parks,
they can bring Brandon a deal.com and get paid, you know, commission, referral fee, piece of the deal,
partnership, whatever.
You also put it on that Instagram post.
You said that was one of the best ever.
I did I put on that.
Yep.
And my business partner said, hey, do you see what Brandon did?
We should do the exact same thing.
Yeah.
He actually thought he's a marketing genius.
No, it's all like telling people what you want and then making it.
giving value when you do it. Here's what I want to point out of what you said that I 100% agree with.
You didn't say what's the answer before you started. You started, you had a problem.
I cannot analyze all these deals. Then you thought of a solution and your mind gave you the answer
when you were in the mud. Like, oh, I'm overwhelmed. How am I going to get out of here?
That is how our brains work and you got to just submit to that process and quit trying to have
the answer to everything before you start because you'll never get it. The reason I did that
homebuyer seminar last night was because I had about 25 to 30 people.
that have all said they want to buy a house or they want a house hack or something.
And I was doing those meetings individually.
And I know I'm going to see Brandon on Wednesday.
There is no way I can do 25 of these before Wednesday.
And I don't want people to say, David didn't have time for me to get their feelings hurt.
My mind came up with, what if you do it all at once?
Well, then what if they feel like they don't matter to me?
They're just part of everyone.
Then buy a bunch of pizzas and sodas and make it a big party.
And everyone can hear everybody else's concern.
So we can all bounce ideas.
I can answer every question they have about the real estate market at the same time.
they all get to hear it. Now it's like a free class that they're getting an education in real
estate. It's not like an impersonal thing. And they still get the information that I needed them to get
to decide if we want to work together. My brain never came up with that solution until I had a problem
that there was 30 people and there's no way I can get this all done. And that's why I want to just
highlight what Brandon said. That's how we think. It's how our brains work. Right. Josiah had this
problem. How am I going to buy more houses when I don't have more money? And he was talking about it to other
human beings and someone said to him, what if you had private money? That wasn't really a crazy
solution, but he was never going to think about it until he got in the point where his emotions
were bothered and he was feeling like, what do I got to do to get out of this mess? So run forward
into the mess. Let yourself get overwhelmed. Let yourself say, I don't know what to do here.
And then watch as your brain gives you an answer or another person gives you an answer to get
through it. And then take the next step and run forward until you get jammed up again.
That is how progress gets made in this game. Love it. David, you shred a book called Once
more into the fray.
That's a really funny joke because that's like an inside joke that
Brandon and I have.
I really like a movie.
What's the movie called?
The gray.
Oh, I've seen that.
Once more into the fray, into the last good fight I'll ever know.
Live and die on this day.
Live and die on this day.
I love that poem.
Beautiful.
That's a very good.
That's funny, Brandon.
Once more into the gray.
There you go.
There you go.
All right, guys.
Josiah, so let's move on.
Last question I have is.
Is that the plan, then the plan is to keep where you're, keep the one by four with rinse and repeat.
You're going to keep rinse and repeat.
And then you're going to just keep pursuing these larger multifamily and syndication, raising money, that kind of stuff.
Is that correct?
Yes.
Yeah.
We're going to, we're going to keep doing the bird deals.
Our goal is to also speed that up.
So, so we've got, you know, four million.
Our goal is to speed that up and have 10 million.
We're going to try to do that.
And, you know, about 40, 40 to 50 single families, have 10 million that are cashful.
These are cash flowing about $200 profit a door and also do flips.
And I've got that system set up that's kind of running itself with a little oversight by
me.
And then I'm also working on the off, trying to find off market apartment deals and trying to get
into that.
My progress for the amount of effort going in there, the results are not very, not very good
so far.
So like I'm not making a lot of traction, but I'm learning a lot.
So I feel like that's good.
On the on the one to four family side, I'm making a lot of progress.
the results are great over there.
So I want to keep that going while I'm working myself into the multifamily thing.
All right.
Well, so let me ask the final question then on that note before we move on.
What do you need?
From our audience, there's a quarter million people potential listening to this right now.
Like what do you need in your business?
What would help you right now?
Off market multifamily leads is what I need.
All right.
If people got those, you know where to contact your side.
Yeah.
We'll give me a message.
Yeah, we'll give you your contact info at the end of the show.
But before we get there, we got to get over to our world famous.
Deal, deal, deep dive.
All right, Josiah, this is a part of the show where we dive deep into one deal you've done.
And pick it apart a little bit.
You ready for that?
Absolutely.
Let's go.
So let's start with the question.
What kind of property is it?
It is a duplex.
How did you find this duplex?
Found the duplex on the MLS.
MLS.
How much was it listed at?
You remember?
I believe the duplex was 225.
Okay.
And we made an offer at 205.
So most of our deals are not on the MLS.
The reason I like this one is this is one of the best ways to find good deals.
Try to find some inaccuracy on the listing.
I noticed, yeah, I looked at every multifamily listing in Huntsville.
And nothing looked decent except this one.
And I was like, okay, what's going on with this?
This looks like it's priced a little bit too low.
The dollar per square foot price on it was 150 bucks a square foot.
And then I noticed this duplex is listed at about 1,200 square feet,
but it looks like it's about 2,500 to 3,000 square feet.
There's no way this whole duplex is 600 square feet aside.
And the multiple listing, the MLS listing was showing 1,200.
I jumped on the tax records and found that it was 2,500 square feet.
So for some reason, the MLS was pulling in only half the square footage on this thing.
So I bought it at about half of what it should have been priced at.
There you go.
That's one of those you didn't buy a deal.
made a deal by looking at things other people miss.
We do that same thing.
That's why I'm having luck with the buyers I have in a super hot market is I'm literally
looking in the MLS for keywords, like keyword alerts on bigger pockets.
I have those set up and the confidential remarks that only agents say to each other
saying things like unpermitted addition or unfinished basement or something where I'm like,
ooh, that's how shows 900 square feet, but there's another 700 square feet that we could
convert that nobody sees when they're looking on Zillow.
And that's a great point, Josiah.
like you look for what other people are missing on the MLS.
Okay.
So how did you end up funding this deal?
We funded it with the same strategy, hard money for 90%, private money for 10%.
Hey, what do you pay?
Simple that is.
I know I did too.
What, what, I know this is not part of the deep dive, but what typical rates are you paying
for hard money and private money?
Dude, I, I am completely spoiled because I started off trying these hard money lenders
that we're charging, you know, 10, 12% right now for both blended.
my blended rate for the entire 100% is like 8.5%.
That's awesome.
Yeah, and about one point.
And they're giving me a good deal because I give them a lot of business.
I refer people to them,
but that's not super expensive for what's happening with it,
how quickly we can close and stuff.
Cool.
That's awesome.
All right.
So what did you do with it then?
Yeah.
So the cool thing was one side was rented out.
One side was vacant.
So we immediately,
so we kept the tenant that was there,
paying what they were paying,
renovated the other side.
The side that was rented was rented for $650.
We renovated the side on the right and rented it out for $13.50.
Now we're working with the tenant on the left side.
They're going to be coming up to $13.50 as well.
So we more than doubled the rents at the duplex.
We're in it total for $250 and the property is worth $400.
That's awesome.
What if instead of the $2.25 that was listed at you went in and said, I'll give you $2.45.
Would you still buy that deal?
Absolutely.
Isn't that funny?
who cares what the list price.
Yeah.
And the crazy thing was, this thing had been under contract before, and it had fallen through.
And the thing was 225, we went in at 205 and they took it.
We would have given them 225.
But it's exactly right.
But I mean, I was like, this is a smoking deal.
Like, it's mislisted.
And nobody's recognizing it.
For whatever reason, the thing had been on the market for three months.
It's crazy.
But it's worth 400 now, right?
So, and you got it at 205.
You could have got it at 225.
You still could have bought it at 250.
and it would still be a great deal to make.
And that's how I want people's minds to be thinking.
It's quit thinking if I got it at less than list price I won and if I got it
an over list price I lost.
Ask yourself, what's that property worth to you?
You made that property worth $400,000.
You could have bought it at $300,000 and it still would have been a great deal.
And I see these deals blow up all the time because the seller doesn't want to fix like,
you know, the deck in the back that has some dry rot so people back out.
And I'm like, you just lost $150,000 of equity to save $2,500.
of a deck.
You know, like, was it really worth your ego in that case?
But yeah, anyway.
So what, do we ask what the outcome was on this deal?
Yeah, so we're working through the second renovation.
They've already agreed to the $1,350 and rent.
And so after that's done, we thought about selling it just so we could capture that
massive amount of money in such a short amount of time.
But we're just going to keep it.
We're going to burr out of it.
It's going to cash flow nearly $1,000 a month.
And so we're just going to keep it, man.
It's going up in value so fast.
It's in a really great area.
Great schools.
So, I mean, I would live in this property.
And yeah, we're pretty proud of it.
It was one that really worked out well.
All right.
Last question then.
What lessons overall did you learn from this deal?
There are really good deals on the MLS.
The MLS gets beat up because everybody says it's picked over, you know, it's a place where
only retail buyers go.
But there are really good investment deals on the MLS if you're willing to look.
And also think outside the box.
Don't just look at the data being presented to you.
Think, is this data correct?
because there's a lot of bad inputs that go in on the MLS that if you recognize,
if you find that something's listed at a lower or a smaller square footage than it actually is,
there's value there.
Exactly right.
Yeah.
Just don't look for the easy step, right?
What I tell people is everybody's looking for the same dame three houses on Zillow.
They're all chasing the same one, right?
Like, oh, look at that.
It's amazing.
It's beautiful.
It's gorgeous.
And then they try to get it.
They don't.
They say, oh, the MLS is no good.
Right.
But like, I'm looking for the one that everybody else doesn't want or passes up, you know?
the one that they don't even take pictures other than the outside so you can't see the inside.
The normal person goes, nope, screw it.
I can't see what it's like?
And they move on.
And I stop and go, ooh, can I get an chance to go see this one?
Maybe it looks terrible.
And that's why they don't have pictures.
We can get a better deal.
That's a great point.
You're giving some really good advice.
I never thought about the photo thing.
I mean, I kind of do that too.
If like, I can't see a picture, I'm just kind of like, oh, that's annoying.
It's more work.
I'm not going to analyze it.
Your brain is in that spot where it's like, I want to understand, do I want it or not.
And it's running it through this filter that you already have.
in your own mind. Oh, it doesn't fit what I want and you move on. But when you have like an agent,
like me on my side, my filter is, please don't go after that same house that everybody else
wants. I don't want to try to chase it. That's really hard to get. So when I see that same deal with
no pictures, my brain, my reticular activate system goes, oh, heck yeah. Let me look at this one, right?
Or, oh, those pictures are terrible. The realtor ticket with his own phone and you see his gut
hanging out in the bathroom beer type of thing. And nobody wants it except for us. We're like calling
that agent frantically. Like there's what I have right now in a city called Elsie.
Cerrito that would be a perfect house hack listed at 850.
It's been on the market 90 days, and I've already talked to the realtor three times and
previewed it.
And she's told me that if we get an offer at 750, they'll take it.
It's a super, super good deal.
But nobody else is looking at that house because she listed at a thousand square feet when
the whole downstairs part that's almost pretty much done is another like 1,200 square feet.
It's really 2,200 square feet that she priced too high for 1100, but way low for the 2,200.
And, you know, this is why, like you said, there's deals on the MLS, but having a guide that can kind of navigate these waters is really helpful, whether that's an agent or even a person on your team that's experienced with this.
Brandon, you look like you are so deep in thought right now.
No, I was just thinking about like, I was thinking about like, I was thinking about how that same strategy I always talk about where I look for, you know, two bedrooms that have like 11,200 square feet, 1300 square feet.
Because that's like my way of finding hidden deals on the MLS is like.
Yeah, everyone skips the two bedroom houses.
Yeah, because nobody likes two bedrooms and at least two back.
Yeah, because nobody likes two bedroom houses.
But when they've got a 1,400 square foot house, I mean, I thought on the other day, it was 2,200 square foot house with two bedrooms.
And I was like, I guarantee you something that's wrong on that listing.
Or that house is the strangest house with like this.
Or it's a discount realtor who got screwed on their commission and so they don't care, right?
If that was mine, I'd put four bedrooms.
And then when they went to see it, they said there's only two.
I'd say, well, one of them's a dining room and one of them's a family room, right?
But at least you went in there to go look at it.
And it's 2,200 square feet.
How much, like, we'll get, we'll fix the rooms for you if you want to buy the house.
That's funny.
I know.
It's really, but yeah, it says everybody's got the same parameter set up on their search.
Everybody's mind works the same way.
They're all filtering deals through a very similar lens and they're all missing the same
stuff.
But Josiah, he comes in and he finds what everybody's missing.
And that's why he's on the bigger pockets podcast.
Well, let me get, hey, let me give you a free tip here, okay?
That, that will help, that could help you make a ton of money on a deal that almost nobody does.
If all the bigger pockets listeners start doing this, I guarantee you.
guarantee you some of you guys have this work out really well for you take a measuring tape go to lows
buy yourself a measuring tape take it with you to some of these properties you're looking at and
measure the property real quick figure out the square footage and you're going to discover that
some of these properties are listed for 1,200 square feet and the thing's actually 1,600 square feet
if you're in a hundred bucks a square foot neighborhood that's 40,000 dollars of value just found
that's awesome try it yeah that's a great tip 40 thousands of dollars of value 40 dropped on us right
here.
Josiah, the value dropper, smelzer.
I'll take it.
I like it.
All right.
Well, now it's time to head over to the world famous.
Famous for.
All right.
This is part of the show where we ask the same four questions every week to every guest.
Josiah, famous four.
Number one, what is your favorite, other than your own?
What is your favorite real estate related book?
It's going to be crushing it in apartments and commercial real estate by my friend Brian
Murray.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Great book.
Great guy.
It's a must read.
Yeah, Brian Murray's the man.
We actually, he's part of Open Door Capital.
You know that.
Like, yeah, he's a, we brought him in.
He came to that mastermind, that Maui meetup mastermind thing we did last year.
And both of us hit it off with Brian really well.
And we're like, that guy is somebody we want to know.
So now both of us are involved with him heavily.
Yeah, it's awesome.
Yeah, he's in abundance as well.
He came and talked to me when I was out there in Denver a couple weeks ago.
He's everywhere.
And he was very impressive.
I was like, oh, I'm really glad knowing that you.
You're the one that Brandon has watching over.
Yeah.
It was like, you know, like, when you're only your friends is exposed, but like, really like
their bodyguard, that's how it felt.
I feel really good knowing you're the one that's watch.
I think we're going to go with like, you met your friend's girlfriend and found out she's
really, really cool.
And you're like, I'm so glad that he got a good one.
Ryan's like.
If I was, if I was like married like you and I thought that way, my filter would work
the way that yours works.
But no, I still think like a cop and everything I do.
All right.
I was just like, what is your favorite business book?
Other than the one that Brandon just created for.
you out of the air like 30 rinse and repeat right i'm gonna i'm gonna i'm gonna i'm gonna apply this as a business
but it's it's meditations by marcus aurelius oh cool absolutely love that book i've only read
clips of it i'm not read the whole thing but ah so good i have the uh check it out are you a stoic
i i i don't know that i would call myself a stoic i aspire to be though would a stoic call you a
well probably not they'd probably say you're too yeah but no i i i think the principles there
are just so sound. I mean, it's like, you know, keep your eye on the ball. Don't be swayed by all these other
things going on. So figure out the meaning of life and go with it. Don't worry about it. Yeah,
yeah, that's all. On that note, what do you do for fun? What are some of your hobbies? You know, I've got,
I've got three little kids. So just hanging out with a family, you know, I like hiking, outdoor stuff.
I really do real estate investing for fun as well. So, I mean, it's really a lot of fun for me to
mess with these properties. So yeah, I also do fantasy football. I get a big kick out of
Yeah. All right. Well, last question for me. What do you think separates successful real estate
investors from those who give up, fail, or just never get started? I would say it's just grit,
you know, just a perseverance through adversity, being willing to keep trying and keep trying and
keep trying. They've got to have that grit factor there. If you're willing to give up, it's going to,
you're going to have so many problems coming your way that it's going to make you quit pretty quickly
if you're, if that's where your mind is and your mindset. Great answer. Last question. This has been a really
really good show. In a way, you actually kind of ended up interviewing Brandon and I.
It was like this cool little like Jedi Mind Trick that you pulled got a lot out of us.
That's a very good job. Brandon said some of the most intelligent things I've ever heard
him say on the show. So for people that want to be Jedi Mind Trick themselves by you,
where can they find out more about you? Yeah. So I've got a podcast called The Daily Real Estate Investor.
And David, I'd love for you to be on there. Brandon's been on there before. That's why you interviewed
us so good. You're a ringer. I didn't really.
I realize that we had that. You're like a secret agent that Liam Neeson came in here.
I backdoored this on you. Yeah, you did. Yeah, got a podcast called The Daily Real Estate Investor. I would love for you guys to check that out. It's basically sharing the journey of building my investment property portfolio. And I love having guys like Brandon and David on the show to share what they've done and how to avoid making mistakes and that kind of thing. So and then I've recently published a book that I would love for all of you to check out.
out the title is dream it and build it how to crush your real estate investing goals and the
kendall version is on amazon the physical version is there as well but it's sold out and it's
i'm a bit frustrated over that but i can't seem to get enough physical copies over there that's a good
and a bad thing right like i'm happy at selling out but i'm also wish they would stock more of them but
it's also on book baby you can get the physical version over there but kendall version's there
readily available there.
And you can find me on Instagram at Daily Real Estate Investor.
And I would love to connect with you guys.
Shoot me a message and let me know what you're doing and that kind of thing.
And let's connect.
And if I can help you with your business somehow, I'd love to.
Awesome, man.
And I do want to recommend, I think your book is fantastic.
I like the format, the way you did it.
It's different than most real estate books.
It's not like a, you know, step one, step two, step three.
It's like, it's like, it was like meditations of, I don't know.
Yeah, yeah.
I actually, I read the book Turning Pro by Stephen Pressfield.
I love that book.
And I was like, man, I need to, I need to format my real estate book this way because I wanted to be kind of really, really easily digestible thoughts on real estate investing that you could, you know, it wasn't, it wasn't really labor intensive going through.
I keep a copy of that.
I really appreciate that.
Yeah.
I keep a copy of Turning Pro in my diaper bag, like our baby diaper bag.
So I'm like I'm out somewhere.
I can like pick it up and read it for like a minute.
And like, I'm like, yeah, that's really good.
So anyway.
Nice.
Very cool.
All right, dude,
well, this has been fantastic.
Thank you so much for joining us today.
And again, everyone, go check out Josiah.
And the show notes at BiggerPockets.com.
We'll put a link to the episode I also did on Josiah show in the show notes.
There you go.
Awesome.
Thanks, guys.
All right, guys, that was our show with Josiah.
I hope you enjoyed today's show.
Remember, this was part one.
If you want to listen to Part 2, that comes out tomorrow.
If you will listen to us in the future, just go look for episode 382 and a half or 382 part 2.
I'm not sure what we're actually calling that.
I think we're called 382 part two.
Go look for that.
You'll learn more about what Josiah has encountered since the COVID thing ended,
about the whole mess with the refinancing.
A lot of his refies ended up falling apart.
He talks about what he's doing because of that and how he was able to battle through.
It's such a hero's journey story.
I think you'll enjoy it quite a bit.
So go listen to it right now.
Again, episode 382, part two.
And I'll tell you more about my new video game at the end of that show as well.
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