BiggerPockets Real Estate Podcast - 426: Using the “Sunflower Method” To Buy 18 Properties in Just a Few Years with Teacher Jon Wooten
Episode Date: December 17, 2020Many new investors find excuses for why they can’t buy properties. Either they don’t have the money, the deals, or the experience. Our guest today, Jon Wooten, had none of these three, but found a... way to acquire 18 units (and become financially free) in only a few years. By asking questions and sticking out to the local real estate investors, Jon was able to acquire valuable experience, all while gaining equity in his rental properties. Jon has his own method for finding deals and acquiring wealth, called the “Sunflower Method”, which has helped him get to the point he is at. Now, financially free at 28, Jon has the ability to choose whether he wants to work, which projects to go after, and how he wants to spend his time. This isn’t a far away goal that only the rich and well connected can get to, it’s available for all real estate investors! You may be working a minimum wage job, stuck in a career you want out of, or have debt. Jon shows that all of these can’t stop you from acquiring wealth! How do you find houses? How do you find a mentor? What’s the best way to find a quality handyman? How can you make sure a house is being inspected properly. All these questions and more are answered in this episode! In This Episode We Cover: How to find a mentor AND get your first rental Why you should make it an effort to get to know your local real estate investors Why self-managing is a great way to gain experience How to get seller financing on a rental (and who to ask for it) Why you should call “for rent” signs What the “Sunflower Method” is and how it builds wealth The best way to find a quality (and inexpensive) handyman Fake cash flow vs Pure cash flow How to properly inspect a house before you make an offer And SO much more! Links from the Show BiggerPockets Forums David's Instagram Brandon's Instagram BiggerPockets Podcast BiggerPockets Store BiggerPockets Podcast 050: Getting Started and No Money Down House Flipping with Mike Simmons BiggerPockets Podcast 200: A Step-by-Step Guide to Buying Your First Real Estate Investment BiggerPockets Podcast 180: 58 Deals by Age Twenty-Three with Devan McClish BiggerPockets Podcast 355: From Small-Time Landlord to 1,000+ Units Under Contract with Ryan “The Mercenary” Murdock Open Door Capital Tony Robbins Check the full show notes here: https://www.biggerpockets.com/show426 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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This is a Bigger Pockets podcast show 426.
But if you just stick with it and keep following the process, it gets easier and easier.
So you're one, you might make $2.50 a month.
Your two, you might buy three or four houses.
And now you're at 1,000 a month.
Your three, you got tired of waiting and buying just two or three at a time.
And you might buy 10 at a time.
And who knows, by your three, four, or five, you're going to be making $10, $15,000 a month just by snowballing that process.
You're listening to Bigger Pockets Radio.
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Your home for real estate investing online.
What's going on, everyone? It's Brian Turner, host of the Bigger Pockets podcast here with my co-host,
Mr. David Green.
David Green.
What's up, Mr. Long Distanced Real Estate himself?
What's what going on with you?
Well, it's the end of the year.
So I'm looking to buy a couple more properties that I have to do before 2021 comes.
So I'm kind of on the hunt, which is funny because I'm looking primarily in Tennessee,
mostly because I believe a lot of Californians are going to leave California.
And they're going to go to places like Tennessee as our property taxes and our income tax are set to increase.
And today's guest was from Tennessee.
Lucky me.
So we got to learn a little bit about that market.
Yeah, today's guest is phenomenal.
Today, like our guest today is John Wooten.
He is a biology teacher.
out of, yeah, Chattanooga, Tennessee has some high school there.
And the guy is like legit in terms of like understanding real estate, buying stuff, overcoming fear, finding deals.
I mean, if there's like one thing you pull out today's show, it's like listen to his strategy for finding off market deals.
It's so simple, yet it's so powerful.
And like if you did nothing but implement that one thing and going into 2021, you will buy multiple deals next year.
If you just did this like this thing, you're going to love it.
He bought a 10 unit, a really creative way.
He bought a, his first, second deal was that strategy.
He talks about all sorts of good stuff, like the sunflower method today.
We talk about that.
We talk about the car accident method.
Today you're going to learn about what those two methods are and a whole lot more.
So today's show is just phenomenal, full of great tips and ideas about getting started with real estate and building a portfolio of rental properties.
And now, before we get to that, though, let's get today's today's quick tip.
All right.
So today's quick tip is very simple.
At Bigger Pockets, we are constantly, and by constantly, I mean, like every month.
month or two months or maybe three months. We are releasing new books. Like we have a publishing
company, we release a lot of books. And sometimes we bring on the author here on the podcast.
Sometimes we don't. So go to biggerpockets.com slash store. It's been redesigned. It looks really
pretty. And you can check out what books maybe you haven't gotten your portfolio yet,
your bookshelf portfolio that is. And you can pick them up and add them to your collection
because there's probably some books you're missing out on. You can also pre-order future books
like David's upcoming book sold, which if you are interested in being a real estate agent,
you definitely want to or being a better real estate agent or becoming one.
You're going to want to pick that up.
So get all that at biggerpockets.com slash store.
All right.
Thanks for that, Brandon.
You're welcome, Mr. David Green.
Well, today on the show, we actually talked a little bit about my future book,
but it's way too early to pre-order, so you don't have to do that right now,
but we talked about that that comes out next summer.
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Yeah, man. Anything you want to add?
No, John's got an awesome story.
And just I want to highlight maybe,
so there is something I want to add.
This is a biology teacher in a state
where teachers probably don't get paid super great.
So if John could do it,
listen to what the guy's got to say, right?
Are there states where teachers get paid great?
I'm sure they get paid a little better in California than they would in Tennessee.
But teachers in general don't get paid really well.
So he didn't let that stop him at all from building up, what is it, 18 units over five years or something?
Yeah.
Yeah.
And he's got like $400,000 in equity in those properties now.
I'm a teacher salary.
Yeah, it's awesome.
All right.
Well, with that said, let's get to the interview with John Wooten.
John Wooten or Wutang, as they say.
Welcome to the Bigger Fockets podcast, man.
How you doing?
I'm good, man.
Glad to be here.
Yeah.
Tell me about yourself.
You are a biology teacher.
Is that right?
My least favorite class in high school?
Yeah, I'm a biology teacher.
I teach physical science and a little bit of environmental science to have been doing that for three years.
You know why I didn't like biology?
Why?
Isn't that the class they made you cut open a frog?
Like I had to cut something open.
And that just that weirded me out.
So you know what?
It's okay.
I still like you.
I think you're a good real estate investor.
So, you know, we're going to get into that today.
Let's go.
Yeah, I'm trying to dig into cutting frogs in my classroom, but they're hard to get.
Ah, are they?
Really, is there a shortage?
There's high demand in the frog industry right now for.
Yeah, well, you ask everybody.
You're like, hey, where can I get some frogs to dissect and everyone just stares at you?
Yeah.
What's funny?
There's some guy listening right now in like Tennessee or Georgia, and he's like, I can get you some frogs.
He's going to, like, send you a box of like, just like hundreds of dead frogs at a box.
that a box is Roddy.
Like this is not what we asked for.
Should we make that with this shows about like how to find frogs in a, in a rough market?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And they'll stab frogs with a little fork like a prong thing.
Really?
Wow.
Oh, that is a thing.
It's horrible.
My mom saw that when she was a little girl.
They came home with all the frogs on a string.
And to this day, she has a phobia about frogs.
She can't see one without throwing up or even hearing the word frog.
It definitely affects her.
This took a grim turn.
Well, I got, I'm going to make it even more grim.
So when I was a kid, we had, not more grim, when I was a kid, we had this, like, window in the basement, right?
In order to have a window, it was for an egress window in the basement of our house.
And so to do that, you had to, like, drop like, you know, like sea shaped metal six foot hole, basically on the side of your house, right?
So that way you could climb out the window and then climb out of this hole and be safe, right?
That's how they make it safe.
So this like, culvert, is that the word I'm looking for?
I don't know.
It's just like this hole in the ground next to your house that allows for a window in a basement.
Anyway, frogs would jump in there.
And I'm not talking about like a frog or two.
I'm talking about like hundreds of frogs.
And the only way to get them out is to drop the nine-year-old, which was me, into the hole with the frog.
And it's like the snakes on Indiana Jones.
And they're like climbing over each other and just this mess of slime.
And I had to pull them all out.
So that was one of my jobs.
That explains why you hate frogs, just like my mom.
Yes.
You two could bond over that.
Yes.
Later on, we figured out you could put a lid on the little hole.
and then the frogs wouldn't jump in.
But that took a long time
because sometimes problems creep up on you slowly over time.
You don't realize it's a problem
that you could just easily fix it,
which is what we're talking about today about real estate
because problems creep up slowly.
Like that transition?
So, thank you.
Let's get into your story
and talk about the properties you buy,
the real estate that you do.
So biology teacher, Mr. Wooten.
Is that what they call you?
Yeah.
They call me Wooten.
Some of my Hispanic kids say,
Mr.
Okay, Mr.
Okay.
All right.
I was going to call you Wooten.
Mr. Wooten, tell us about yourself.
How did you get into real estate investing from being a biology teacher?
So it started before biology, before I taught biology.
I was working at Starbucks, actually, way back when I was 17, 18 years old.
And I would sit there and I would hear people talk about real estate.
I'd have a lot of people come in and talk about real estate.
So it started piquing my interest.
And then I had a buddy.
He went and bought two houses.
is and I was like, well, how can I do this?
I'm 18 years old.
And the first thing he said was build your credit.
I didn't love that answer, but that's the next three years of my life.
Like three, four years just build my credit because if you don't have credit,
no one's going to lend to you.
So it was the first thing I learned.
So fast forward a few years, I discovered you guys on my way to my first real job.
I was working at a bank, BB&T as a teller.
And on my way to work, it was about 30 minutes.
I would listen to Bigger Pockets religiously.
and I got to the point to where I was like,
I know that this is an investment vehicle of some sort.
I know people make money in it.
So I'm just going to try to figure it out.
And I probably listened to episode 50 up to episode 200.
I contacted Devin McClish.
He was on episode 170 something.
I contacted, I think one of the guys you're working with in Maine or Maryland.
Yeah.
And I mean, like Ryan Murdoch maybe.
I don't know.
Yep.
He ran me through some numbers too.
I've talked to him.
And I just started calling all these people.
just picking their brain about, you know, how they got into it.
So I was listening to all these podcasts and I was making maybe $12 an hour.
And I, you know, just started listening to it.
And it got me interested.
And then I would go back to Starbucks at night and I would sit down and watch your videos.
And I would work it out.
And you'd say, all right, take 30 minutes, go find a deal and practice a deal every day.
And I would practice on my computer, see if it made sense.
And one thing led to another.
And I started talking to people about actually getting deals.
Yeah, let's go into the first deal then.
I mean, first of all, did you decide you, obviously, you're in Chattanooga at this point?
I mean, you're there now, but are you still, were you there then?
Yeah, all this started in Chattanooga.
Okay, I love Chattanooga.
But so you decided to invest there.
What was the first property like that?
You started practicing, started running the numbers.
I'd get the first deal.
So a few things I started doing, I would go to the MLS and I would try to find deals.
I would go walk around the houses, even though I knew I couldn't even buy them at that point,
just to kind of dip my feet in.
And my wife, my now wife, she was babysitting for somebody who had a few rental properties.
And I had met with them before, just kind of asked them about it.
But I went and talked to him a little bit later on.
I said, are you still into rentals?
He said, yeah, you're still looking for some.
I said, absolutely.
He said he has 10 units, a 4 unit and a 6 unit right beside of each other.
And if I wanted to, we could work out a deal to where we'll owner finance them.
It won't cost me that much out of my pocket.
And that way it will let me get started.
and 10 units to start out scared that scared me pretty bad.
Yeah.
So he said, go drive by them and see what you think.
I go, I drive by them and they're rough.
I mean, there's nothing like too pretty about them when I first get there.
But I told, he showed me an eviction, what it looks like.
We walked into one house, and, I mean, you could tell someone was mad.
They had holes all up in the wall.
There was furniture thrown everywhere.
And he said, this is what it is.
Sometimes if someone gets evicted, they get mad.
Sometimes they'll just leave it.
And sometimes they'll clean it up and be.
cool about it. And I told him, I was like, I'm in. So I ran my numbers and after everything,
I was going to be making 800 a month, like plugging it in on the calculators. And I thought to
myself, that that'll do it. If I can take $800 a month and somehow save that over the course of a
year and start to snowball it, and that's what I would do. So that was my first deal. So we did
an owner finance and I managed them for a year and a half. I would give him a check at the
beginning of every month for how much he required,
which he needed 7% of the number,
7% on a 30-year loan is what we agreed to.
And once we decided those numbers,
I would just go and write him a check for that.
I would go and pay the utilities.
I pay their utilities.
And the rest was my profit.
Oh, the first five months,
that was what he wanted for me.
He wanted to see that I had skin in the game.
So he just said,
give me $1,000 a month for the first five months.
I was like, okay.
So every profit I had, I just gave it right back to him.
Interesting. So you, so that was almost like your down payment was the first, the first, what, five months you said?
Yeah, to him. Yeah, you just gave them their profit. That was like your down payments. Now you had something to lose. That's interesting. I, I did something like similar. My very first apartment I bought, I did seller financing and I didn't have the money for it. So they let me like lease optionate like master lease option, which is where I rented it from them basically paid them the rent that they wanted. Yeah, the same thing. And then I didn't actually buy it. So at this point for you, did you own the property legally or was it, it was still in their name. You were basically doing what I did. Like you're renting to own it almost.
Exactly. So for a year and a half, I'm making payments to this dude. It was really nice because anytime I had a problem, I could call him because he doesn't want his properties to go under or fall apart either in the event that I foreclosed and stop paying him.
Yep. So I'd say, hey, I've got somebody won't open their door. They moved out. And he said, and I'm like, hey, he don't have a key. We'll go kick it in. Okay. So I'll figure that out. And then, hey, I've got an eviction to do. Have you ever like, what do I need to do? He said, meet me at court on Wednesday.
I was like, okay. So everything felt trial by fire. But anytime I had an issue, I would call
him, he was a really good mentor to have through this whole transition process. Yeah, this is,
this is such a neat topic because, I mean, one, how shockingly similar it is to mine, because I
worked at a bank and my wife worked at Starbucks, actually, but so I worked at a bank and then I bought
this 24 unit from the same sort of situation. I bought it on that kind of lease optiony thing for
a while until I had enough money saved up from the cash flow to be able to use that as my down
payment essentially. But more importantly, it was the mentorship of that person. Because here's
what's so cool about the strategy. Now, some people listen to this might go, well, I, you know,
why would somebody do that to you? Like, why would they work with you on that like that? Like,
that sounds like a lot of work for them. It's because like they don't, like you said,
they don't want the property back. They don't want to just sell it to you, right? And then
seller finance it. They want monthly passive income forever. So it's in their best interest to
train you over time to be good at this so that they don't ever get the property back.
I love that idea. And it's low risk for them. They don't have to go through a foreclosure
if it didn't work out the first few months because you just hand the keys back to them and be like,
well, it didn't work. And you know, exactly. They say, bye-ba. Yep. That's a cool way.
It's very similar to how businesses work. When a business is sold from one person to the next and
it's somewhat big, the new buyer makes some of the old people stay on for a period of time to
help them get the thing off the ground. And it's a great strategy. It's why business is why
is using it. It works with real estate.
Just the same. Wait, David, David, are you saying that real estate is like business?
Oddly enough. It sounds that way.
This is especially true with multifamily, right? Because multifamily is especially made for like a
bit and people treated it that way more often, like treated real estate the way that you would,
if you were to go buy McDonald's, like, that's basically what you're doing here.
So you could go and work at the McDonald's for a while as a general manager to learn how to do a
good job at it. Wouldn't that make sense? That's exactly right.
Instead of, let me just buy a McDonald's. Tell me everything that there is to
know about running a McDonald's.
And I expect that I can walk in there on day one and do it super good.
And if I can't, well, then real estate's a scam.
Yeah.
Oh, gosh.
Tyler, or John, sorry.
I'm sure you've heard that yourself.
Oh, yeah.
One of the things that I've noticed is like, if I go and explain to my parent, like I told
my parents, I was like, this is what I'm doing.
I'm buying this 10 unit.
I'm going to manage it for a year and a half.
And they said, why are you doing that?
Why would they sell you that?
It sounds like, that's what they said.
It sounds like a scam.
It doesn't like, why would you?
And they're like, you're not going to own it.
But I think.
What I've come to learn, and I guess this is, I used to think that nobody would ever tell somebody
their secrets in real estate because you would just feed your competition. That's what I used to
think. And now, the more you get into it, there's so much property for everybody that they want
to, in a weird way, give back. Yeah. Train you right. You do have some people who don't.
Yeah, by and large, most people I've ever met, like especially older investors, they like,
because they're kids and their grandkids and their nephews and nieces, they don't care anything about real estate.
So you show up to one of those people and like you're interested in what they're doing and you're excited and you're passionate.
Like they almost everyone I've ever known will want to pour into you.
So people complain, I'm young.
I can't invest because I, you know, like why would somebody take me seriously?
I'm young.
I'm 20 years old, 22, 25.
That's your greatest asset.
Go use that.
Like that's what you have.
Like, yeah.
I would kill for somebody to come up to me.
He's like 22, 23 and say, hey, can I manage your property?
Exactly. Yeah, I'll pay you.
Please.
Yeah, uh, a hundred percent.
Yeah, I think when I, when I started, uh, I had Kyle was like this, his name is Kyle and he
was like my mentor, but it wasn't like an official thing.
It was like we became friends and I started managing, well, quote unquote, managing his
properties.
He didn't want to deal with the problems anymore.
So I did all his maintenance, all his work for him.
I'd turn over his units for him.
I'd show units when he didn't want to show him.
And like, I took all that work off his plate and he paid me.
I hope he's not listening to this, but he paid me almost nothing.
Like, but who cares?
I mean, looking back now, it took me actually way too long.
I got so much experience and it was, I had no risk.
Zero risk because it was his property.
So if I didn't get it rented and I did, I did a really good job.
And so later, like, he's helped me a ton now.
He's like lent money and we've been good friends since then.
But like from both sides of that equation, it was an awesome relationship.
So John, how did you find the guy?
You might have mentioned that.
I might have missed it.
But how did you find that guy that you bought that from?
The 10 units?
Yeah.
Yeah.
So it was my wife.
She was babysitting for this lawyer.
in town. And I know, and his lawyer and the guy who I bought it from are partners.
Okay. So I had been talking to the lawyer. Anything the lawyer says to me, I jot it down.
It's gold. And his partner owns an insurance company here in town. And his partner's the one who I
mostly dealt with. The lawyer, you know, he kind of stays out of the real estate management side
of things. But, you know, it's so funny about that. I just said how similar we were. I got to have
a bank job. My, Kyle, my guy, his partner was a lawyer. And he was a lawyer. And he was a
like my like lawyer guy. It's like exactly the same. I'm pretty sure like you and I just have
identical stories. You just need a longer beard. We're on the same wavelength. And then Devin
McClish is a, uh, that's what got him. That guy who was a lawyer, he managed some Home Depot.
But yeah, lawyers, lawyers seem to get into it. Yeah. Crazy. Awesome man. All right. So you bought the 12,
the 10, you 10 units there managing yourself. What did you have? I go, what did you learn? I want
from that experience. In other words, like as you're going into that, was it harder than you thought
to manage all these tenants going from zero to, I mean, going from zero to ten is pretty awesome,
I'll say. Some might say crazy. But what was that like? What did you learn? What was easier than you
thought? What was harder than you thought? Terrifying. It was absolutely terrifying. Because it's easy now
when you look back at it. You go, oh, you just get another tenant. Oh, you just do this.
Back then, if I had a tenant call me, you know, nine, ten o'clock at night and they say,
hey, my toilet's not working, this, that, and the third. Well, they just moved in two weeks ago.
that's doing this, they're going to bail on me. I'm going to have, I'm going to lose $500 this whole month.
And it never, you kind of think yourself into a storm. And the thing that I learned is that if there's a
problem, there's a solution. And it's never as bad as you think it is. I've had waterline breaks.
I've had heaters go out. I've broken windows, doors, cops. I've had somebody die at my properties once.
I didn't know that person, but there's always something that gets handled. And it's never quite as
crazy is whenever you know when your mind makes it that's one of those clips i'm going to take and throw
my instagram later of you saying that because that's so good like i want everyone to listen to that like
there are yeah there are problems like they do come up but they're never as bad as you think
you talk yourself into this drama you think it's gonna be much worse and oh you don't want to
manage properties like you know uncle this uncle john had properties and he lost everything like
everyone's got like the story and so you get scared going into real estate it's terrifying but then
there's an answer to everything i mean every single thing
I can relate this going back to biology.
Your prefrontal cortex is going to allow you to see things in the future.
We're just so good at it that we make it worse than it is.
And the minute that you can just kind of shut that off and there's a reason that you don't
hear that many people going out of business with real estate.
And you hear a lot of wealthy people who are in real estate.
That's such a good point.
Yeah.
What do they say 90% of businesses fail within the first five years?
I've never heard that quote about real estate.
I'm not heard of me say like, yeah, 90% of all people who buy rental properties lose their
property than the first five years. Like, that's not a thing, you know? But it also, you rarely hear about
someone that steps into it in the first year becomes a millionaire. Yep, true. Correct. It's like an
inverse relationship. So I think that's why a lot of people don't get into it because you're, it's a get
rich slow game. You're committing to the long term when you get into real estate investing. A lot of people
don't like it. Another area where I've seen a lot of people that were really good at this start was they were
a CPA or some form of accountants and they were looking at their wealthy clients and seeing they all owned real
estate. That was another light bulb moment, like your guys is lawyer thing. I'm sure Brandon probably
saw this when he was at the bank. You have some wealthy clients come in and if you talk to them,
you find out who owns businesses, what kind of checks they're dropping off and you find out real quick.
Yep. Yeah, very much. Yeah, there were a few people I knew were real estate investors and they were like
they were doing well. Interesting enough, actually, one of the people I was closest to at the bank,
like the customers that I became friends with sort of, he had a golf business. He sold golf supplies
online. And this is before I do anything about internet marketing or working on lot, like people
made money online. And that blew my mind. I would say that is probably what got got me to even start
a blog originally, which led me to start this podcast with Josh back in the day. It's because like,
this guy, his biggest problem was he couldn't pay off his credit card fast enough. Like, because he had
like a $50,000 line on his credit card, but he would buy $50,000 worth of material. And then he would
sell that right away, but he didn't, he couldn't do it fast enough. So his card kept getting maxed out.
And I'm like, and he was coming in like, yeah, it was like such a good problem to happen.
So we had like three cards.
And like I was as a as the guy trying to help him as the banker at the bank, like trying to get him more cards and trying to get him a bigger line of credit.
And I was like, I want those kind of problems.
Like that's the kind of problem.
Like my problem was like my tire and my car blew out on the way to work today.
Like those are the problems that I'm going to say like wealthy people have different types of problems.
Right.
And so I want the kind of problem that says I can't pay my credit card bill fast enough.
because like, you know, I'm making so much money and spending so much on supply.
That's like, oh, that was so cool.
And I remember just thinking at time, like, how amazing that was.
Now, I never got into necessarily like the internet e-commerce business, but just, just entrepreneurship and business in general.
Yeah, you learn a lot from those kind of people.
It's a revelation in a very strange way.
And like, could you find out, you'll talk to people and they say, hey, I make X amount of, X amount of dollars or whatever salary.
And then you might talk to somebody who they've never had any bit of vegetables.
education or and you might just, you know, you can tell about talking to somebody, but then they might
own a multi-million dollar, a multi-million dollar business and that's how they did it.
Yeah, one of the actually things that always encourages me. And I don't want this to sound mean,
but it probably will come out that way, is I know a lot of people in my life, even before I got into
real estate who yes, were not that intelligent. I mean, like my friend Kyle, he's super smart.
He's a pilot and was like wicked smart. But then there were other guys that I know, even today,
like, and I'm just like, you're like a few, what? What's the,
like a few crans short of a craelobox or whatever.
But they own like $6 million of real estate.
And it's always like just reassuring them.
And we're like, okay.
Like you don't have to be the top 5% or the top 1% of intelligence to figure this stuff out.
You just have to not give up on that period.
Yeah, that's so good.
So what you did not give up then, I'm assuming?
So after the 10 unit, what happened?
So before I even closed on the 10 unit, so we have this time frame of between, we'll say now and 18 months,
probably around the 13, 14 month mark, I meet another guy. I'm working at FedEx at this point,
and I'm managing the properties, and I meet this other guy who I saw his phone number on a rental
property outside of a house. I said, okay, well, I'm going to talk to him and start putting another
one in the pipeline, as it were. And I ended up buying a house from him for $65,000 before I closed
on the 10 unit. So not three months later, I go and close on the 10 units after buying this whole
65,000. And that $65,000 house doesn't make me but $80 a month right now.
Sure. The guy's been in it for years. He's actually my handyman, but I don't go up on his rent and I leave it there and it just does its thing. But that was my first official one. And then three months later, I closed on the 10.
Okay. So tell me about this. You saw a four rent sign and you called it. Is that what you said? Oh yeah. So that's such a cool strategy.
I have if I see, and I tell my friends this, because I have friends in Charlotte, North Carolina right now and they ask,
me like, what about, what about this? What about this? And all I keep telling them, I say,
go make phone calls. Just tell them you want to pick their brain, tell them you, you want to ask
them how you can get started, this, that, and the third. And at the end of your conversation,
just ask them, do you have anything, any problem properties that you want to get rid of, any headaches?
And you might not find anybody, but I'd say probably three out of ten times you're going to
find somebody who wants to sell something. And then they know the game. They know how much it's worth.
They know that you need to make your money on it.
So they're not ridiculous with it.
But yeah, that's how I called him and I started asking him,
just like I'm talking to you now about real estate as much as I could get,
like filter feeding as much.
So, yeah, I would call a phone number.
Anytime I see a phone number, I would call it.
That's a good tip.
Yeah, if people did nothing but that, just that one thing
and made that their whole thing for the year, like you will buy property that way.
Every landlord, pretty much every landlord I've ever known has properties that if,
you know, if they were asked and pushed on it, they'd be like,
yeah, I'd probably sell that one. I don't really like that one. Or I've already maximized my return on
that one. Like, have those conversations. In other words, I said this at the beginning of the show when
I tied in a terrible analogy to this, but this is a much better analogy, right? Like, there's frogs
creeping in these holes in these investors' lives. Like, these properties, like, just continually
causes them a headache. And they don't realize it that their, that their hole is getting filled up
with frogs until you're like, hey, do you have any holes with frogs in it that I can go and
jump in and clear out for you? And they're like, as a matter of fact, I do. And then they're like,
you know, let's talk about it.
And like you said, they're not going to be crazy as much as like,
I feel like homeowners are almost sometimes more irritating to work with
because they have these completely unrealistic expectations of what their house is worth.
But, yeah, I've knocked on a few people's doors.
I'll knock on their door and, hey, do you want to sell your house?
Come on in, come on in.
And we'll start talking about their house.
It's a two or three bedroom.
I'll do my numbers and I'll call them and give them my price.
And I've had two people just get mad at me on the phone.
And I'm like, I mean, it has to make money.
I'm sorry, lady.
Like, that's the way it is.
But I don't know.
Dealing with homeowners is different.
Yeah.
You're looking for the homeowner that's in pain, which is why you're calling landlords.
You're looking for the one that's like, I don't want to own this.
This is very intriguing.
What do we have to do?
And when they're not in pain, that's the first sign I have, just don't invest into it.
That's a mistake a lot of newbies make with off-market deals is they take someone who loves
their house, who cherishes it, who wants to show you the hue of paint that they
chose because it fits the accent wall just right.
And they're trying to convince that.
person to sell their house for half of what it's worth. And they get frustrated. They're like,
why, how do I get them to sell me their house for cheap? And the answer is you don't. You just move on
from that person. You go look for the one who doesn't want to own their house and is looking for you.
And that's the one you put the time into. And that's where you really leverage. So is that something
you found? Like, have you noticed in your strategy to acquire new properties that you found a niche where
you can find people that are in pain? Oh, yeah, especially that the type of owner who might have
50 to 150 units is usually the guy I'm trying to talk to.
They always have a $40, $50, $60,000 house they want to get rid of.
It's always within the same area.
I mean, at least what I'm targeting for is in the same area.
I will even ask if I have a house on Berry Street.
And I'm asking, do you have anything near Berry Street?
Because I'm trying to buy up this whole little section of part of my town and not have to
also drive to go collect my rent all the time to you.
And yeah, what you're saying, if you meet somebody and they have all this invested time in their house and it's their baby, they're not going to let it go for what's reasonable.
It's not happening.
I love what you said is you're looking for a bigger investor who's got a lot of properties.
They're busy.
And you're asking them basically like, hey, I see you got a classroom full of 40 students, which one's causing you all the trouble?
I'd love to take them into my class, you know, as a school teacher.
because when they've got two properties, that problem house is still a cherished part of their portfolio.
When they've got 50 to 150 units and this same address is popping up in their inbox, trust me,
I know what that feeling is. I will sell it at a loss just to be done with the problem.
But that's what you want is you want somebody's problem. So that is incredible advice.
Everybody, please take that serious. When you meet that investor who's like, I've got 200 units,
don't think, oh, I'll never be able to talk to them. The next question should be,
Are there any that you don't want anymore that I can take off your hands?
They will always say yes.
Yeah, that's a good tip.
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All right, so what came next?
You bought the, you then, you bought the house, the 65K one.
Yeah, I got the 65K one.
And then I bought two other houses from the same guy, not the lawyer friend.
This is the guy who I called.
I bought two houses at once from him.
I think I paid 90 for total, 90 for those two houses.
One rents for 575 and the other one rents for 650.
So I bought those two.
That was 15% down.
Also, I know as I'm talking, just if you guys are listening, just make sure you find a bank that you're comfortable with because it's weird realizing this, but you think everything's so set in stone, everything's so paper.
You have to do it, have to do it this way.
And you find out that certain banks can work with you.
I pay 15% and everybody told me I'll never get below 20.
I had other banks and they'll go and talk to their loan officer and say, hey, this, wooten guys back again.
what can we do because, like, let's say you want to buy a property and they have to approve
that you can even pay for that loan. Well, now they might have a meeting to people at the bank
and decide on if they want, if they can even bypass their rules to give you that loan.
And if you have a good relationship with them, they'll work with you. So, yeah, I bought those two
and then, yeah, those are working. So what do you have now total? Tell us about your total portfolio.
I have 18 units total. And I've got 11 that I'm purchasing with.
in the next nine months. So I'll have what? Well, what do you mean? You're under contract? Are you doing
the same kind of lease option thing? Or like, what are you doing for those? So these 11 units,
they're under contract. And there's this guy, he almost looks like a biker. He's big, he's bald,
he's tattoos everywhere. Nice as can be. But he owns, I think, three or 400 units out here. And
I bought four units from him about five months ago. And he said, hey, I've got 11 more if you want
I was like, yeah.
So I drive over.
He told me the price.
And they need a little bit of work.
But people, they're rented.
It makes money all day.
So I told them, I'll take it.
He said, we wrote it on a piece of paper.
I, John Wooten, buy this address.
I will buy this address by September 1st, 2021 for no more than this amount.
Here's $1,000 down.
And that's the entire contract.
Wow.
And, yeah, so I take that to my bank.
and we start locking, locking everything in.
And my goal here is to not use any money that I've saved.
I use a little bit, but I'd rather start to use the equity from my previous properties
that will help me pay for this 11 unit.
It'll be the biggest one I've bought so far.
So trying not to dig too deep on my cash.
That's an example Brandon and I often give where when you do well buying the first couple
properties that grows and then those buy you the next wave or the next round.
And then now you've got more cash flow coming in from,
that one that was bought for with the equity from the first ones. So now you can save faster to get
the third, which is why real estate investing goes really well when you take time. Like for sure,
it's something you have to, do you want to comment on that? Yeah, I do. The first two,
the first year to three years, it's, it's going to be slow. I mean, I know that I in a weird way
was lucky, but just like what you got to say, everybody's lucky in their own right. And
that first 10, I was like, any money I take is going to go straight into the next property. In
money that I make from my other houses are going to go straight into the next property.
And so your first couple of years, you might make a couple single families or, you know,
quad, you make 500 a month, maybe a thousand a month, maybe only 250 on your first house.
But if you just stick with it and keep following the process, it gets easier and easier.
So you're one, you might make 250 a month.
Your two, you might buy three or four houses.
And now you're at 1,000 a month with everything.
year three, you got tired of waiting and buying just two or three at a time and you might buy 10
at a time. And who knows, by year three, four, or five, you're going to be making $10, $15,000 a
month just by snowballing that process. And to compound that, I found when you're buying single
family houses, which is where the majority of people get their start, they don't crush it with
cash flow. And I'm going to ask you in a minute why you feel single family houses don't,
like what expenses come up there. But they don't. However, they're much easier, in my opinion,
and to build equity with.
You can get fixer uppers.
You can make them nicer.
Now they're worth more.
So really the best strategy I found
for pushing your way into the market
and building cash flow
is to start with some fixer up or single families.
Use the Burr method to kind of keep the capital going
and build your equity.
Then exchange that equity into something
that will cash flow better.
That's 100 times better than just saving your money
and going right after the cash flow
because it takes so long to buy those bigger properties.
Is that similar to what you found?
I saw you smile.
Oh, yeah.
Because there's a game called Plants versus
zombies. Have you ever heard of it?
So the whole point of the game, you want to get as many sunflowers as you can so that you can start
generating because the sun the sun points basically give you more weapon replants.
I know I'm going off on a tangent.
No, trust me.
There's a lot of first responders out there working three AM shifts that are very familiar.
They're thriving with your example.
Well, like my whole thing is I'm just going to play life like a video game.
And if I can keep saving up my sunflowers, I can go eventually.
buy the 11 unit that's going to make me $3,000 whatever dollars a month. But I couldn't do that in the
beginning because, I mean, it just, it sucks. You have to just take it slow in the beginning.
But then you realize that time that you went into it is not that bad. Do you really want to learn
how to solve 30 units worth of problems in a year? I don't think you do. It's a lot. That's a great
point. Yeah. That's such, you have a great perspective on this, John. I love it. And I love the
sunflower method. Sum that up for us again, for everyone that heard,
that so they can walk away seeing how you look at it.
So the sunflower method is what we'll call it.
You're going to write a book called the sunflower method now.
You heard it here first, folks.
The sunflower method, plants versus zombies, imagine zombies are coming into your, no, I'm
going to ruin it.
Sunflower method just save up a bunch of sunflowers so they're always producing for you.
You always want to have something producing for you.
The zombies in this example would be the things you're tempted to spend money on that's not
real estate.
Yeah, I want to steal your wealth.
Yeah, exactly.
I want a car and that's going to be $300 a month.
That's the zombie coming up.
Well, instead of just taking the $300 a month I got from a promotion,
why not take that money buy a house that makes me 300 a month for the rest of my life,
also pays down a loan, also allows me to dip into the equity of the home and then do the same
things with it.
That's exactly right.
And let those weaponry plans that you said attack debt, which would be zombies to now,
they're making money for you so you're not just working.
I think that's brilliant.
So let's stay on this theme.
When it comes to owning, like usually smaller properties, what do you find are the zombies
that will attack your profit with real estate investing when you're kind of dealing with like
the single family or two to four unit space?
It's always the tiny things.
It's a sink.
It's a bathroom device, like it or a bathtub device.
It's the, what do you get?
The spicket on the actual shower might go out.
And those are things, if you don't grow up and see them all the time, those are the
ones that will surprise you because you might go one month and spend $100, just a little $100 on
your plumber to come out there and for him to fix whatever's on the back of your commode.
And then the next month comes, tenant says, hey, I've got an issue.
My sink's leaking.
You spend another $100.
So then you either start deciding, okay, what's worth my time?
Do I need to go out there and learn how to fix a sink?
Or do I need to go out there and learn how to fix a toilet?
I'm going to go fix the sink and then have somebody else do that.
but it's always eating into, it's always there.
You almost have to plan for it,
but there's always going to be a problem
that's within the properties themselves.
So when it comes to that spigot,
in your experience,
what would you say those spigots typically costs
for just the part?
Oh, just something like that.
I mean, that just the part,
you're looking at $50 to $60 on a cheap one,
just getting that piece out there.
And then when you got to call a plumber out there
to go install it,
now what's your total bill usually going to be?
If you don't know them,
You're looking at $200.
If you do know him, he might be out there and charge you $50.
So you're $100 to $250.
Well, if the part's $50 plus the $250, you got to pay for the plumber.
Now you're at $300 for a $50 part.
And there goes your entire month.
That's exactly right.
And tenants never think of it when they call in to complain about something.
What they see is, I'm paying $900 a month.
He can afford $50 for this part.
They don't realize out of that $900, only $100 of it was cash flow.
You just spent $250 on that part.
You just lost three months of cash flow from that one unit because of that one.
call. So yeah, and that's the part that might that might bother somebody who's new. Like let's say you
go buy your first property four months in. You're like, hey, I finally saved a little bit of money.
Something like that happens. Well, now you start to get in that mentality of, oh, no, might give up.
Maybe this isn't worth it. But in reality, once you have five or six units, those start to offset
maybe offset each other. But I want to make sure nobody gives up just from. No, no, no, no. But there is a way
that you've, what I was getting at is it's usually the labor that costs more than the part.
Oh yeah. And we just look at the bill, 300 bucks to fix that thing. But there's a way that,
I mean, you really can't get the part a lot cheaper. Maybe if you design some way to import it
directly from China, you can save yourself $9 or something. But you can go after the labor. And I wanted
to hear from your experience running a tight ship like you do. What are some strategies you put together
so that you don't have to call a licensed plumber every single time and spend $300 for that spiget?
So some of the things, what I first started doing is I tried to, if I can, I'm going to learn how to fix it.
One, because it's a, it's a game.
You have to want to some reason to solve a problem if you don't.
But anyway, I want to first, can I fix it?
And then two, if I can't, can I get somebody who does it regularly for me at a better price?
Like getting a good handyman or along those lines, but I still replace my windows.
I will go out.
I'll find the things that someone might.
cost or might charge me a lot of money to do for a door jam. Like I've said, I've kicked in a few
doors and I know it cost me $130 for my guy part and him to go out and fix that door.
I know he can go to Lowe's right now and get the whole thing done for $25. I'll go pick it up.
I'll tear it out with my hammer. I'll tap it in. Now, obviously, there are some problems that
I don't want to tackle because they start to get too complex or they start to get a different
level of skill. So that's where you want to have a good handyman who you've developed a relationship
with. Maybe you've talked to a few different people. You've looked online. You've tested a few out.
I've had a lot of bad handyman too. Okay. What are some advice that you have for listeners for what
you can do to find the right handyman? Oh, Facebook's great. Asking around is great. Honestly,
going into lows, I will find people all the time. Like this happened with my outlets. I was going
to pick up about 15 outlets the other day for one of the units. I wanted to replace all of this
unit. And I saw one guy. He had some electrical boots on and he was sitting there looking at some of
the outlets. And I said, hey, are you an electrician? He said, yeah, I am. And I started talking to him.
I got his phone number. And then he ended up, I talked to him. And we made a deal. He went out and
replaced all the outlets for me for the $100 for the entire unit. So just always asking around,
to always trying to find that relationship.
So you're sort of lead generating for handyman, so to speak.
Yeah.
Yeah, which is brilliant because that's your biggest expense when you're owning these properties.
That's what crushes you.
Brandon, what have you found?
You've got a similar size portfolio of smaller units or a large portfolio of similar type
properties.
When it comes to this whole question of like, how much does it really cost to manage them?
What's been in your experience?
Yeah, it's expensive.
This is my problem with a lot of turnkey companies.
Like, there are some good turnkey companies out there.
But the biggest problem I have with like the companies that are,
and for those who don't know what turnkey is,
they're companies that will sell you a completely fixed up property with a tenant in place.
They'll manage it for you.
And they claim you're going to make all this money from owning this rental.
And sometimes they're right.
Sometimes there are, again, there are good companies out there.
I don't want to say it's not.
But a lot of the company that have looked at their numbers,
they're like, oh, yeah, we already fixed the property.
You won't have any repairs.
And I'm like, oh, yes, you will.
And like, you're not going to have to replace anything for like, for 10 years.
I'm like, no, you will.
You have to always be replacing things.
you're always fixing things.
You're always...
So a couple points on this.
One, I got a new book coming out next year.
It's on multifamily.
I wrote it with Brian Murray.
And we talk about a lot in this book.
There's a thing called like fake cash flow
and then there's pure cash flow.
Just like there's like gold and then pure gold.
Purified gold has gone through the fire.
It's gone through a tremendous amount of like fire
to release all the impurities.
And what you're left with is purified gold.
The same thing is true with pure cash flow is like,
this is your actual cash flow.
Like not your lying cash flow,
not your fake cash flow,
not your optimistic cash flow of what we all think. It's like, this has gone through the fire.
So my encouragement to people is when they're running their numbers, don't do what some turnkey
providers do and just like, oh yeah, you won't, you'll never have repairs. You want to fix things
ever. Like I assume, and again, this completely depends on the age of the property, the condition of
the property, the area you live in. But I typically assume between five and 10% of whatever money I
collect is going to go out in repairs. And another five or 10% I'm going to set aside for future
replacements, which is what we call a cap X. So if it's an older house,
I might set aside a total of 20% every month just for those two things, repairs and cap X.
And if it's a newer house, I might go more like 10% total.
But don't kid yourself anybody and think that you're going to get away with not having repairs ever.
You might get lucky.
I have a property of five unit that I think I've had three calls on in the last seven years.
The house was built, this fiveplex was built in 1870 or something like that.
Everything about that property says it should have a lot of problems.
It just doesn't.
I don't know why.
It's just been well taken care over the years.
but I have like a new house built in the 70s
that I have a problem every single month
there's something breaking on it.
So you just never know
but if it's across your portfolio
I just know that I'm going to lose
between 10 and 20% to repairs and KepX.
Oh 100%.
And then you can even on
when I look at my Excel spreadsheet
and I'm plugging things in,
I don't even collect.
If I'm at 100% occupancy,
I still don't collect 100% of that money.
You might catch somebody
who's missing 20 bucks one month
and are you going to kick somebody out
over 20 bucks?
It keeps happening.
You have to discipline, but you don't want to kill, you don't want to kick somebody out over $20.
And then what you're saying, and it goes back to the videos you used to put on YouTube, how to analyze a deal.
Yeah.
You do have to factor that in because one house I bought, I had a roof, my first year, the roof had to be replaced.
It cost me $10,000.
Yep.
Like that.
And it, you do want to have that implemented in or you're not, if a, if you're renting $700 a month or if you're charging $700 a month or if you're charging $700.
month and let's say your total expenses are 400. Your total expenses are more like 500.
Like just go ahead and assume that there's something you can't see that's going to happen.
Yeah. And even if you go, you might go six months without anything and then you get hit
with something big that's six months worth. And so it all averages out. That's what I was going to say.
It all comes in waves. I didn't have an eviction for a year, the past year, didn't have an eviction.
Not nowhere. Had three. Yeah. Yeah. It happens. And so if you don't assume for those things,
If you're not calculating pure cash flow, if you're trying to do fake cash flow, which is like mortgage, you know, rent minus mortgage, it's just, it's not going to work out. You got to get it through the fire. It's actually one of the reasons why I chose mobile home parks. Not that they're the end-all, B-L, there's other asset classes too that avoid repairs, but all the mobile home parks that I buy, the tenant owns their own home. And the reason I went for more than every, probably more than every other feature about mobile home parks, the reason I chose them is because tenants own their own home, which means I don't have that nitpicking.
repair cost every single month.
That just drove me nuts.
And I was like, how do I avoid that?
Well, like self-storage, mobile home parks, like land.
Those kind of avoid the repair stuff.
And now there's other things that we have to fix and repair.
And there's a lot of things I didn't expect.
I'm not saying there are no expenses with mobile home parks.
There's a ton of them.
But anyway, that's why I built whole open door capital, like my whole fund is because
I'm like, I just got tired of dealing with the nitpicking of little repairs.
I heard so many people switching into self-storage.
that's been incredible.
What breaks in self-storage?
You don't have any,
you don't have no toilets.
Concrete and metal.
Yep.
Concrete and metal.
It's an amazing thing.
All right.
So we talked about,
you know,
you got the handyman stuff.
You're still doing some of the work yourself.
It's the plan eventually.
Are you trying to like,
are you desperately trying to get out of your job?
You're like,
I got to quit this teaching thing as soon as possible.
So I got to build my cash flow.
I mean,
could you leave?
Do you make, like,
could you leave soon with the cash flow
you're getting in right now?
Like,
where are you at with that?
And then what's your mentality?
behind quitting your job and financial freedom?
So financial freedom, I hit financial freedom technically, I guess a year ago.
Like I could quit my job right now and be fine.
But I, after going through COVID and everything just sitting there for five months,
I'm good.
I don't ever want to retire, I think.
I like what I do.
I like having something that's not just real estate on the side.
Now, I still like doing real estate.
And I've noticed if anything, I want to hire somebody to start managing.
managing my real estate so that I can specialize and just keep buying it.
So if I can set up a system to where somebody manages my 18 units and then it manages my 29
units, I can keep buying 10, 11 units every couple of months or whatever, every couple of years,
whatever it may be, and I can still do whatever job I like on the side.
Like teaching for me is fun.
I get along with people.
Yeah, so I don't really have an exit strategy for teaching, but it also wouldn't be,
it wouldn't be the end of the world if somebody walked up to me and was like,
John, you're fired. Oh, okay. So you have a good day. That's the way at FedEx, it got me, man.
There was one day I walked in and I had, I was used to doing about 60, 70 stops and I had to
drive about 250 miles total for the day. And my boss told me that somebody called out and I was going
to have to do 100 plus stops, drive maybe 300, whatever miles that way. I had a rough day.
And he said, what are you going to do? Because I just, I sat down. I was like, man, I'm going to quit.
He said, what are you going to do? He didn't care if I quit.
So I still needed to make a paycheck.
And I decided right there, I was like, I'm not having anybody have their thumb on me ever again.
Because that moment of, it feels like they got you.
You know, your boss has you.
And that freedom of not having, like I still respect my boss.
I love my boss now.
But as far as someone coming in trying to threaten me over a job, I see you.
I don't have time for it.
That point is so, like, resonate so strong in my soul.
Because when I talk about financial freedom, I'm not talking about sitting on a beach
like drinking margaritas all day
like even though yes I live in Maui
but like that's not what I mean like
because I still want to work for the rest of my life
I love work and I love building being creative
it's gross yeah it's growth we love that stuff right
it's I don't want anyone having their thumb on me
saying I have to do this or else like
that that trap kills me
like it just kills me yeah
so yeah the freedom to be able to do stuff
is more important than the freedom itself for me
and it sounds like you
so that was the first step I noticed
I noticed that there was a freedom in that
And then what you're talking about, I can take my wife on dinners now a little bit more than I used to.
My son, I have a brand new son. He's five months old. And I pay for childcare with, thank you.
I pay for child care with rental property. And I mean, it's, it's a blessing for sure. So I've been anyway.
Well, you said something that sort of illuminated this like, it brought a lot of clarity into my mind about entrepreneurship or working for someone else.
When you were saying, if I could find someone to manage my properties, I could go on to grow more.
I realize that you are highlighting what every entrepreneur, which every business owner does,
is they're constantly solving a new problem.
That's all that business is.
Here's a problem.
Can you figure out how to solve it?
Sometimes it's leverage.
Sometimes it's a system.
Sometimes it's knowledge.
All the stuff Brandon and I are talking about are just tools we used to solve problems.
That's what you sign up for when you become an entrepreneur.
The opposite end of that is working for someone else driving their truck.
And you become the solution for someone else's problem.
Hey, someone called in sick.
It's your problem.
you're now doubling the work you're going to do. There's nothing you can do about it because you're
the solution for my problem. So what the people who want to get into real estate investing have
to understand is that while you are getting away from someone telling you what to do,
you are voluntarily walking into a lot of problems that you have to solve. And if you bring the
mentality of, I want all the security that comes from having a job where I'm solving someone else's
problem and you also want all the freedom, you're going to be disappointed. You have to understand.
both sides have merits in their own way, and you have to pick the road that's best for what you
want your life to look like. Brandon does not mind solving problems. He doesn't like a thumb on him.
John, it sounds like you're the same way. It's what you guys have done really well.
For the people that are listening, they can't get going, or they constantly say, well, what about this?
Well, what about that? And that's the reason to not start. That's just indicative of a mindset
that comes from a W-2 job where you're not the person that has to solve the problem.
You are someone else's solution. So, like, if what about this is stopping you,
you, that's what you need to let go of. You have chosen to walk into a scenario where what about
this is your job? And it is so hard. Like on the other end of that, it's so hard when you don't have
rental property and you don't see the numbers and you just hear about people doing it and you're,
you know, let's say you need to save up $10,000 to buy a house. In your head, it seems hard.
I was, I get it. I was there not a year or two ago. Like it seems impossible to just get to that
barrier. But once you do, it's almost, I don't know, it's a very clear feeling what happens is,
and you let go of fear. I think people, when they say that, what about this? What about that?
I think that's the fear because I can go through my phone right now and show you the messages from,
I keep bringing him up, Devin McClish. I was messaging him. I said, what about this? What about this?
This is not going to work. Direct mail is not going to work. He says, is working for me. Why isn't
not going to work for you? Can you not invest $2,500? Do you not have $25? I was like, yeah. And he goes,
okay, invest it. And then I still wouldn't because I was afraid it didn't work. But, I mean,
that's what it really boils down to is, you've won anybody who's out there who wants to jump in,
you do have to in a weird way let go of that fear. And I know it's hard. But once you do,
the results are incredible, permitted it's done right. And I mean, you can listen to anything.
Brandon and David have anything on YouTube. You can find any problem you have,
you can find a solution to it. And it's not so scary. Yeah. I've told the story before,
but I'll say it again real quick now is like that's how I found bigger pockets originally
is I had told my parents that I was not going to go to law school.
I was going to go and buy rental properties instead and go be a real estate guy.
And they were like, are you crazy?
Like what are you doing?
My dad, I remember my dad saying, well, what are you going to do if tenants don't pay rent?
You won't be able to pay the mortgage.
You'll end up like, you know, living under a bridge.
Like, you know, you can't pay the whole mortgage yourself.
You're a makeup.
Yeah.
And I was like, you're right.
I can't pay a $2,000 a month mortgage.
I don't know.
I mean, my job, I'm making $9 an hour.
What am I going to do?
And like, but rather than allowing that fear to dictate my decision, instead I allowed that fear to guide me to asking the better question of what do I do if tenants.
I typed into Google what to do if tenants don't pay rent.
And I found an article on a little tiny forum at the time.
It was just a forum called Bigger Pockets and, you know, weird name and didn't know what it was about.
And like the article was about what to do and tenants don't pay rent.
And it was like, I do this.
And then I send this and then I do this.
And I was like, whoa.
Yeah, there's answers.
Like there's things people do.
And then I jumped into the bigger pockets forums and started like realizing there were
thousands of conversations about like what do I do in this situation?
So if people are listening right now going like they have that fear, well, what if this happens?
What if this happens?
I can almost guarantee you there are hundreds of threads in the bigger pockets forums that
address that specific thing.
You know, like 11 people are like, well, what are you going to do if you get more than 10
properties?
You know, banks won't lend you.
I'm like, come on, everyone figures that out because I have an issue, right?
Or what are you going to do if the banks does know?
What are you going to do if you don't have good credit?
What are you going to do if you don't have enough down payment?
But everything has an answer.
Yep.
And then another thing, just know in the back of your head, if somebody else is doing it,
I mean, I'm doing it.
Brain is doing it.
Dave is doing it.
If somebody else can do it, surely you can do it.
You just follow the process.
You know, that was one of my favorite points in the book, the 10x rule from Grant Cardone.
I read that before we ever had Cardone on the podcast.
Yeah, he was a cool guy.
He had the 10x rule was so good because they made this point in that book.
He said, when somebody is doing something incredible in their life, like amazing.
The natural reaction is to get jealous, like to be jealous of them buying a bunch of real estate.
They just close in a big property.
They just cross the, you know, whatever threshold in their life.
He's like, instead, look at that as if, well, if they could do it, then I can do it.
Like, it's not like they have more time in the day.
They have the same 24 hours we all do.
So if anybody's ever doing anything, it means that you can do that thing as well.
And so we should be looking at other people's success as motivation and encouragement of our own life.
And that's made a huge impact.
I mean, now years later after reading that, it still, I think about that all the time.
And I bet you it changed your perspective to you.
Very much so, very much.
If you embrace that what they did was they said, hey, there's going to be problems and I got to solve them.
If we all take that same attitude, yes, we can do the same thing.
I think that, John, you just made a really, really good point that you naturally, when you walked into this new, well, I got to figure out how to manage this property.
I got a problem.
Hey, can you help me do it?
Yeah, I'll spend the first six months or five months or whatever it is teaching you how to run it.
And then the down payment from the first five months will come from the work that came in from the
rent problem solved like you you were you were brought you were brought into this world understanding
there's a way to solve problems and that's what i'm really doing and when you approach real estate
from that perspective it doesn't feel that hard and it gets fun too yeah oh that's a good point too
if solving problems is fun for you this might be a great thing to get into yeah if not maybe
you like being a biology teacher and don't feel bad about that either that's there's definitely a
role for for everybody true true cool man all right yeah this is awesome i'll i'll be yeah this is awesome i'm
one with a deal deep dive here in a second, but before we do, I'm curious, like,
there are things that our audience can bring value to you?
Anything you're looking for right now?
Anything that would help you out in your business?
Nothing on my end.
I've, I've got not much of a social media presence.
I pretty much just kind of live, living my life, going to collect some money.
Yeah.
And get some more rental properties and try to teach students.
Everything's good on my end.
I guess if anybody's listening and you want to help me, just, I don't know, help yourself,
go out there, listen to some bigger pockets, listen to Tony Robbins.
listen to Tony Robbins, listen to get your mind right.
I don't know.
Just make sure you go after your dreams.
I know that sounds cheesy, but you get one life.
Enjoy it.
That's awesome, man.
Very cool.
Well, with that said, let's move over to the next segment of the show.
It's our deal deep dive.
All right, this is the part of the show where we dive deep into one particular property you've bought
to get the dirty details on it.
So you got something in mind that we can dig into?
I do.
All right.
All right.
Well, I'm going to just throw a bunch of, we're going to throw a bunch of,
We're going to throw a bunch of questions at you.
Number one is, first of all, what kind of property is it and where is it located?
So this is a single family, and it is 200 yards away from my 10 units.
This was when I was saying I was on Berry Street.
Yep, right Chattanooga.
Okay.
How did you find it?
Funny story, how I found it.
I was at Starbucks again.
I guess I don't really do much.
So I went out, I was at Starbucks.
I was hanging out with one of my buddies, and I watched Mercedes back in to another car, a really nice
car backed into this
Honda Civic
and they grinded
the entire side of it
as they backed in
and I saw the guy
who got out
and I have heard of him
and I,
you know,
he's,
after you call so many people
looking for phone numbers
of people in real estate,
you start to get familiar
with names and I've seen his face
before and I've met his uncle
but he'd never met me.
So when he came back out,
like we saw his car,
he asked who,
whose car he hit
and I told him it was one of the workers inside
and he came back out and I was like,
are you,
are you David?
And he goes,
yeah.
And I said,
If you have, I literally just out of nowhere, I was like, do you have any properties you'd be willing to sell?
I've heard your family's names, this, that, and the third.
I know it's weird coming out of left base.
He said, yeah.
He said, take down my phone number.
There's a property.
I've got a few of them.
So he texted me and we found this one, this one we're talking about.
And I bought it for 60.
And that, but that's how I found him.
I watched him back into somebody's car at Starbucks and then, hey, sorry, you did that.
Do you have any houses?
That's really funny.
that's exactly what people do that are good at this though they don't you have to be weird a little bit
you would just embrace it that's what you're doing is you're constantly asking that question of everyone
you meet that's an awesome story all right so now we're going to call that the car accident method
we've got the sunflower method and the car accident the trick one you have to plant the the car
is slightly off so they can back just fill a parking lot up with dummy cards that are parked
correctly make make your own way okay how much was this deal
It's 60,000.
Well, 62 after everything, but yeah, 62.
How'd you negotiate that?
So I have, I'm trying to think, I don't actually think I've negotiated someone on their price down at all.
The entire time I've been buying my house is my home I'm in right now.
I paid $5,000 more than what they were asking.
The market was going crazy.
The rental properties that I've bought from people, they always give me a good deal.
And when I run my numbers, if it makes me my goal number,
then I don't try to talk them down because I feel like one,
they're already giving me a good deal.
Two, are they going to give me more deals in the future
if I'm always trying to chip at them?
So I bought it for 60, didn't really have to negotiate.
That one rents for $750 a month.
Side question for you.
Approximately, how much equity do you have in your whole portfolio right now?
I looked at it, and this was surprised.
Last time I went to the bank and they did all the numbers
and it shows your net worth on one of the papers,
it said $400,000.
And I looked at it and I was like, my goodness, I did not come from a lot.
But whenever you're seeing 400,000 at 28, like if I sold all my property, it was just a really good feeling.
So the point I want to make here is how to have a $400,000 net worth always paying over asking price for every property.
Yeah, for real.
Because you'll, oh, yeah.
Right.
That's how real estate works.
Okay.
All right.
How did you fund this deal?
So that one I saved up 15%.
So on a $60,000 house, I think it was $15.
percent down is about 9, 9,500. Now you have closing costs that are associated with that,
but I try to negotiate out of getting closing cost. So we made the price $2,000 higher and then had
him pay for the closing cost. So that way he got his $60,000 and I got that house.
Also, side note, I do this in my business all the time. At a 4% interest rate or so,
you probably increased your expenses by $8 a month by borrowing another $2,000.
But that $2,000 you saved, how many hours do you think that it takes you to do that?
So in general, when rates are this low, it is so much smarter to pay more for the house and get closing cost covered.
Keep the cash.
You're going to get a much better return on that $2,000 than the 4% that you would have saved on the interest rate or the 3.5, whatever people are paying.
So that's also very smart.
Yeah.
Also, on a side note, I mean, good for people who pay off their college loans.
But if you go through, if there's one thing I learned in college, it's always apply your money to the highest.
interest rate thing. And I'll watch people save up $50,000 and pay off or pay off $50,000 worth of
debt on their college loans, which is incredible, good for them. But those loans are at a four to
five percent interest rate. Why wouldn't you take that $40,000 to $50,000 by a house,
make those payments on the college loans using the house? And then you have an asset that you
never have to get rid of ever. Or house act. They're spending $1,200 on rent. That is a much higher return
if they could have got themselves a property and reduced that from 1,200 to 300.
That $900 was way more than whatever their student loan was.
And that $50,000 was the down payment on a house or two they could have done instead of, yes, that's a great point.
Yeah, just pay down that interest rate, the highest one.
All right? Well, what did you do with the deal then?
You ended up renting an out of must mean, right?
Yeah.
So I actually, I bought that one.
He had it rented out.
The worst part about that one, and if anybody is listening, I had taken a few of those home inspector classes.
and I wanted to start my own business doing home inspection for a little bit,
or at least do it on the side.
So I had a rough idea.
I was going through the house,
okay, looking for the stepping cracks,
don't see any of those,
looking at the window seals,
looking for water intrusion.
Well, my dumb, dumb self didn't go up on top of the roof.
I looked at the roof visually from the road.
I was like, okay, it looks square.
So a couple months later,
tenant texts me, and they're like, hey, my roof's leaking.
So I send my guy out there,
and he climbs up on the roof, and he shows me.
First thing they do is they pull up what's on top of the roof to the porch.
Just rot.
Just rot.
And I was like, oh, my God.
And we ended up costing out as a $10,000 roof on that house.
So even though that was a, that house is a good deal.
$750 a month, I think the mortgage to it's $350-ish a month.
And then taxes and insurance brings that up another $100.
So that house makes $3,000 a month.
And that's now depending on which purification level we're looking at.
but it still made money.
So I'll take it.
But then writing a $10,000 check was no fun either.
So now that house, any time that they give me rent, I'm like, just go back to paying that.
Yeah, that makes sense.
And that's the thing we just talked about about.
You got, like, those little frogs are jumping.
Yeah, the frogs are filling the window hole.
But yes, they inspect.
So what was the outcome?
I mean, like, what was the, like, where are you at today?
What kind of equity do you have?
I still have it.
That house I could sell for, I don't know, 90,000.
thousand dollars right now. It's great. Ten, it's wonderful. She calls me the third of every month.
Says, I got $750 for you. Awesome. It's working. And she does park too many cars in the yard,
so we're working on that. But nothing's perfect. Unless you get someone to run into those cars,
in which case that can leave more deals. So got to kind of wait out. I like where your heads at.
Way to bring that back, David. All right. What lessons did you learn from this deal?
So that one always, if, if you think that you know how to inspect the house, make sure,
that I mean really go through and inspect it.
You don't have to worry as much as you might think you have to,
but still go up on the roof.
Look at the big expenses.
If you see double-layered shingles
or if you go up and you see water up in the ceiling,
definitely check that out.
That's worth an ask from the buyer.
And don't be afraid to ask the buyer.
A lot of people will get too aggressive.
Let's say they found that house for $60,000.
They say, oh, let me get it for $50.
You might start off a little too strong,
But then on the other side of things, like you don't want to scare away your, your seller,
but you also don't want to buy a bad deal.
So always, always, always do your due diligence.
Make sure that the house isn't falling apart.
Make sure the roof's good.
Always go back to your fundamentals.
Make sure the house makes money.
That $750 on a $60,000 house makes money all day.
So make sure it hits your rules.
Yeah.
Do your math homework and do it right.
For real.
And do it to where it's ingrained to where you don't have to think about it.
You know that $100,000.
loans about this a month, a $50,000 a loan is about this a month. Yeah. I always tell people,
like, you may have to analyze 100 properties in your market before you feel comfortable,
like knowing that market really well and like knowing what property is like the cost of these
things are going to be because it takes practice. People expect to like watch. It's like,
Kobe Bryant shot a thousand shots. Like he didn't stop shooting. You still go out. You make your
repetitions and that's why you're the greatest. Yep. Yeah, it's practice, practice, practice.
I don't know why people think real estate's any different, but it's not.
All right, man.
Well, that's awesome.
Good stuff.
Let's have her to the last segment of the show.
It's our famous four.
All right, time for the famous four.
The part of the show where we ask the same four questions every guest every week.
So first question, what is your current favorite real estate related book?
I'm going to go with what everybody says is Robert Kiyosaki.
All right.
Rich dad, poor dad.
Rich dad, poor dad. And maybe, and I haven't heard a lot of people say the reason why it's so good, but in this, it changes your mind. You look at real estate, you look at business, you look at money one way, you look at debt one way. I grew up. We didn't have a ton and my dad always said, get out of debt as fast as you can. Get out of debt. So my whole life, it was I got really good at saving money and I got really good at not getting into debt. And that book, whenever he talks about going into debt, I'm almost,
I'm, I don't know, I'm close to a million dollars in debt now, but that money makes it's,
it makes profit.
So that's a healthy debt.
So seeing that change was huge for me.
And then just seeing him talk about what you would have to do, like little subtle things.
He said he would go run his neighborhood and look at houses for sale.
And I said, okay, if he does that, that's what I need to do.
That's when I was a teenager still.
So that's the best business book, I think, or real estate book so far.
Very cool.
We're a big proponent of mindset.
That's why we pointed out every single time.
Mind sets the soil and the knowledge we give is the seed.
Having all the knowledge in the world doesn't matter if your soil is not ready to receive that.
Okay.
On the topic of books, what's one of your favorite business books?
The best business book you can get is I was thinking about this in the car.
How to Win Friends and Influence People.
It is my Bible.
If you can't talk to people, I mean, there's nothing bad about that.
I know some people are awkward and there's nothing you can do,
but you can always relate to somebody in some way that if you don't get it around your head,
that if people don't like you, they're not going to do business with
you, period. And if you, and that's all business is, is you're reacting and interacting with people
who, in some weird way, you see the same viewpoints on certain things. And that book tells
you exactly how to do it. And it doesn't feel fake or contrived. It really teaches you to actually
listen to the other person to make it authentic. So yeah, great business book. All right. Any hobbies?
Yeah, I've got, I've been doing Spanish now. So my students, a lot of them speak Spanish.
day, 340 days in a row. I haven't missed that. I like shooting. I like going out with my bow,
trying to think basketball and working out and running. I just ran my second half marathon.
I got an hour and 35 minutes for my pace and crushed it. I love it. I don't know about that
marathon, but everything else we might have just become best friends. It's all the stuff.
I like to do. Come on out to Tennessee. Yeah. And I don't think I would mind not paying the California
state income tax. I mean there's all.
lot of Californians that are coming out that way. I'm sorry. I'm sorry how much you have to pay.
Yeah. Yeah, that's great. Brandon and I were just talking about that. We're looking to buy some
property out there in Tennessee exactly for that reason. So if you guys know any great commercial
brokers are people that are willing to help, we're looking. So send it over. I'm going to my
eyes out for commercial brokers. Thank you. All right. Last question for me, what sets apart
successful real estate investors for the most who give up, fail, or never get started?
It's my favorite question because I would like pretend in my head hearing this question.
when I was pulling up to the bank, it'd be 7.30 of the morning, and I would be finishing up
the podcast, listening to you guys talking. Y'all would always, I would always wait to hear
whatever this person had to stay. And I mean, it's nothing gold, but it literally is do not
give up. And every time I heard someone say that, like, if I having a rough day, I couldn't
find a house. I could, like, my boss was giving me a hard time. I didn't think that, like,
it was so far out in the future of having real estate, just know that, I mean, if you don't
give up and you chip away at it, even if it's two minutes a day. You can find two minutes a day,
no matter what, to hone your skill in some way, to learn a new vocabulary word, to learn the
burr method, to do anything, don't give up, you'll hit it one day. So. That's really good, man.
Really good stuff. Thanks. Well, this has been a fascinating conversation. I think there's a ton of
value here, John. You're very good at this in case no one's ever told you to that. You should do it
more often. For people that want to continue the conversation, how can they find out more about you?
I have an Instagram account.
I don't even remember the name of it.
Let me pull it up.
But if you want to look at me,
try to solve any problems on Instagram,
I'll try to post a video of me doing it.
Like if replacing my window,
I'll do a little fast forward and just,
yeah,
I'll do a little construction stuff.
What is my name?
John Wooten, J-O-O-T-E-N-U-U-N-U-U-S-U-S-U-Skore.
You can find me on Instagram there,
and I post funny videos.
I post informative videos,
but that's pretty much it.
If you ever have any questions,
you can reach out to me on the
direct messenger piece. I'll try to help as much as I can in the same way that everybody who I've
gotten in touch with has. So I hope I can give back some knowledge. Cool, man. John Wooten, I'm following
you. Hey, we even, we even chatted via messenger. I didn't even realize that. I told you, man. I've been
keeping up with you for a while. That's awesome, man. Well, thank you very much. This has been
amazing. Appreciate you being here. Go follow John right now on Instagram. And with that said,
David Green. Why don't you get a thought of you? Thank you very much. This is David Green.
Brandon. Thank you. It was our pleasure. This is David Green for John Wutan Klan and Brandon didn't know what was in his DMs, Turner.
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