BiggerPockets Real Estate Podcast - 546: Flipping 30 Houses Per Year All While Keeping Wealth-Building Cash Flow w/ Noah Evans and Jeff Fawson
Episode Date: December 19, 2021Adversity tends to breed ingenuity and genius. More often than not, smart and capable individuals will find a way to use their hardships as fuel to build something better. This is exactly what house ...flipping, wholesaling, and rental property-owning partners Noah Evans and Jeff Fawson did. Noah and Jeff were both following different paths to real estate success, taking on apprenticeships under investors who had already made it big. It wasn’t until Jeff was doing some work on Noah’s house that the two began talking, realizing they had the same type of past conflicts and saw each other’s strengths as their own weaknesses. Now, they’re building a systematized, scaling real estate business, operating in multiple markets, and bringing in not only flipping and wholesaling profits but generational wealth-building cash flow. Noah and Jeff discuss how they research markets for investing, systematizing fix and flips down to a point-by-point checklist, and how to make networking beneficial (instead of a drag). In This Episode We Cover: Using your past struggles to fuel your future success in real estate and life Networking in a way that truly adds value to other investors’ lives Finding a partner who matches your weaknesses and struggles in your strengths How to identify and research a new market for real estate investing The systems and tools that Noah and Jeff use to run their scalable business Paying attention to personal progress, instead of the dollar amount on a deal How ripped BiggerPockets founder Josh Dorkin has become And So Much More! Links from the Show BiggerPockets Talent Search BiggerPockets on Itunes BiggerPockets on Audible BiggerPockets on Twitter BiggerPockets Forums BiggerPockets Youtube Channel BiggerPockets Pro Membership Brandon Turner's Instagram David Greene's Instagram Open Door Capital GoBundance Chasing Freedom Website Click here to check the full show notes: https://www.biggerpockets.com/show546 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Hey everybody, it is David Green here. As you all know, Brandon's stepping away from the show
at the end of the month. Now, we have some great co-host lined up in the new year, and we also want to
take this chance to get to know anyone else out there who's interested in contributing their talent
to the BiggerPockets Podcast Network. If you think that's you, you can make a submission to our system
at BiggerPockets.com slash talent. That's BiggerPockets.com slash talent. You'll see a few questions
and a place to submit a video reel of yourself. Again, that's BiggerPockets.com.
slash talent if you'd like to lend your voice to the growing bigger pockets podcast network.
This is the Bigger Pockets podcast show 546.
Sometimes I feel like adversity is the catalyst or can become your catalyst to becoming successful
in whatever realm it is that you want to go into.
It doesn't have to define you in a negative way, but actually propel you into something great.
What's going on in the morning's Brendan Turner, host of the Bigger Pockets podcast here with my co-host,
Mr. David Green and happy holidays. Merry Christmas. Happy New Year.
Kwanza, Hanukkah, and every other holiday going on right now.
This is the Bigger Pockets podcast, a show where we show people how to use the power of real estate to reach financial freedom faster.
And here with me today, of course, is my co-host, Mr. David Green.
David Green, by the way.
Merry Christmas, too.
Well, I'm not doing bad.
It's Christmas time.
Right?
This is the best time of the year.
It's the most wonderful time.
It is pretty awesome.
Of course, it's a little bittersweet because as we announced a few weeks ago,
this is one of my last episodes for at least a while.
I'm going to take a good sabbatical and go explore the world of hanging out with family and business and such.
So David, you're going to be taking over as host of the Bigger Pockets podcast.
And I'm going to the background for a while.
But I'm not gone forever.
I'm just gone for a while.
I don't know.
I'm going to go have some fun.
Yeah, I look at you like Aslan, right?
Like sometimes he has to leave and go do other things, but he always comes back when you need him.
And your beard is like a main.
It fits.
Speaking of, you can never stay away from the Bigger Pockets podcast forever.
And to illustrate that, at the very end of today's show, for like eight seconds,
we have a guest coming into the show that many of you know.
So you got to stay to the end of the show to hear that one.
But somebody happened to walk into my office during the middle of this recording.
So you're going to see that a little bit later.
But first, we've got today's episode.
It is a good one. It's an awesome one. It's two phenomenal gentlemen. We got Noah and Jeff or Jeff and Noah. They own tree city homebuyers in Boise, Idaho. Do you know it's Boisey, not Boisey? I say it wrong, I'm sure, because I'm from California. Yep. Everyone says it wrong. I just recently learned it's not Louisville. It's like Louville or something that no one ever says outside of there. So I think there's a lot of things I say wrong. But I feel better being around you because you say even more things wrong than I ever.
ever could. Yeah, I like Lewisville a lot. It's a good place. And Bosai is also Bosai,
Idaho is really good too. So anyway, a good word to talk about them. I'm going to use the word
scrappy. They started just scrappy, like getting this done coming from like, you know, rough
backgrounds, both of them. And they go into that today on the story of how they kind of broken that
that path in their families to create kind of a new future, which is pretty cool. They invest both
in where they live, like in Boise, Idaho, but they also invest out of state.
And they do Airbnb, they do flips and they do rentals. They do a ton of stuff.
And we go through like a lot of details on how they do that. Some of the systems they use,
how they split their partnership up, how they found each other, which is a great story involving
a fridge or a stove, was it? And some snowboarding. And a lot more. So we're going to be
covering all that. Cold call, driving for dollars, amyless, all sorts of good stuff today.
So hang tight for all of that.
As well as a good piece of advice if you don't like networking, but you keep hearing people say that you should.
Yeah, yeah, that was a good topic of a conversation today was about networking and how just the word networking gets weird.
And so we're talking about some good ways to do that.
So all that and more is coming up.
I don't really have a quick tip plan today.
I know that's kind of, you know, sometimes we do it at last second.
So today's quick tip is going to be simple.
I want you guys to go follow David Green on Instagram, David Green 24.
That's the quick tip. If you're not following him, he's a good guy to follow
an Instagram. You're going to learn a lot about real estate and business and just what it's
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With that said, enough chit-chatting, David Green. It's time to get into the show.
So anything you want to say before we jump in? No, because that would be chit-chat. Let's get to the meat and potatoes.
Here we go. All right, fellas, Noah, Jeff. Welcome to the Bigger Pockets podcast, gentlemen. It's awesome to have you here.
Thanks, man. We're stoked to be on.
Thanks, brother. We really appreciate the chance to come on and hopefully share our knowledge with everyone listening.
Awesome, man. Well, I think we should probably start this thing talking about one of the most important past times.
At least, you know, Noah, you were there, but Jeff was involved.
And that was the time that you viciously attacked me in Maui and tried to choke me out.
Do you want to tell everyone that story, Jeff?
You want to, you want to?
Yeah, it was pretty rat.
And I actually have a little nugget in here that I think is important for people.
So we were invited to the Maui Masterclass.
And we were given some advice by a mentor that, hey, give giving is a good idea.
We got some cool rash guards with this guy, Taros face on it.
And then I think Brandon's face maybe was on there too.
And we gave it to Brandon and decided to throw down some jujitsu on a random lawn in Hawaii.
And I'm just saying only one of us walked away with blood on their face.
So I'm just going to leave it at that, dude.
And it wasn't me.
It was a good time.
It was a good time.
We had a good time.
No, I think that does.
It does illustrate a good point, though, of like, like you were, this is very much like a giftology kind of thing where you guys are like, how do I give
something kind of funny, unique, valuable, but also like memorable.
And like it was, it's a cool rash guard.
So it was like, it was cool.
And here you are today.
So the secret to being on the Bigger Pockets podcast, everyone, is a send David or I a rash guard.
Clearly, that's, that's the one way ticket.
So I just had this very funny idea, Brandon, of somebody making a rash guard with your face on it.
But the chin would cut off at the bottom of the shirt.
And then the pants would be your beard.
That's a great idea.
All right. So fast forward a few months. And me and a bunch of buddies were going to be passing through Boise, Idaho on a quick trip. And we didn't book any hotel until like the day of because we're like, oh, you know, there's lots of places to stay in Boise. No, there wasn't because there was a game going on that night. And all of a sudden we realized we were homeless that night. And so I texted my buddies here. And I think Noah, you got back to me. And you were like, yeah, I got an Airbnb. You can stay at. So I actually got to stay in these gentlemen's property, which is pretty awesome.
And it was awesome. We learned a little bit more about you and your property's there.
So all right. That's the end of the story. But we want to rewind the beginning of the story.
How did each of you, uh, once you introduce yourself to east so people can kind of get the voice if they're just listening to this, uh, who you are.
And how did you get each into real estate? What inspired you? Yeah, for sure. You want to go first, Jeff?
Yeah, uh, I've been investing in real estate since I was 19 is when I got my first house.
Um, I got into real estate really by happenstance. Um, it's kind of a real long story, but started working for a buddy as an office assistant and found out
He had had some real estate holdings and real estate was kind of his passion.
It definitely wasn't what he focused on.
But I was like, dude, that's where you make money.
So I started kind of convincing him to partner up with me.
And it started in real estate.
So I started door knocking houses and got a house on the contract and said, hey, look, dude, you got some money.
I know you're loaded.
Let's partner up on this house.
Let's make it happen.
He decided to invest in the deal.
And so that's how I got started in real estate.
Yeah, there's a lot behind.
I don't know how much we want to unpack and spend time on it.
But kind of like a rich down for that type thing.
We got all day.
Well, keep going then. Let's hear it.
Yeah. So one, I guess I'll start off.
I was going to college, found a girl, got engaged, and she was like, hey, I got a buddy who could
give you a job. And I was like, all right, cool. So he hired me and my job title was literally
called puppy. So on the job application, it was called puppy. And I was like, hey, what is my role?
And he's like, your role is literally do whatever I tell you to do. And literally my first three days,
I stood and I crumpled pieces of paper and threw them into a, like a giant metal bin and
like lit his papers on fire for his document deletion. So I was like my first step.
That was on my first ever job outside of like fast food stuff. And I had grown up like super
poor and had family like in the hood and I got a father in prison and like was just like, man,
I'm not going to go down this, this path that everybody else has gone down to my family of not
having like a solid future. Like I don't want to live, build a bill. I don't want to just not have
any money or have a future set up. So I started studying what I could do to make money without a college
education because I met this cute girl and dropped out. So the guy, well, don't have a college
education. I better figure something else how to do. Heard this seminar about real estate, start
talking to this guy, Scott. And then we became business partners for like two or three years in
Portland, Oregon and flipped about 10 houses together. And that was kind of my introduction into
real estate. All right, man. Well, it's cool to see kind of that, that, I don't know, like,
if poverty break is the right word there. But like, you know, the family you came from or the life you
came from was very, very different. You said, I don't, I don't want that for my future. And you,
like, made that generational change that will probably affect, you know, generations on. So it's one thing we
love about real estate. Yeah, absolutely, man. That's the, that's the whole point where we got
started was to switch up the trajectory, right? So yeah. Let me ask you a very quick question on that
before we move on because I just don't want to forget. Is there any advice you have for other people
in a position like that that historically would, you would understand feelings of I don't belong in that
world, that's not for me. That's what people with college degrees, backgrounds, you know,
connections I don't have. What would you say to that person who's listening to this thinking?
You know, I think real estate's cool, but I just don't think I can break in. Yeah, you know,
I would just think it's like you got to, you got to understand that that thought is really
a limiting belief, right? Like, I still struggle with the imposter syndrome today, like even being
on a bigger pocket podcast. I'm like, well, this is crazy. But you really got to like be conscious,
conscious of that that limiting belief and know that it's a limiting belief and that it doesn't
define you and where you came from doesn't define you. And then you just got to look at like the real
life out there. Like there are so many people absolutely crushing it, whether in real estate or
started their own business who didn't go to college. So you don't have to think that that college
degree is something that's a necessity to start your business. And then just surround yourself
by people. So like for me, it was surround myself by this gentleman Scott and really like
form a relationship and be like, I belong in this circle and I'm going to figure out to make sure
I actually do belong.
So kind of manifesting and then getting rid of those limiting beliefs.
So definitely the two things I would say help me do it.
I really want to add something to that that I think is interesting, especially as we've met
more people in real estate that have become really successful.
Sometimes I feel like adversity is the catalyst or can become your catalyst to becoming successful
in whatever realm it is that you want to go into.
It doesn't have to define you in a negative way.
It actually propel you into something great.
Yeah.
Yeah, that's a really good point, man.
I like that you mentioned that because that and then those big last things.
we say, I feel like when we tell people, hey, here's what you go do. Like you were saying, Jeff,
I went knocked on doors, right? It's that simple. What you're doing is you're looking for a person
that owns a property that doesn't want to own it anymore. That doesn't take a college degree, right?
Like regular people, everywhere own properties. Because you had that like, well, what else am I going to do?
I don't want to go work fast food. You are willing to go knock on a door. It's sometimes people who said,
well, I went to a good school. I have a good degree. It's beneath me to go look for overgrown lawns
a knock on doors that they actually talked themselves out of doing what it takes to get ahead.
And that's just what like I like what you guys both mentioned there.
You made a really good point too, Noah.
That adversity is almost, almost like a required ingredient in this cake that if you want it to be cooked right, that has to be one of the pieces.
Yeah, really good point.
Really good point, man.
This is getting up to a strong side.
I like it.
So Noah, let's see if you can live up to the hype of Jeff here.
So Noah, how'd you get into real estate?
What inspired you?
Yeah.
So I was a very troubled teenage.
I got into drugs pretty early on and got into a lot of trouble.
I think a lot of times we look at people that are really successful and I think that their life has always been great, right?
So at 18, I decided, I was like, man, I've got to get out of California.
I've got to move.
So I moved to Utah and I started going to school.
And I ended up getting a full-ride scholarship.
I mean, even though I was getting in trouble, I still had really good grades for like my community college.
So the Southern Utah University took me on a full-right scholarship based off my good grades from my community college.
So I was like, great, because I was not going to go into debt.
I mean, even though I was, again, like a troubled teenager, there was still some financial education that I put myself through at a young age where I was like, I don't want to go into debt.
I'm not going to risk that to just get my degree.
So it all ended up getting taken care of in that same time frame, just like Jeff.
I met my wife while I was in college.
And then she ultimately ended up dragging me out to Washington for her to go to med school there.
During that process, though, I'd gotten really involved with like the business department at my college and realized that that's the realm I wanted to be in was like entrepreneurship.
and business. And when I moved out to Washington with my wife, I quickly realized that I absolutely
hated the corporate job that I landed myself. So I was like, this is not for me. Like, I'm capped.
They're going to tell me when I get promoted and how I get promoted. And it's more like a personal
choice than it's based on merit. And so I was like, there's got to be something better for me.
So during that process, I was like, okay, my time's very limited. I mean, the job required like
55 hours a week. And I started looking into real estate. I found bigger pockets. And then I found
someone that was actually really close to where I was at. So to me, that made it very real.
Elliot Smith was actually was only an hour and a half away from me in another town.
And I was like, okay, well, if he's doing it and he's successful, then I can do it. And I liked
the whole aspect of wholesaling, which is ultimately what I ended up getting started in because
it required no money down and I didn't have money. So called Elliot up one day. I was like,
hey, how do I get started in this? He's like, dude, before you call me again, go listen to like the
first 80 episodes of this podcast. And it was Tucker Merrihew's Real Deals podcast.
how you're going to say the bigger pockets back. Come on, man. Come on, man. Elliot is like one of my,
Elliot's one of my best friends and he didn't recommend my own podcast. I'm, I'm offended.
Offended. So I called him back and I had done the homework. I'd listen to the first 80 episodes.
He gave me a few pointers on how to get started. And then I started doing driving for dollars while
I was actually like driving around and picking up customers while working at Enterprise. So I was like,
I guess like the moral of that, what I hope people take away from that is like, there's always a,
there's always a way if you're willing to look.
But I could have easily been like, dude, I work 55 hours a week.
Like, there's no way I'm going to have any time to do this.
At the same time, I'm like taking care of my wife, cooking dinners.
Like, I took care of the whole home.
She's doing 70 hours plus a week during, in med school.
So it took me eight months, two failed partnerships and like sinking five grand that I didn't really have to get started to land my first deal.
I stuck with it.
I'd actually got to the point where I was like, man, I'm done.
Like, I'm not going to do any more driving for dollars.
I'm not going to do any more cold calling.
This doesn't work.
And then I was like, I've got two good leads.
I'm going to follow up with them until they tell me, do not ever call me again or they sell their house to me.
Well, one of them ultimately ended up selling her house to me.
She lived in my neighborhood, oddly enough.
And I was able to cash a $10,000 check.
And from that, I was like, man, this is real.
Like, I can actually do this.
And then that $10,000 check was equivalent of like three of my paychecks from my corporate job.
And I had done this, like, while still working, like literally the corporate job was paying my early wage,
but I went and drove for dollars.
So I was like, this is totally possible.
So I ended up one of the people I was trying to disbo that first deal to didn't end up taking the deal, but I formed a great relationship with them.
They had an at scale like flip and wholesale company in a different part of Washington.
And they were looking to expand into the area I was already in, which was Yakima.
So I ended up linking up with them.
He became my mentor.
He mentored me for like two and a half years.
And I gave up a lot of my deal, but this is another important part that I want people to be able to take away from this.
Sometimes it doesn't actually matter how much you get from each deal, just that you're,
learning and becoming better on each one. I see a lot of people getting started. They're trying to go for
six-figure assignments. They're trying to do the $250,000 profit on their first flip. And it's like, man,
like just getting the motion and getting the confidence to know that you can consistently do deals is more
important than the dollar amount tied to it. So I gave up, I gave up 70% of my deals. I only got
30% of my deals for like the first two years, but I learned how to wholesale at scale through this mentor.
And that was kind of my journey. The next part of it, I think we'll wait.
on. So that's such a valuable point. I just want to emphasize this idea of whether you're trying
to be a real estate investor, you want to be a real estate agent, you want to go be an insurance agent,
or it doesn't matter. Like any like any commission type business or some kind of line of work where
you earn the more you produce. Like, yeah, people are so short-sighted and all they can think of
how do I make the money right now. But if you spend a year or two learning from like a rock star in any
of those industries, like it's such a investment in the next like 20 years of your career, 30 years,
50 years of your career. I wish more people thought that way, kind of up with a long-term
vision. And some people do. And some people do. And that's why, you know, at Open Door Capital,
we built our entire team off, like, mostly interns that we move into paid positions. And now
I've got 20 some people on staff. But like so many people are just worried about, you know,
well, how am I going to, how am I going to get 250K on a flip this year? Yeah, it's just short-sighted.
I heard a really good argument somebody made. I might have been Peter Schiff. I don't remember.
But he was talking about how for the most of the time the world's been spinning,
apprenticeships is how you learned a trade from someone else.
So you wanted to learn how to put a horseshoe on a horse where there was a person
that knew how to do it and they would teach you.
And that's really the way our minds operate best.
As I watch someone do it, I listen to them.
They show me the right way.
I slowly pick it up.
And then at that point, I either work for them and take over the business or I go off
and do my own thing.
And it was actually when minimum wage was introduced that killed the apprenticeship.
because now you were required to pay somebody a minimum wage.
And if they didn't have a skill that was worth that, you couldn't keep them.
So the apprenticeship died.
And that's where the idea of building skills kind of went away.
And it's sad because the people like you two that are going to go crush it are ones who put
that investment in that learn how to do this and don't worry about what they're giving up.
They worry about what they're going to gain.
Whereas a lot of other people would have had opportunities to get into what we do and they
don't because now there's no one apprenticing. So I bring this up to say when the whole world is
zigging, you want to zag. When everybody else is saying, I'm just trying to get mine. I'm trying to
get paid. I want to make 100 figures on my first deal. If you go the other way and you say,
I don't want to knock somebody out on my first punch. I want to learn how to fight. It's a completely
different mindset. And it's very hard to not succeed when you take that path. Yeah, that's a good point.
Well, let's go to the end of your story again of your, and I don't want to go back and know how you
guys met each other and build it together. But just so people have an idea like of what you,
what you do today? What is it you do today? What do you have today? What's your current life look
like? And then we'll backtrack. Yeah, for sure. So we have a couple different entities that
that we have set up. But our primary focus is that we are a fix and flip company. We find we go
direct to seller for most of our deals. We're not those guys who are really buying from wholesalers.
So we go direct to seller. We have an off market portion of the business. Do a couple
wholesale, but really primarily fix and flips. And then we buy long term holds in Midwest
markets, as well as in our local market here in Boise, Idaho.
If the deal makes sense, we use the Burr method.
We take that deal down.
And then we're starting to set up a couple of Airbnbs.
We should be about eight Airbnbs by the end of this year, early January.
So yeah, so we flip about 30 houses a year.
And now the main focus is really just long-term generational wealth.
So we're really starting to hold on to a lot, a lot more stuff.
That's awesome.
Any multifamily in there, mostly single family or?
Yeah.
So in this, the specific Midwest market that we're in right now is South.
Bend, Indiana. We have 14 doors out there and they're all small multifamily properties,
you know, duplexes, triplexes, fourplexes. Okay. Why south bend? What made you, yeah, what brought you
there? That's a great question. A little bit of it was the competitive advantage and the other
part of it was, realizing how different of a market it was from the market we're in. So we're in a,
we're in a highly appreciating market. It's very expensive. It works great for flips though, right? So the
average. Boyd-Doy, right? Yeah, Boise, yeah. The average purchase price, it's why. It's
wild. It's insane. We appreciate it 44% of the last year.
Yep. And so like the average purchase price of a home is 400 grand out here. It's great for
flips, but it makes it really hard to do successful rentals because the rent really hasn't
caught up. Yeah. But in South Bend, Indiana, we already had some connections. We liked that
there was a major university. Felt like that created some, you know, some additional draw to the town.
But the average purchase price of a home in South Bend, Indiana, we picked up most of our
fourplexes for under 150 grand. Yep. And the rents are still.
$700 a door. So they just cash flow so much better. And it took so little of our actual
capital to go take that down. I mean, that's a whole other thing we can go into, but we actually
didn't even use any of our own capital to go buy those. We used other people's money.
Oh, yeah. So I know Indiana in particular, South Bend specifically, they're very popular with out-of-state
investors. This is one of the places that everybody goes to to get started. I know the strengths of it
would be the lower price point and the high price rate ratio that you mentioned those.
What about some of the problems that you've encountered? Can you share what some of the challenges
have been with making investments work there? Yeah, I mean, I would say the most, the hardest part
has been training the property manager that we have there to operate on the system that we utilize.
So we didn't, when we went to that market, we didn't want to just go, okay, we're going to hire you
to be a property manager and you have your system. Like, we really believe that like we get people
to kind of bend to our rules for lack of a better term. Like, if you're going to manage my
properties, you're going to do it with the system and process that we've deemed the right process
to run our properties. So really getting them on board and doing that properly with the tenant base that
they have there. In Indiana, you get a lot of people who are paying weekly because they're really
poor with their money and they can't pay all at once. You get a lot of Section 8 tenants.
So really navigating difficult tenants, getting new tenants placed has been one of the hardest hurdles
and then getting that property manager on par with what we want to do and how we kind of run a professional
business, not just kind of like a side hobby, how it was being ran before.
Yeah, that's smart.
That's smart.
So what have you considered like your secret to success in that long distance thing?
I mean, maybe even before I answer that question, I want, I'll, I'll stress a point here
that we talk a lot about here on the show and on webinars and all across bigger pockets,
is that when people are, when listening to the show, if you're getting started, there are things
that work in your market.
Like if you're in L.A., Seattle, San Francisco, Boise, you.
like it's expensive, but there is something that works there.
But if it's the thing you want to do, it may not work in your market.
You may need to go somewhere else.
And I think you're guys, the story illustrates us perfectly in that you are doing what works
in your market, which is flipping and vacation rentals.
And then the other thing you want to do, which is long-term generational wealth through
rentals, you found a location that that works.
Rather than trying to fit a square peg in a round hole, you're making it work where it works.
I just want to commend you guys that a lot of people don't figure that out for a long time.
They're trying so hard to get something working in their market when it just, it doesn't,
it's just not going to work there very well.
So that's awesome.
But then what's made it work long distance?
I mean, like, is it the fact that you have a lot of them that makes the kind of economies
to scale work better?
Or is there anything else that just really made that work?
Yeah, I would say as far as like the long distance rentals go, what made it work was, one,
the ability to find good deals.
And a part of that was investing into our team out there.
So we did spend a lot of time training our property manager.
She had some flip experience as well.
but investing into the team first, right?
So like, we're like, okay, hey, look, here's how we look for off market deals.
Here's how we negotiate them.
These are our parameters and setting that all up front.
So that way there was no frustration.
There was no like, oh, you didn't communicate that you wouldn't buy this because it was
in this area.
So she also helped us to better understand like there's some war zones in South Bend that you
really don't want to go in.
One of our trips out there, we were sent a 17 package portfolio of single family homes
for like 350 grand.
And I was like, oh my gosh, we have to buy this.
It was like the fomo of like missing out on such an awesome deal.
Well, luckily we were out there.
I was like, let's just go drive it.
Oh my gosh.
If you've ever played like, I don't play a lot of video games, but it does remind me of like Call
a Duty when you're like running through like the map.
And like there's just like houses that look like they could just be pushed over.
All 17 of those homes were like that.
So that was a very good eye opening experience to realize we need to take in those areas.
But I would say the tradeoff between the two of us of both she educated us on the local
market. We educated her on what's a deal for us. That's, that is what really allowed us to go so quick
because we picked all of those up from basically, I think our first one was really in like,
is kind of at the end of last year. Yeah, it's December of last year. Yeah, so December of last year till
now being able to pick up 14 rentals and then the total cash flow on that little portfolio is a little
over three grand a month. So that's, that's the actual cash flow back into like our company.
Yeah, that's cool. That's such a good point. That's awesome, man. To brand his point, how do you
make it work in a different area.
One of the areas of bias when you're out of state investing, you have to be aware of is when
someone says this is a house immediately, everything that I've seen in my life relating to
housing, I then project onto whatever that property is that I was just told about, right?
So I live in California.
The land itself is going to be worth half a million dollars.
So they put a lot of time and effort into the housing.
The code is, and restrictions are very high.
The quality of craftsmanship is going to be really big.
So when I hear someone say house, I'm immediately thinking.
about, you know, this like wood frame, really nice roof, great foundation, expensive stuff.
Maybe the finishes are outdated. That's a bad house where I am. But you go to some of these other
places and like it was built before they had code. Who knows what's been done to it since then?
It's like there's, it's literally rotting its way apart. The septic tank it might be on is
completely corroded. It's not the same thing as what you're thinking. And what you mentioned where
you said, we just went there and looked at it completely changed your perspective.
And I know I've often said you don't have to go look at the house, right?
And I just want to highlight in the book long distance real estate investing.
That is under the assumption that there is somebody there that is watching your back,
that you already understand what you're getting into.
You don't have to look at the house.
You do need to understand the area, the condition of the property.
And to someone in South Bend,
house might mean something completely different than to somebody that's in Boise.
And so I only say this because as technology grows,
it becomes very easy for companies to market to out-of-state events.
investors and people that live in Idaho or California or New York, Texas, some of these areas
that they traditionally have made a lot of money. That's who they go to to sell this product.
And if you're thinking that house is what you saw growing up, you can find yourself in a world
of hurt. Do you have any stories you can share on some of the learning experiences that you
picked up when you realize, oh, like we're not in Kansas anymore. This is completely different.
I've got a couple related to just the difficulty of getting financing and some stuff out there.
Yeah. Yeah, those would be good one. The one thing I'll add real quick.
quick before that is like in those other markets, you got to understand that like street by street
things can change. So it is really like to David's point. Like it's really important either you
understand that neighborhood or you have somebody that does. Like in South Bend, for example,
there's a street called Portage Road and you don't go west of Portage Road. If you do, you're in a war zone.
But if you're literally one block in, you're going to have a decent house that you could probably
flip and sell for 150. So you really got to understand that like in those secondary markets,
you got to make sure that somebody is an expert in that area. And if it's not you,
then you need to go and find somebody to be that expert for you.
Yeah, I definitely agree with that.
And then to speak to David's earlier question,
I would say, like,
one of the big learning lessons we had was we originally picked up
a really awesome package of like four single family homes,
but they were completely spread out.
But it was honestly a great deal.
It was probably like 70% of value on the home
and we didn't have to do any extra negotiation.
So we got this great deal.
But they were spread out and they were in rural areas.
So when we went to go and try to get, we bought them cash with someone else's cash.
And then we went to try to go get loans on them, pull the cash out and go buy more rentals.
We found out that there was like no lenders that wanted to do these properties because,
one, the value of each home was like under $60,000.
So they all had minimum caps of your home had to be worth at least $50,000 after the loan was put on.
So that included your down payment.
And then on top of that, just for two rural, they're like, now it's too far out.
So what we ended up doing is we ended up selling those, reusing the cash to buy stuff that was more condensed all into South Bend.
We were kind of all spread out around there within like a 30 to 40 minute drive in either direction.
But by condensing it down, it became easier to finance those properties.
And so like my big takeaway from that was, you know, we're already going into other markets.
But now we're starting the relationships with the lenders in those markets first.
And we're getting their criteria for what they'll lend on.
And then we're meshing that with our criteria for what we'll buy.
So we don't run into that same issue again.
Yeah.
That's hugely important.
And I'm so glad you brought it up because because refinances at the end of Burr, it's easy to do it at the end at last.
But you always want to start with the end in mind.
So I'm always telling people you need to go find the bank or the lender or whoever first, get pre-approved for what conditions you could get a loan under and then sort of work back.
Like, okay, now what rent do I want to get?
Okay, what's my rehab budget?
What houses can I look at?
then you know what your buy criteria would be for the B.
So this is really good advice.
Like it's kind of embarrassing how many people will message me and say,
I did everything you said.
I bought it.
I rehabbed it.
I rented it out.
And I went to refinance and the bank said,
you haven't had a job for 12 years.
You can't get a loan.
The bird doesn't work.
Yeah.
You know,
like in our local market in Idaho,
Idaho is like this weird state where it has some really weird lending regulations.
And so in a lot of markets,
you can do a bird.
You can do it cash out at 80%.
And Idaho,
just to speak on that point, that doesn't happen, Idaho.
There's actually a state law that caps you out at 75% loaned of value on a cash out refi.
So if you didn't know that going into it, well, then you're looking to do it in a burr running it on 80% trying to get your cash out and your numbers might not work.
So yeah, you definitely got to know how the lending works in that area to make sure that you're making the right decisions.
That's such a great point.
Do you guys have any advice for studying a market?
Like if somebody's trying to find a good market to go to like South Bend or whatever, like how do you begin to that search for a market?
And then how do you dig in and really get that insider knowledge of the lending rules and all that?
Any tips for people?
Yeah.
So this is actually, Noah, I will say Noah is a stud in this area.
Like he has this full Excel sheet built out with like 40 different points that we look at before we go into a market.
So I'll let him answer that.
But I want to give him a quick shout out on his expertise in that area.
Thanks, brother.
I mean, we could go really, really deep.
But I would say on a base, I'm going to give, I would rather go really surface level and give people some tangible.
tangible steps that they can actually take like literally during this podcast to go do.
So the first thing I would do is I'd go add myself to all the investor Facebook group pages.
And I'd try to find things of value to post, right?
Because you just go on there and you're just asking for help or you're just asking for other people to invest their time into you.
It's not likely it's going to happen.
So I would go figure out like, how can I add value to these people in this group?
Can I call 10 banks in that local area?
can I go find what their terms are or what their lending requirements are on single family and
multifamily properties? And then can I post that in the group and then can say, hey, would anyone
like to hop on a Zoom call and talk with me and go deeper on this? And then start forming relationships
with those people and going really deep and getting connected in that market. I feel like relationships
above all else. I mean, you could study all the data. You could figure out, you know, population trends
and our rents increasing or decreasing is vacancy increasing or decreasing over the last five years,
is our new business. You could figure all of that out.
Those are all great things to know.
But at the end of the day, your relationships in the individual market, I think,
are probably the largest determining factor of whether or not you're going to be successful.
That's really good.
That's a great point.
Like very practical.
You can get in there and you can start having deals come your way.
The next logical step is that people are going to send you deals and you are going to have
a very difficult time knowing what to do with them.
So what advice can you have for what your matrix looks like when you're analyzing something,
where you start and what the steps are that you're taking.
Yeah. So I feel like that's probably the same. And no matter what market you're in, maybe Jeff, you'd like to talk to that because you're definitely involved on that aspect of helping us underwrite deals.
Yeah. So I mean like for us, like I would say the first thing you guys talk about this all the time on the show is like you got to understand what's a deal to you. Because what's a deal to me and then what's a deal to me. And then what's a deal to me. And then what's a deal to you. Like, again, make sure you have an expert in that market. It's going to be very different. Right. So you got to understand what's a deal to you. Create your buy box and then stay within that box. But when you start getting deals sent to you like, again, make sure you have an expert in that market.
that knows the areas and you're not spending time.
Like we probably get sent 20 deals a week in South Bend that like I open it.
I see the street and that's that as far as I go on underwriting because I know that
that's an area I don't want to be in.
So like we actually one of the things we do and this is on an off market stuff and
when we underwrite deals is we go for no.
Like I would rather just give myself a quick no right away and move on.
I don't want to spend a bunch of time being like, oh, let me let me see if I can tweak
this to be a deal in this way.
So we go for no right away.
We try and eliminate the stuff that we're underwriting.
and then if it kind of passes the test and we can't get a know on it quickly, then we'll go deeper on it.
But yeah, a couple of things we look at is inbound moves to outbound moves, vacancy rates.
One of the things that we love looking at is one of the major infrastructures in those areas.
So like South Bend, do you have a university?
You have a big medical arena, I guess you could say.
One of the markets we were in for a little bit was Warsaw and they're like the orthopedic capital of the world.
So they have a ton of people coming in, which it sounds weird.
but it led to a need for like nurses to stay for three to six months.
So it created a little niche market.
So just kind of understanding what supports that local market that you're investing in
is super important.
So let's move on a little bit.
I want to go back to the how the heck do you flip 30 houses a year?
What's your systems look like?
What's your team look like?
What's that process like?
Yeah, for sure.
So first I will tell you, you learn how to flip 30 houses a year by failing it
trying to flip a couple houses.
So we learned a lot through our failures.
I have some stories of losing a ton of money starting out.
So what I did is I just like I took really good notes of why I had my failures and like spend a lot of time being honest with myself and being like, hey, why did this flip not go well?
What can you tweak to be better?
But so today our team, it looks like this.
Essentially, we have an ownership stake in a general construction company.
There are exclusive contractors for our flips.
They have about anywhere from 10 to 14 guys at any given time.
Idaho is a large turnover market.
People just will jump to another job to make 50 cents.
an hour. It's kind of crazy. But so we own a stake in that company for their exclusivity for them to do our
flips. And then we have built out another team of like two or three smaller GC teams to do some of our
cosmetic stuff. But I would say like the way we're able to do 30 flips a year is that we keep
it simple. We're those guys that when you see my flips, you're going to be like, wow, he used the
same paint color on the outside. Wow, he used the same paint color on the inside. It's the same
floor in every house. Yes, it always is. I have like three different packages.
If it's a sub 300 house, it looks this way.
If it's a three to five, it looks this way.
And if it's over five, it looks this way.
And then just spending the time on the front end to set that up.
Like, we talk about systems and processes a lot.
And that's not something that we just kind of say like, oh, people say systems and processes.
Like, I mean, I won't say we have a relationship with Tar Yarber and his systems for his flips, blow mine out of the water.
It makes people really dumb.
But I still have like a full list of everything that we buy per house.
Everything is labeled out in the steps of operations.
and who's doing what, who are subcontractor teams are.
So being prepared for it going into it,
it's almost like playing a little game.
Like when I buy a flip,
I fully visualize that flip before we even purchase it.
Like I walk it.
I get it under contract.
I'm looking at my paperwork and I can map out exactly how that flip's going to go
based on what I'm seeing on my spreadsheets and how that's going to then translate.
And then just having good communication with your teams.
I'll say the other thing is motivating people.
You got to motivate your teams.
Like,
why do we have a GC that exclusively does our flip in a high.
highly competitive and expensive market because we motivate them to be a part of our team.
We make sure that we're constantly buying deals that their guys never have to worry about
not working.
We give them a percentage of profit.
We even allow them to roll over a portion of that profit to stay on as a small percentage
owner and our short-term rentals that we keep in a local market.
So adding value to those guys and making sure that they're staying motivated is definitely
one of the ways that we're also able to do that.
That's awesome.
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savings. So you have in-house construction. What are some of the pros and cons of doing that,
of having it in-house? Yeah, I would say pros is, I mean, exclusivity. Like the day you buy a flip is the
day you start a flip. Whereas like if you're if you're hiring a GC, it could, because this is how my
business model looked four or five years ago. I didn't have an in-house team. I would buy a house,
then I would get the GCs to go and give me bids. And normally I'd have like two weeks to a month
owning that, paying interest on that before I even got started. So I'd say the speed, it definitely
costs are, our cost is lower. I just pay, we pay their hourly rate. So you're not subject to their
markups. That's definitely a huge win. On the con side, it's a ton more paperwork. Like,
I don't just run a flip business.
I also run a GC business.
And part of how I get those guys, my partner and not business, to be motivated and do my flips,
is he doesn't want to do paperwork.
He doesn't want to talk to the bookkeeper.
He doesn't want to talk to the lawyer, the accountant.
So now that's my job or somebody on my team's job.
So it creates a decent amount of work for us.
But I would say the pros definitely outweigh the cons and being able to go quickly and
keep your costs low, which is really the two keys to success and flipping.
Or I guess three, buy the deal right, do it fast, do it right, and they get a
good cost on it. I like it. So the con would be if you can't have enough volume to support that.
That's when you're going to get in trouble, right? Because then you look at being that guy that
then has to go and lay people off, which like me, like I can say to this day, I've never fired
anybody. I've been able to hire people who have to fire people for me. I don't think I could ever,
like, actually lay somebody off. Like, so that it's definitely like that. That's a big con is if you can't
keep up with them. And then like, say you can't keep up. And then now you get a flip and they're like,
okay guys come back you're not getting them back they lost that trust for you they're gone and they're
on somebody else's jobs so that's always been something i've been drawn to as well i think i always start
off contracting with someone else right so i would refer people to real estate agents and then my friends
would come back to me and say the agent doesn't know this and i'd have to do the work and i said
screw it i'm going to get my license and then i'd refer him to a lender and they'd come back and say the lender
didn't return my caller they said they can't do this and i'd call the lender and say hey you can do it this way
okay, cool, I didn't know that. And they got a commission and I got my time wasted. So then I started a lending company. And it slowly sort of been the way that I've done things is that I go learn it and then I look for a partner and I bring it in. And in-house is not, I wouldn't, it's not like an end-all. Hey, take this magic pill and everything's good. Because you got to actually build those businesses. You have to train the people and run the books and build the infrastructure and create the systems and get the good clients or the good employees, not the bad ones. It takes some time. But once you,
you've got it, just the measure of control it gives you over how quickly you can move from
thing to thing, right? Like I wish more investors that got good at something would do that,
that would actually expand that knowledge they have. I'm really good at flipping houses. Now,
how do I take that and use those same systems to get a construction company going on and make a space
for someone else to take over their home flipping business? Is that something you guys have planned
for the future where you can see yourself expanding? Yeah. And I don't know if it's necessarily going to be
on the GC side. But yeah, we're definitely looking at like how can we vertically integrate a little
bit more. So like we've actually just kind of by happenstance and I guess necessity kind of like you're
saying, you know, we're frustrated with agents. We also buy on market deals and the key to buying
on market deals and a competitive market is being quick coming across professional. And when you're
working with an agent that's an outside agent, you can't really control how quickly they get
through the information, right up their agreement, send it over. So we just brought Noah has his license
and we brought an in-house agent onto the team. And that's a team that naturally just as people see
our company and how attractive it is and how much we're doing. We're big culture guys. They want to
be around us more. That is starting to build out. And so yeah, we're looking to vertically integrate
that team. The GC will mostly just do our flips, but then also like some some property management
Airbnb management stuff is definitely on the table as well. Just like you say, you start to do this
stuff and then you're like, I'm pretty good at this. Why would I spend my time and not get the upside
for making the money on it? So yeah, I definitely see it's vertically integrating a little bit more
moving forward. I think that's very cool. I also, I like that it creates.
job opportunities for somebody else who's maybe good at construction, but they fit a ceiling,
right? They can only lay so much laminate flooring. Now they have an opportunity to start
managing the other crew members and then ultimately, like, leading that arm of the company. So that's
something that's shifted for me going into 2022 is I'm now looking for the right partners. I want the right
partner to start a short-term rental property management company for the whole country. The right
partner to start a tax accounting business with.
Right.
Partner to start a construction company with because the measure of control gives you with how
quickly you can move, how you can control your profitability of the deals is really kind of
next to none if you think about it.
And that's one of the reasons Brandon and I talk about more than just here's how you
analyze a deal and buy it.
Because I think that in the future, that's if investors want to compete with some of the big
hedge funds that are going out and buying houses that have insane resources at their disposal,
we have to be able to run at better margins so that we can make a profit when we're going against
someone they can pay more than we normally would be able to.
Yeah, I think that's a really good point.
All the people that we look at, where those guys are like, we just copy the people who are
better than us.
We have a couple guys we would meet with lately.
And that's just, that's been the consistent thing that we've been seeing is people who are
vertically integrated, like turnkey providers for other investors, which means they're taking
off kind of the best deals that work for their buy box.
Anything that doesn't work for them.
Well, then they're still getting the upside by being the realtor,
contractor and then being a property manager.
So, yeah, for sure.
So when you were with Brandon at his master class in Maui,
what did you learn about either business or real estate that you didn't know before you
went?
I didn't learn anything, Noah.
Yeah, nothing, actually.
To be totally honest.
No, we're totally kidding.
Actually, to shut up.
To be totally honest, the biggest thing that we took away was the connections that we got.
And I think that I've hit on this a few times, right?
Like this game is so relationship-based.
For example, from that Maui mastermind alone,
we are looking at partnering on some multifamily in Texas with someone from there.
I'm not want to give too much way,
but I think she may have already recorded her episode here as well.
And then, let's see,
we started actually doing cold calls and acquisitions in another area of Texas
for another person from the Maui mastermind because we found out they were buying
all their deals on market.
And I'm like,
man, we got a whole sales team that's really good at finding off market.
deals. We'll just go freaking be your outsource sales team and we'll sell all the off market
deals to you. And then in Indianapolis, there's somebody from Indianapolis. Well, Jeff and I are
already in Indiana. We're not in Indianapolis yet, but now we're going to be partnering up with
them and doing, we're going to build these little pods of short term rentals in different states.
So somewhere between five and 10 properties. It's very interesting on the short term rental side,
how much the revenue can change state by state and the cost of which you can get into some of those
property system is insanely cheap. There's a lot of partnerships that came from it. And that's only
some of them. We also raised a significant amount of money for our flip business. We fund all of our
flips using private money for the down payment and the rehab. I think we're up to just about
800K just from the Maui mastermind, which is crazy. So there was a ton of value in the relationships.
I don't believe he won. I believe it was a tie. We're going to go with the board regulations.
I definitely run. It was a tie. All right. So this actually brings up a good point. I want to
talking about networking for a second. You know, people have heard us talking about the Maui Mastermind
or a master class before. And whether you go to something like that or you go to a bigger pockets
conference, you go to any of that stuff, the truth is what you said is like, yeah, we do some educational
stuff, right? There's some teaching that goes on. But that's not the goal. The goal is to get outside
your life into another situation. Abraham Maslow, the famed psychologist, calls them peak experiences.
It's getting outside your normal day-to-day life into a like mountain top experience,
something cool, where you meet other people working on their goals.
And in that setting is when your life pivots, when your life changes.
So sometimes people think of like, what's the ROI of me going to this conference?
I'm going to go spend $1,000.
Am I going to get $1,000 back and return?
Like that, like, I just don't like that thinking at all.
It's like by attending things in general, that's what pivots your life.
So 10 years down the road, you're like, oh, yeah, I'm a different person because of who I met
and how I thought because of these events I attended. Agreed?
Yeah, 100%. Oh, 100%. Yeah, networking can drastically change the future of your business if you do it
properly. Yeah, one of the major things I took away, this is something that's kind of been rattling
my brain for the last couple weeks. It's just by being around those other people. It relates a lot to
what you said is like changing your day-to-day environment and like getting out of like the habits
and rituals that were in sometimes is really healthy. But man, like I left with like this clarity of like,
no matter what's out there in terms of whatever crazy goals we set for ourselves,
we can actually do it.
We're only just a few actionable steps and a few more relationships away from making it happen.
One of our like really big long-term goals and we thought this was maybe like five,
10 years down the road was to build a really awesome office space for our team.
You know, 10 to 12,000 square feet, we could also sublet out some other space and reduce the office
cost of self, office hacking, I guess.
And I think we, yeah, there you go.
We plan on this being like five to 10 years down the road.
And just by like going to that Maui Mastermind and having our mindset changing,
realizing that we can do stuff that we didn't think we could,
we're actually already like laying the groundwork to go ahead and build that office in 2022.
So that's,
it's just been kind of crazy to be around those people that are out doing way bigger and better things than we are.
Yeah.
One of the things too on networking that I actually listened to a bigger pocket podcast like right
before going.
And David, I believe it was you.
You were saying like you're the networker that kind of sits back in the corner.
and you don't really go and talk to everybody unless you think you can actually add value to them.
And like that was my entire motto at like the Maui Masterclass.
I was actually way more, which this may surprise Brandon because I'm very loud and obnoxious.
But I was actually way more reserved at that event than I've ever been at like any event.
Like I'm normally loud and bullish.
And like I didn't change who I was, but I definitely kind of sat back and watched and was like, who do I strategize?
Like I'm not a big note taker, but I took a ton of notes on like, what does this person do?
What market are they in?
What did they say their need is?
And then based on that, like, who am I going to spend my time going deep with?
Because I think when people go to like these networking events, it's like, oh, I want to shake hands with everybody.
I want to go away with 30 friends.
Well, yeah, I got 30 friends, but I also have five people I'm doing business with.
And that was strategic.
Like, I heard what they had to say and knew how I could add value to them, how they could add value to me and made sure that it was something that would work.
So I think when you're thinking about networking or spending money on these events, like, you really have to go into the mindset of like, I'm not just here to take.
I'm here to add value and strategically think about where you're going to.
spend your time at those events and who you're going to spend your time with. Yeah, that's a great,
great point. When it comes to networking, I think one of the biggest mistakes people make is operating
under this mindset that I have three hours to show that I can bring value to this person's business
who I just met. And you end up in this like rabid, psychotic, like, how can I bring value to you?
And you're just throwing as much spaghetti against the wall as you possibly can and hoping that one of them
sticks and then magically you guys will end up starting a business. Like you don't realize it,
but you're swinging for that home run like we were just saying in the beginning of the show,
that's not how it works. When Brandon and I became friends, which, you know, I can say quite
humbly is probably one of the biggest powerhouse teams in the world of real estate.
We became friends. We didn't become business partners, right? Like we didn't even talk
about business until we had gotten to know each other at a personal level and realized like,
oh, we actually get along pretty good. And we have very similar values. And we had different roads to get where we went to, but we were heading in the same direction. And we could very clearly see that. So before he ever tried to help my business or I tried to help his business. We were getting to know each other personally. I knew about his family. I knew about what matter to him. I knew about his strengths and weaknesses. And he knew a lot of mine. Then the business side became a much easier decision if we were going to do something together or not and in what capacity we were going to do it. And so networking.
should probably just be replaced with like go make friends. That's what you're really doing,
right? You obviously, Jeff, like, you made some kind of good impression on Brandon that he was
willing to like put on a rash guard and roll with you. And like Noah, he obviously liked you because
you guys are here on the podcast right now. That wasn't something that you had some slick marketing
trick that you like worked an angle. No one else could see and like wiggled your way into Brandon's
life. You just became his friends. And I think if more people understood, that's what you're going to do in an event.
you're going to show someone where your heart is and try to know where their heart is.
And you start it from that.
The business stuff will fall into line.
If you start with business, nobody's ever really comfortable with the other side.
Like I bet if you guys told how you became business partners, it wasn't based on business.
You got to know each other as people way before that happened.
Yeah, 100%.
Should we actually give the little tag line to our partnership, how it started?
It's kind of funny.
Give it, bro.
So our partnership is really based off of the exchange of a stainless steel stove and a snowboard lesson.
Yep.
That's how Jeff and I really became business.
That's how we got started.
And on that, on that ski lift is when you two fell in love, right?
All right.
Let's hear the story.
How did that?
How did you guys connect?
Yeah.
So I was doing some flips here in Boise, just really one at a time.
And then our GC business was built out and we were running flips for other investors.
So I had had some stuff in Portland where I had a really successful like three years and
I had a really bad year.
And then so when we moved to Boise, I was kind of like, let me be a little more cautious
and focus on how to build a business.
So I spent most of my time like studying how to build a business and
didn't rush into flipping, but knew I needed to still make money.
So I just did one flip at a time and started to run another people's stuff.
And Noah had bought in a duplex that he wanted to house hack and reached out to a couple of investors
said, hey, who's the go-to contractor who's not going to gouge me?
And I was the cheap contractor in the valley because that was my business model was make it work
for investors and they'll take care of you in the long run.
And so then we got in contact with Noah, went and gave him a bid.
And then, yeah, so our company got hired by Noah to turn his basement of his duplex into
or a basement of his house into a duplex unit.
And then just very quickly,
I think we actually got locked out of his house one day
and we're sitting on the porch, like, waiting.
I'm like, dude, like, I'm doing this job super cheap
because I kind of like this guy.
And like, next thing you know, five minutes later,
we're talking about how his dad's a POS
and my dad's sitting in prison.
And like, it's just like, we're like, oh, this is cool.
Like, we have similar stuff going out of life.
And the next thing you know, it's like 30 minutes.
And I didn't found out, I locked myself out of my truck.
And we're trying to break into my truck.
And it's just this whole saga.
but we just opened up really quick.
And I was like, man, we have so much in common.
And we also started talking about this wholesaling background.
I was a flipper.
And I really realized that the hurdle in my business before was like,
I wasn't good at finding off market deals.
I would just buy whatever came along.
So we went deep and we formed a friendship.
And then also at the same time,
like we both acknowledged that the other person had a missing piece of what was kind
of holding us back.
But then we still built it really slow.
Like when we were doing that,
I was like, hey,
I know your budget's pretty tight for this flip or for your house.
I have a stove with a flip I just bought.
If you want it, I can just bring it over.
But I know you used to be a snowboard instructor.
I really want to learn a snowboard.
We did that little exchange.
Again, the stove and he took me up and taught me at a snowboarder.
And to know his credit, he's a pretty good teacher.
I'm actually decent at snowboarding now.
I'm actually afraid that he's going to be better than me.
All right.
So let me ask you a question.
I want to ask how you split roles.
However, I want to do it in an interesting way.
I want you, I'm going to start with Jeff.
What does Noah do and what does he just do so well?
Like, what is he amazing at?
I'm going to reverse that.
Noah, what does Jeff do?
What does Noah do in your business?
And what's he just incredible at?
I feel like that's a two-part question, right?
So his role is that he's the acquisitions and marketing guy.
So he handles all the off-market acquisitions.
He trains our sales team on how to talk to sellers.
He reviews calls with them.
He is very good at that.
But I don't think that's the thing that he's the best.
I think the thing that Noah is the best at is motivating people to do what's best for the vision or what's best for the culture.
So Noah's the guy, like, I'll sometimes listen to his conversations with the sales team.
I'm like, bro, that sounds so cheesy.
And then at the end of the meeting, they're like, yeah, man, we're going to do it.
And they're all like brought up and like, I'm a pessimist.
So that's just not me.
I'm like, dude, I can never do that.
But Noah gets all these guys just lined up on this vision and they get stoked and they're texting them at 10 o'clock at night talking about work that they're not getting paid to do.
And everyone's just excited.
So, like, by far, Noah's best superpowers that he motivates people to do things.
And ultimately, like, the thing I will also come cut it on is it's never like a take advantage of this person.
He, like, we have a long-term vision.
We're able to look ahead and be like, I know if you will just stick around and do these things and add value now.
Then ultimately, here's where we will all be.
We're trying to build everybody on our team up.
And he's really good at communicating that in a way that gets people motivated to do it and to stick around through the long run to make sure that they're around for the upside on the back end.
man that gave me chills
that was really nice
man
all let's see if you can
return the favor what what is
Jeff's job what does he do and what's he awesome at
yeah so Jeff is in charge of
basically I mean to simplify it down
the minute a property is locked up
to the minute it's ready to be
resold or disbode
that's Jeff's role he's everything in between
so Jeff is the transaction management
of getting that thing actually to close through title
Jeff also is a huge part of lining up all the private money that we use to fund those slips
and making sure that everyone's secured in the right way and their interest rates are all lined up.
Jeff has an amazing brain for organizing a massive amount of moving parts and putting it all
into this funnel where it flows smoothly.
Like I can't imagine keeping 30 projects rolling around in my brain and knowing that this project
is the project that needs appliances today and this project getting paint and this project
over here is not doing Windows, but this one is.
The fact that he can figure that all out and put it and conceptualize it into a system
that other people can follow is a little insane to me.
So I would say that that's Jeff's superpower.
He can strategically take multiple moving parts funnel it into something that the rest of
the team can understand, even if they don't have a hand in every single part of that
process, they can still know what's going on.
I love it.
Would it be fair to say then in terms of like the book traction or the EOS system that
that Noah you are more the visionary and that Jeff, you're more the integrator.
Is that a?
Yeah.
I think there's a lot of bleed over in both sides.
Yeah.
I would say that's a good alignment.
Yeah, that's awesome.
And it shows why it works because a lot of people like only have vision and they can't actually
get the work done.
They can't manage projects and other people are really good at managing stuff, but they have
no ability to drive the business forward.
And so when you have like, I mean, one, both, I mean, I know you guys well.
So I know that both of you have both those pieces in you.
But I can definitely see the strengths on both sides.
and that's what makes your partnership works so well.
So, yeah, I would say on the operation side, like, I just, like, shout out to all my other
people with ADHD.
Like, I just realized ADHD is a superpower.
That's what I have.
And, like, there's so much crap going on in this brain that if you can, like, get it on
the paper and formulate it, like, you got a chance at doing some big stuff with it.
So what are some of the systems or even, like, tools, like software?
What are some things that help enable your guys' business to run so well?
Yeah.
So we're actually, again, I will say simple scales.
So there is like a ton of systems that people like actual software that people use that we could
probably use and it would help us out.
But we're like really simple.
So a lot of it is just like Google Drive is all document storage, all our scopes of work,
all that kind of stuff.
And it's not so much that we utilize software to make it easy.
We just make sure that we are putting a ridiculous amount of effort into like the details
in our scope of work.
So like on the flip side.
So like you'll see a scope of work from something that's like exterior, demo,
landscape, blah, blah, blah, like that's not what ours looks like.
Ours is like you are demo in the kitchen by removing the cabinets and the flooring,
but you're leaving the trim, you're leaving the door.
And it's very detailed out.
So like that, when we say like system, like scope of work is just like very detailed
out points to where if that gets handed on to anybody on the crew, I'm not getting a call.
It's like, hey, they ripped out the bathtub and they weren't supposed to.
Like, no, they know they were leaving the bathtub because it was very specific on there.
In terms of actual like software that we use, we have Monday.com.
I know a lot of people use Asana as well.
It's really just a checklist.
I think checklists are like way overlooked with the insane amount of power that they have
because they can hold people accountable to miss steps.
And then you can realize where you missed your step and how to go back and tweak it.
So we use that for like our checklist.
So like when Noah says like from the day we get it under contract, Jeff takes it over,
there is a 25 point checklist from the data that gets under contract to the day that we technically
own that property and close on it.
And all those items have to be checked off by somebody on the team.
So we use that Google Drive for storage.
And then we have this little app called like Meister.
It just is like a picture app.
And that's my way of not wasting my time going to projects.
You can build tasks per job within that app.
And then you could just see like pictures of that.
So I don't have to go.
Okay, we use hard money so we get a reimbursement line.
Okay, is the floor done?
Well, I got to drive to this house and see if the floor is done.
No, I just get on the app and look at the pictures.
And then it's a live update type of thing.
And then we use rent ready for rent tracking.
So we have a couple of systems that we use.
But really, I would say like checklists.
It sounds really dumb and basic, but you don't have to like, this doesn't have to be some
grandiose, complicated thing.
Like, it's actually real.
That's why I love real estate.
I actually joked about this with Brandon.
And if you need to bleep it out, bleep it out.
But I'm writing a book called dumbish shit because I believe that the only reason I am successful
is because I am dumb.
And I know that I'm dumb and I make checklist to make sure that I'm not missing things
because I'm not smart enough to remember it all.
So don't think you're too smart to follow a checklist.
Dude, that book would be a best sell you.
There's a lot of those books right now.
They have like, you know, like the kind of like provocative titles.
And they always do well.
But I love that title.
That's amazing.
All right, guys.
It's been fantastic.
We're almost done.
But first we before we get out of here, we want to talk about a specific deal you've done.
So it is time for the deal deep dive.
All right.
Well, good.
It's one.
Yeah, it's one of my, it's one of my last deal deep dyes for for some time.
So for those who don't remember, the few weeks ago we announced that I'm going to actually be stepping away from the podcast for a while.
I'm going to be focusing on some open door capital stuff, family stuff, maybe some surfing and tennis.
So kind of a heart sad, maybe my last deal deep dive.
Maybe I'll do one more next week.
We'll see.
But let's get into it.
Deal deep dive.
This is the part of show where we dive deep into one particular deal that you've done.
Question number one, what is the property and where's it located?
Yeah.
Maybe let's go over it in our actual roles.
Like we'll talk about the parts that we were responsible.
Yeah. So we'll follow.
Yeah.
So it's a Glendell project.
It is in the Veterans Park area of Boise, Idaho.
It is a duplex that we converted to a townhouse.
Okay.
All right.
And how did you find it?
This actually came from a previous seller who had already sold us another house that we had actually flipped.
We stayed in contact with him.
We continued to notice that relationship.
He found that he basically was like,
hey, can I actually make money by bringing other distressed properties? He was a guy that liked to
flip houses on the side. He was basically retired. And he brought us this lead and was like,
hey, would you want to buy it? And what would you pay me for doing it? So he connected us to the
seller. We ended up working out the deal. And we paid him a $10,000 wholesale fee. So would you actually
then pay? What was the final price for the property? $340,000 total.
$340 for a duplex. And that was in your area, right? Yeah. Okay. That's what you said. Okay.
All right.
Cool.
And how did you negotiate that price?
So the seller, we actually, so his name was Brian.
We actually used him.
He kept the relationship up with the seller since he was already friends with that person.
We basically told him kind of where we needed to be and what we could afford to pay for the property.
And he went and worked it out for us.
It was a really easy negotiation.
That's great, man.
How did you fund the property?
How did you finance that thing?
So we actually negotiated a seller carry on that property.
So we had to bring $20,000.
It's actually like the deal of a lifetime.
Yeah, we won't ever probably have a deal like this again. No, it's a whole breath. So we had to bring $20,000 down and the seller carried $320,000 for a payment of $800 a month. Oh, wow. Okay. All right. And you said you turned it into a townhome. So how did that process work? Yeah. So really, it's just paperwork. And then there's, there was a little bit of construction on the back end to create a firewall between the units. But really so it's you go through. And this is different per market, right? But in our market, we do what we call.
a planned unit development. It's a PUD. And so you have to go to the city and say we are
converting this duplex to actually technically a subdivision. So it is now called the Glendale
Commons subdivision. And what it did is it made it to where now you can individually sell the
sides to a retail buyer rather than just as a duplex. So yeah, it's just a bunch of paperwork.
I will say the seller carry was a necessity of this deal to work because it kept our holding costs
so low that it took it took nine months to get the survey, the engineering, get all the paperwork
pushed and approved by the city. And it actually just got approved like two weeks ago, the final
approval for the townhouse. So it took a long time. It took about nine months to get that paperwork
process done to have those legally be considered townhouses. Wow. All right. Well, then,
so that's what you did with it. What was the outcome? Did you keep it then? I'm assuming.
Yeah. So we did, it's essentially a burr. So I guess it's not essentially, it is a burr. We put about
$20,000 into both sides.
on rehab. And then we inherited a problem tenant in one of the units. So our original goal is we were
going to buy it. It was downtown. We're going to put it on Airbnb. But there was this weird little
scenario where last minute, there was supposed to be no lease. And the owner literally, there was a seller
signed a new lease with the tenant the day we bought the property. So then when we bought it,
there was a lease all the way out to January. And he's like, oh, I didn't know. I was not supposed to
sign a lease. So we're like, all right, we're not going to Airbnb because we have this problem
tenant. So we're underwriting the deal and we realized that we could place a tenant for $1,800
into one side. So we remodeled it for $20,000, put a tenant for $1,800. And then we actually
just got the other tenant out last month and they're actively renovating that unit right now. And
that one is going to be put up on Airbnb. Okay. And one point that I wanted to add that was pretty
cool. I'd actually give Jeff credit for this. But he actually went back to the seller once we found
out that that new lease was signed kind of behind our back. And he's like, hey, look, we actually think
that the fair market rent at the time we thought it was $1,300 a month, was $1,300. She's only paying
eight. We're kind of shorted about $500 a month from what we thought we'd be able to get. I don't think
that that's fair for us to have to eat that because we didn't sign this new lease. So he actually got
the owner to come down $500 a month in their payment that was owed from us to them. So we are actually
only paying $300 a month to that.
owner for this owner carry because of the mistake that they made, which was signing a new lease.
I still don't know what the intent of that was, was probably to help that tenant stay.
But I thought that was really cool of Jeff to be like, hey, look, let's take lemons and let's go make
lemonade.
How do we take this bad situation?
Make it good.
Look for the solution.
Yeah.
So during that nine months, we were getting $1,800 for the one side.
And then she was still paying $800.
So we were getting like, what is it, $2,600 a month in rent.
And then it's about $2,400 a month in rent.
I'm bad of math.
And then we were paying $300.
So meanwhile, while we were actually flipping this property, we're cash flow pretty high on the
property. And now it's being submitted for refinance. And here's like the reason we made it at townhouse
is because as a duplex, the value would only been 550 to 600. But as a townhouse, now I get
individual values per side. And the appraisals just came back at 375 a side. So whereas that would
have been a $5.50 to $600 unit. And then my burr method really wouldn't have worked out by making
it a townhouse. Now I got a $750,000 evaluation that they're going to
to give me 75% loan to value on, which my loan should be somewhere around 600, and we're all
into the property for 400. So I'm actually going to tax-free, make about 200 grand, and still hold this
asset. Wow. All right. And so, and then you're going to turn one side into Airbnb. You said one that you're
going to keep as regular rentals for now. He's at his lease was a short-term. We're smart. We set it up as a
six-month lease because we knew we'd get this tenant out. So when his lease is up in the end of January,
that'll become a short-term rental as well. So what do you expected to do with a short-term rental?
what's the potential there?
Yeah, so as a short-term rental, we have a couple other ones to kind of base the projections off of,
but we won't actually know until we get them up and can start seeing what they produce.
But we're projecting anywhere from 2K a month in the slow season to 4K a month in the peak season.
So for Boise peak seasons like summer, slow seasons like January, basically through like April.
So as far as like what that actually means, what goes into our pocket after taking out the mortgage, taxes,
insurance, cap X, budget and repairs and everything like that, and property management,
which on the short term rental side is really important to think about because it generally ends up
being 20 to 30% of your cash flow. It's actually really cool numbers. We should end up pocketing
somewhere between $800 and $1,400 a month per side as a short term rental after all expenses
are paid. That's awesome, man. That's really good. Really good. So all right, last question then.
David, is this yours? How far? I don't know who I thought. Last question. What lessons did you learn here?
I would say like again, relationships.
So the key lesson was that this deal came to us by a seller that we could have just assumed,
hey, he's selling us a distressed property.
Therefore, he's a distressed seller.
Therefore, we buy the property and we moved on.
But instead, we formed a relationship and we kept that relationship intact.
So we're not only did this guy bring us a deal, he's actually now a private investor in our company
and one of his family members works as our operations manager.
So relationships are key.
Not only did it get us this awesome rock star of a job.
deal, but it also influx capital and built our team out as well. Yeah, that's great. I love it.
Love hearing stories like that. Very good job, guys. All right, well, let's get towards the end of the show
by wrapping up with our world famous.
Famous Four. All right. The Famous Four is the part of the show where we ask the same four
questions every week to every guest. So we're going to throw them at you guys. So question number one,
do you have a current favorite or all-time favorite real estate related book?
Ooh, that's a good one.
Specifically, real estate related.
I actually loved the book that David Green wrote on Burr investing.
I thought that that was a really awesome book that definitely helped us to get started as far as picking up properties and starting to hold them.
It definitely seemed almost impossible in our market at first.
And that book, I think, really open the doors of how we make that work.
Yeah, I actually don't read a ton of books.
So I've only actually read one real estate book and it was the Burr book.
And I'm now working through the multifamily millionaire.
And that's really just because I like to read books that my friends write.
So I guess I'll read those.
But Burr was not only just cool for me, but that's been a book that a lot of my family members have
been like, dude, how do you do this?
I'm like, well, actually, you can do this with no money down and pull your money out.
And it can be awesome.
You can just keep doing this.
And like, how?
So I buy them all the Burr book and send it to them.
And it's been really cool to now see my family also start to read and understand what
we do and hopefully start to take action steps into doing that as well.
That's awesome.
All right.
Next question.
What is your favorite business book?
is, and I guess you call it a business book, it's related to business. Go Giver by a landslide.
Like that is, I try and operate within that mindset. I try and like let the, let the five laws in that
book really dictate how I make decisions in my everyday life and my everyday business. And so that one,
if you haven't read the Go Giver, like you absolutely have to read it. It'll change the way that you
think about business as a whole. All right. Yeah, I like that. I would say mine is,
it was actually the first, like, business book I ever read as well.
And it's how to win friends and influence people.
I feel like that's what we built our business off of was like taking care of people
and relationships.
So, yeah, that's a great one too.
Awesome, guys.
Okay.
What are some of your hobbies?
Oh, well, like I mentioned, I like to snowboard.
I like to snowboard.
I'm a big sports guy.
So I love playing basketball, football, ultimate frisbee.
And, uh, jiu-jitsu is a big passion of mine that I stopped doing for two years,
but recently got back into.
So that's what I like to do outside of work.
then hang out with my family.
Love watching my kids learn.
He's my little,
my little guy,
JJ,
starting to learn how to ride a bike.
So that's fun.
So,
yeah, hobbies.
Let's see.
Man,
snowboarding.
We love snowboarding.
Actually,
everyone on our team
snowboards,
so we're super excited this winter
to have this
scale out team,
be able to go take them
and get out in the mountains.
I'm really passionate about my dogs.
One of our Airbnb's is actually named after,
you know,
one of my dogs.
And then I love coffee.
Man,
we spend a lot of time of coffee shops.
I spend a lot of time of coffee shops too.
For those watching on YouTube,
you might just,
you might just notice that a half naked man just walked into my seashed.
This is Josh Doran.
Yeah, he says you're ripped.
You are kind of ripped.
What's been going on, man?
Look at this guy.
This is Josh Dorkin, found our bigger pockets.
Crazy.
What's up everybody?
Is this what happens when you drink beardy brew coffee?
Is that what Josh is on?
When you drink beardy brew coffee, yeah, Josh Dorkin shows up your house.
It's amazing.
No, I'm saying Josh looks like he's been juicing.
Oh, that's the body you get if you get on that coffee bean.
That's funny.
Yeah, and beard hair.
Just to clarify the coffee love.
I told Noah I wouldn't let him get out of this show with saying he's a coffee lover.
He's a white chocolate mocha drinking coffee lover.
He's not a pourover dip coffee type of guy.
So just to clarify.
Well, I was a peppermint hot chocolate guy forever.
And then I had to force myself off that.
Now I'm a coffee drinker.
So there's hope for you still, Noah.
There's hope for you.
That's funny.
Yeah, Josh was picking up a surfboard.
He texted me and said he's going to come grab one of my surfboards.
So that was him randomly dropping it on.
the podcast. Yeah, no shirt and everything. Yeah. So if you guys are listening to this right now
on like your podcast, you should go check out the YouTube video and just fast forward to the end
and say hi to Josh and see how Ripdi is. All right. Yeah, that's what financial freedom does for you
right there. You see a lot of time to work out. With that said, we got to move on to the last question
of the day. Wait, you both answered. Yeah, you both answered. Okay. So last question of
the day from me, what, and you can each answer to this separately if you want, what separates
successful real estate investors from all those who give up, fail, or never get started?
For me, yeah, it's action, consistency, and humility.
One, you got to take action, you got to get started.
Don't get stuck in analysis paralysis.
Two, consistency.
You can think about it all day long and you can take action, but if you don't follow it through,
nothing comes.
Three, this is a big life lesson for me was humility.
For me, I'm a believer in Christ, and God really corrected me in my humility.
You got to be humble and you got to just understand that all the blessings that we have in life
come from God.
And so you got to reciprocate that out into the world.
If you haven't read, go give her, read it.
It will change your life.
So action, consistency, humility.
That's how I try and operate in my daily life.
And Noah?
Okay.
I would say you have to start with the end in mind.
So what is it that you're actually trying to achieve?
And then you need to break it down into little tiny chunks that make it a little bit more easy
to absorb and to take action on.
So start with the end of mind, break it down, go backwards, and then decide what it is
you're going to do today to get started. Okay, last question of the day. Where can people find out
more about you? If you guys want to find out more about us, and if you want to get that downloadable
spreadsheet where we talk about breaking down how to analyze out-of-state markets, you can actually
go to Noah and jeff.com. We're also really active on social media, so you can find me at Noah Evans
underscore real estate. And Jeff, what's your Instagram? I am Jeff underscore Fossin, F-A-W-S-O-N, keeping it
simple. All right, guys, thank you so much. This has been a great interview, and I'm glad that I got
to meet each of you. We're going to let you get out of here. This is David Green for Brandon
Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu on the beach Turner. Signing off. Thank you all for listening to the
Bigger Pockets Real Estate podcast. Make sure you get all our new episodes by subscribing on YouTube,
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I'm the host and executive producer of the show, Dave Meyer. The show is produced by Ian K,
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