BiggerPockets Real Estate Podcast - 564: Difficult Tenants, Taking on Investors, & Leaving a Safe Job for Real Estate | Q&A w/Rob Abasolo
Episode Date: January 30, 2022Bad tenants? Funding hiccups? Scaling too fast? These are just some of the problems real estate investors have to deal with every day. What’s the prize for all this work? Financial freedom, pers...onal fulfillment, and the time to do what you want, with who you want, wherever you want! It’s no surprise that real estate investing is one of the best ways for the average person to build wealth. But what do you do when things go wrong? Expert investor, agent, lender, and podcast host, David Greene, is joined by short-term rental pioneer and YouTube personality, Rob Abasolo, to answer questions from rookie and veteran investors. These questions are thrown at our experienced hosts without any prep, allowing them to come up with quick solutions that could answer a question you’ve been wishing someone would ask. David and Rob touch on topics that almost every investor will deal with, such as: how to take on private money for the first time, creative ways to fund your rehab, tips for setting up a short-term rental, when to quit your job and pursue real estate full-time, and how to get rid of headache tenants. In This Episode We Cover: Should you own real estate in an LLC or in your personal name? How to legally (and ethically) raise private capital for real estate deals The best ways to fund a rehab, especially when you’re low on cash The biggest mistake that short-term rental hosts make when setting up their first rental Valuing your time vs. money and when to quit your W2 Inheriting tenants and what to do when renters won’t pay on time (or at all) And So Much More! Links from the Show BiggerPockets Youtube Channel BiggerPockets Rent Estimator BiggerPockets Forums BiggerPockets Talent Search BiggerPockets Rental Property Calculator BiggerPockets Pro Membership Submit Your Questions to David Greene David Greene Team David’s Instagram David’s BiggerPockets Profile Click here to check the full show notes: https://www.biggerpockets.com/show564 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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This is the Bigger Pockets podcast show.
564.
That's what happened to me.
I could not scale my Airbnb stuff.
I couldn't scale my YouTube platform.
I couldn't scale anything because I was working 40 hours a week.
And so I had to make that decision.
It's time to quit because it's actually holding me back.
And the moment that I quit my full-time job,
I was making $110,000 at this job.
I significantly, by many factors, increased my salary that same week.
And it's because I got 40 hours a week back to focus on everything that I was talking about.
What's going on, everyone? It is David Green, your host of the Bigger Pockets podcast, where it's our mission to teach you how to become financially free through real estate.
Now, we believe that real estate investing is the best way for ordinary people to build wealth.
And we prove it by bringing you stories of people who started out right where you are right now.
Then we apply the simple but not easy framework.
Look, real estate investing is definitely not rocket science, but that doesn't mean that it's easy.
It's consistent steps in a positive direction that will get you big results over time.
Here today is my amazing co-host, Rob, Abasolo.
Rob, we tag team some live questions from listeners who throw stuff out us and we don't know what's coming.
Oh, yeah, man.
No soft balls today.
It was all curve balls.
But I think, you know, really nice, man.
I think it's really interesting to kind of hear what other people are struggling with because we've all been there.
I've been there.
Like every single question that we had, I was like, oh,
this is how I feel every day, you know.
But when you get to examine problems from the outside and you kind of step outside of your
personal situation, it kind of helps you really diagnose a problem much quicker than if you're
in it, you know?
I think that's why it's so valuable to listeners because we get on our own head and we see
our own problems and we think we're the, this is the only part of real estate.
Then you hear somebody else dealing with something who's successful and you're like,
oh, I dealt with that long time ago and you realize I actually am making progress or I'm
not the only one who's going through that.
So today we answered questions regarding should I start an LLC or should I do things in my own name and how do I know which way to go?
We had a guest who bought several properties at one time and is trying to figure out I have this much capital.
How do I know which property to put it towards and what order should I be moving in to get these things rehabbed and rented out?
We had a guest who stuck with tenants that aren't paying their rent on time and they're sort of held hostage because they couldn't evict them during the moratorium.
But now they're able to and they're trying to figure out, well, should I keep the property?
or should I keep the tenants and they weren't sure to do.
Did you have any that stood out to you that you thought were particularly insightful?
Yeah, definitely.
Well, I mean, you know, not necessarily insightful.
More just like, I feel you, man.
I feel you.
Like we had one guest who called in and, you know, really trying to decide if he's making a very
nice six-figure salary.
And he's like, should I quit this or not?
And, you know, as someone who's been there myself, I really resonated with that because
I just quit my full-time job back in April.
So it really feels like, you know, like, you know, he reminds, David, he reminds me of a younger me, you know.
That was coming.
Yeah, and you gave some remarkably good advice on that.
Everyone definitely makes sure that you listen all the way to that.
Because that's probably other than should I get an LLC or should I do it in my own name.
The question at the front of everybody's brain is should I keep my job?
Should I leave my job?
Should I get a different job?
When should I quit my job?
Most people are here on bigger pockets because they want to have a lot.
life that is fueled by real estate, not by a W-2 job and clock it into a cubicle.
And so this type of stuff is very relevant.
And I think we gave him a really good path to figure out at this point, you're good to go.
And that was a very talented person too.
So, you know, that's nice to see how many of these people on Bigger Pockets are actually
making progress.
So we will get to the show very soon.
But first, today's quick tip will be go to biggerpockets.com slash David and submit a question.
We want more questions from people like you.
We want to know what is on your brain.
What do you wish that we talked about on the show and we never actually get there?
Well, this is probably the only podcast I'm aware of outside of maybe Dave Ramsey stuff
where you can show up and you can actually ask the questions that are on your mind and everybody gets to hear it.
So please go there as well as biggerpockus.com slash live questions.
And you can be notified when we're going to be going live and show up and ask your question and get it answered.
I have an uncomfortable question for you.
If your rent collection drop to 80% next month, how long would your cash flow hold up?
What about 70% for the next three months? Would your cash reserves cover it?
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You've upgraded how to buy properties, but did your insurance get the memo?
When investors start scaling, insurance can't be an afterthought.
Most policies were designed for a single property, not multiple rentals, LLC ownership,
short-term stays, or properties mid-rehab.
That's where blind spots can creep in.
NREG works exclusively with real estate investors.
They understand portfolios, how risk compounds as you grow,
and why insurance should protect your upside, not just a checkbox.
One uncovered claim can undo years of progress.
Before your next acquisition, review your insurance.
Talk to NREG and get investor-specific coverage from specialists who actually understand real estate at NREG.com slash BPPod. That's N-R-E-I-G.com slash B-P-P-Pod. Anything you want to add before we get out of here? Get onto the show. Yeah. How do we get a backslash? I want a biggerpockets.com slash rob. Can we get on that? Can we make that happen? Can we make that happen? Easy there. Grasshopper. All good things come to those who wait. Yeah. We were going to give me a backslash.
earlier, but we couldn't figure out what to call it. So we finally got here now.
Well, hey, David was a little on the nose, but I like it.
All right. Let's get to the first guest.
Maria Dennis, welcome to the Bigger Pockets podcast. You look so familiar.
Yes, David. How are you? This is so exciting. I'm good. How are you doing today? Or should I say
Camustaca? I'm very good. You know, very pleased to be here. I'm so excited to ask a question,
kind of nervous, to be honest with you.
This is the second time you've asked me a question in like the last week or so.
I believe you're in my mastermind.
You asked a question there.
Was it a week ago?
Maybe two?
It was a week ago, but it was a completely different question.
I'm just waiting for your book to happen.
So I can't wait to read that.
Awesome.
I'm learning a lot of things from the mastermind, by the way, just so you know.
I'm very glad to hear that.
Okay.
What can we do for you today?
So I wanted to ask you a question, particularly about investing.
So basically, like I said, I did really well last year, thanks to your book sold as an investor agent.
And I've used that like a Bible just so you know.
However, I'm in a position right now that I've worked with many investors.
A lot of them are really trusting me now in this industry because, you know, I try to bring as much value as I can.
And in my head, because I'm still an investor, I want to grow my portfolio.
and I feel like most of these investors wanted to invest with me.
So partnering up on real estate investing.
But my fear is, you know, I'm still kind of new in a game.
I'm afraid to take somebody else's money and take that leap.
So a little guidance is what I need to like, how do I do it?
How do I start now that I know what the agent side works,
but how do I do it legally that?
I'm benefiting and my clients are benefiting as well.
Now, are we talking about a deal specifically with the client you're representing them on or just overall borrowing other people's money?
Basically borrowing other people's money, maybe possible syndication or GP on something, just something big because I'm thinking this year I want to go big.
So you're looking for some kind of like framework that you can operate out of to get started.
Exactly.
Rob, you want to take first crack at this one?
Yeah, yeah.
Well, first of all, fundamentally, I think you got to think about what your mindset is around working with other people's money and like how you treat other people's money. For me, when I was getting started in this and I was working with different investors and everything like that, I really had this mindset where I treat an investor's dollar like it's four times more valuable than mine. So if I lose $100 for an investor, it feels like I lost $400 of my own money. That way, I make every decision very critically
strategically and I don't ever just like say, oh, it's not my money. It should pain you to lose
money for other people. And I really think that's an important way to kind of like level set when
you're starting to take on cash. From the second standpoint of working with investors and
everything like that, especially from a mindset, like a lot of people get very greedy and they're like,
oh, yeah, I'm doing all the work. I want 50% and all this kind of stuff. I used to be very
stubborn about that when I was like working with investors. I was like, I want 50% I'm doing all
the work. But what I quickly came to realize is that I am actually not the
someone that's incurring any risk. So I would say be very open-minded with what kind of structures and
partnerships and templates that you work through. Don't feel like you have to have 50%.
If you have to start with an investor and you only get 25% or 20% or 15%. I think the experience
that you're going to get out of your first investor deal will be a lot more valuable than any type
of equity split that you're going to actually have from that deal. That's a great point.
I mean, I think that's what I did when I became an agent.
I had that mindset of, you know, treating it as my own investing.
And I think that's how I became so successful that way.
I never thought of it as a dollar.
I thought of it more that will it work for my investor to make this work.
So thank you.
I appreciate that.
So when it comes to raising money, what I'm sensing is you don't have enough direction yet
on what you want to do with that money.
And so if you have like, hey, I can do anything.
you're going to do nothing. You've heard that phrase if you chase two rabbits, you'll catch none.
Well, this is like if you try to chase 200 rabbits, that's what we're kind of at.
So the first thing I think you need to do, Maria, is figure out where you feel the most comfortable
and the most competent investing yourself. You need to know the asset class, the types of deals in the area
that you feel very good about and start with that. All of the, what split do I get? What do they get
versus me? Like Rob said, that's not as important, especially on the first couple deals.
you knowing that you can go to someone and say, here is the plan is very important.
What people that are in your position do that are new is they go to a person who's very scared
about investing money and maybe also scared about real estate.
And they sort of say, well, what do you think we should do?
Which is the worst thing ever?
I tell people, it's like your first day as a firefighter.
And they're like, all right, the building's on fire.
And you're looking around like, where's the most experienced strongest firefighter?
I'm going to follow him.
And they go, I don't know what we should do.
I'm after you.
right. No one's running into that building with that. So you want to sort of provide that
clarity to the people that you're investing with. The most practical advice I could give you would
be start with where you're already helping clients. You know that market. You've helped them buy
deals before. I can tell you're confident investing there. So choose that market. Get yourself pre-approved.
Figure out what your down payment's going to be at the price point you want to be. And you know that's the
amount of money you have to raise. It probably won't be that big, at least for the first one.
So you could say, hey, I'm going to bring in 25%, you're going to bring in 75%.
I'm going to do this much work.
You're not going to have to do anything and we're going to split the profit 50, 50.
That might be a nice place to start.
And if they say, well, why do I have to give 75% if I'm only getting 50?
You could say, because I'm the one doing all the work and I have all the experience.
If we let you, if we switch roles and you do all the work, we're going to lose our money for
sure.
So that's probably where I would start with the deal.
and then as you get comfortable in that market, you'll start to get sort of the rhythm down of
looking at property, what to look for, what mistakes were made. You'll start to get more confident
about moving forward. Then you can start expanding into other markets or more expensive properties
or some of these syndications. Yeah, I think I want to echo that just a little bit, just because
for me, like I have found that when I'm working with investors, like having a clear framework is
pretty important. Like, I've had four or five or six, you know, tricks in my bag, if you will. And every
single time I come to an investor and they're like, all right, I've got, you know, $500,000.
What do you want to do with this? Well, the moment I give them all six options, like,
all right, so we can build a tree house. We can buy a house. We can rehab it. We can build a tree
house in that house and then rehab the house. The more options I give it, usually the investor starts
getting a little bit nervous because they're like, well, what is your thing? So very much agree
with David, that's like, whatever your one thing is, even if you're very good at multiple things,
I would really try to be as laser focused as possible because it's going to be very easy
for you to answer questions revolving around one strategy versus trying to answer questions around
six different investment strategies. And then now your investor's a little scatterbrain because
they have to think about, well, didn't you say you do this with this strategy and this and this?
And there's so much different explanation that comes along with like your rationale for how you do
things with every single type of investing model. So the more laser focused you can be, I think the more
confidence you're going to build an investor. Perfect. Well, that's great point. Thank you so much.
You know how when you go to a wedding, Maria, and they say, do you want the steak or the chicken?
Yep. It's a very easy decision. You just pick one right off the bat. You don't want a menu that has
40 things on it that will then prompt them to ask you questions on all 40 things and say,
well, now I need to go talk to someone else and see what they ordered. And I need to read the Yelp reviews.
You create way too much confusion and you'll never go anywhere.
Start with steak or chicken.
As you get that down, maybe there's two kinds of chicken.
You can sort of slowly expand, but that is way down in the future.
The best thing you could do is to stay in your area of competency, what you know very well,
the market that you know, and then you are an agent.
So people are going to trust you because you've represented other people before.
You'll do great.
I'm going to make that a sign.
Start with steak or chicken, David Green.
So do you see it?
is it better for me to just focus on that one investor that would bring value to me as well
in order to bring that deal or multiple investors to a sense where I have more capital
and then use that as a sense as I'm their main GP.
If you have too much capital, but you're not comfortable at where to deploy it,
you're going to feel pressure to buy properties that you don't want and that's the worst thing
ever. It's going to be like all these people are pushing you from behind and you have to jump
off a cliff, but you don't know which direction you want to jump in because you haven't gone to the
water below to see where it's shallow, where it's deep. That's not a good situation to be in.
You want to be able to take your time on the very first deal and know this is what I'm getting into.
I know what I'm diving into. I know that I can make it. And then as you learn, the areas that you're
diving into, you can slowly start to expand like what you're saying. Perfect. Thank you. Thank you so
much. This is awesome. Yes. I agree. Salamat.
Hey guys. Thanks for, thanks for doing this and having me on.
Big fan. So I appreciate the insight here. But my question is if you guys have your properties listed in an LLC or under your personal name, I'm currently getting, I'm under contract for my first single family short term rental deal. And I'm wondering whether I should keep it in my personal name or transfer the deed to my LLC.
because what I'm wanting to do is leverage the equity built in this first deal to purchase future
properties. And I know I could do a he lock if I kept it in my first name, but I don't know
if that's an option under an LLC. So I'm just curious your thoughts on how to leverage equity
and how to best set up a business for success. Yeah, I've got some thoughts. Well, let me start
with the caveat here. I'm not a lawyer. Neither is David. And this is not legal advice. But
In the past, anytime I've purchased short-term rentals, and this, honestly, this changes, like,
from property to property.
It really just honestly depends on how my attorney sort of instructs me on the state that I'm in.
But a lot of the times what we've done is we will purchase a property and then we'll do
what's called like a quick claim deed into the LLC.
Now, when you do that, it can trigger what's called the due on sale clause, which basically
means that the mortgage company, if they find out, can call your mortgage due and you'd have to
pay that back.
So there are some caveats and some things you'd want to discuss with your attorney in doing that
because that's always going to be a risk with doing a quick claim deed.
But there are really like a few schools of thinking here.
Like I've spoken to a lot of people that are seasoned hosts and have even talked to attorneys about this.
I mean, most of the attorneys that have spoken to typically want that LLC protection.
But a lot of the really seasoned hosts in the game will just have very good insurance,
like very good renters insurance, very good short-term rental insurance that can cover you.
and they may not necessarily have it under an LLC.
So I can't really speak to why one would do that or not.
But it basically depends.
Your mileage may vary.
And your attorney will probably instruct you a lot better than my nervous, sweaty answer here because I don't want to get sued.
No, I'm just kidding.
David, what do you think?
That was a really good general overview of some things to be concerned about.
Jordan, what are your specific concerns about your different options?
I mean, overall, the reason that I would want to use an LLC is just for protection.
Granted, I don't have a lot to protect right now because this is my first property.
I have a residential home, my own home, but I want to scale this and make this a business
and have multiple, multiple properties in the future.
So I kind of thought it was best to just set it up from the start.
And then that way I don't have to worry about it down the road.
So I guess that's a reason why I would use an LLC.
That's okay.
I think I see where we're going.
You're seeing how this first step is a foundation.
And then as you build this foundation up, if you get like 17 stories high,
you don't want to have to go back and restart over.
Is that kind of the fear?
Yeah.
All right, well, here's the good news.
It doesn't work that way.
You can move them back and forth pretty frequently.
Again, I'm not a lawyer.
So don't hear this and just say, David told me I could do it.
There's a way to go about it, right?
I have the strategy.
I tell the people like my CPA or an attorney, here's what I want to do.
They figure out how to do it.
I don't, I can't tell you how exactly to do it.
but I will tell you that I move properties around all the time from one form of title to another.
I would say one common misconception in my opinion is the belief that an LLC will protect you while having it in your name won't.
That comes from the understanding that if a property is held in a business, if you are sued,
they can only take the assets that the business has.
That's where we say, I'm protected, all right?
That's not always true.
There's many cases in court where a judge will look and say that LLC is managed by Jordan and is run by Jordan and is an extension of Jordan.
And therefore, they will do what's called piercing the veil of the LLC where they will say, if you're guilty, right?
Like you do something really, you leave a rabid dog in a house when someone gets bit.
They can come after you personally.
That LLC is not like this airtight.
I'm safe.
So I would let go of that.
It also creates a lot of complications with financing if you're trying to get fan.
May Freddie Mac products, which if you're new in your career, that's what you're trying to do.
So what I did and what I would say is a good option is buy them in your name and get more
homeowners insurance to cover you if you're worried.
So the policy will have protection against getting sued.
And if that's what you're afraid of, jack that thing up as high as you are comfortably
reasonable to handle, then you have to worry about the LLC.
Now, what happened in my career is I get to a certain point.
where I couldn't get those kind of loans anymore.
And I had to get commercial loans and the properties had to be in an LLC.
So then I had to switch into them.
But it wasn't that big of a deal.
I just transferred the title over there.
And also when this happens, the due on sale clause that Rob talked about is a concern.
It's not at this stage in investing.
It's not a practical concern.
But you could just refinance them.
That's what I did is I own them in my name.
I refinanced them into an LLC.
I got a better rate.
And the title was changed and I had no problem.
So I guess what I'm trying to highlight here is for everyone listening.
The whole should I take it in my name or in the LLC is not hard set in cement and you can never
change it.
It's probably the most over worried about question, I think, in all of real estate.
So I appreciate that you're asking it.
But you should just give yourself a side of relief because I don't think it's as serious as you think.
The advice I do want to give is the lending is what will be affected by how you take title.
So you want to ask your loan officer or the broker who's doing your loan, can I get the
loan if the title's in this condition or what would have to change so that it does?
And if you want to reach out to us, send me a message on Facebook Messenger or on bigger pockets.
I'm happy to put you in touch with my team.
And they'll get an idea of what you want to do.
And then they can say, do it like this.
Awesome.
Thanks, guys.
Yeah, I also got to say, like the shaved head and light screff thing you got going on,
I really like it.
You might be a little biased, though.
You might be a little biased.
Heck of a look you got going there, David.
Thanks, man.
Hi, guys.
Hey, there, Suzanne.
Hi, Suzanne.
Hi, how are you guys? Thanks for taking my call. My husband and I bought four duplexes long term,
not long term, long distance investing about a month ago. And we moved our contractor to
the area. So we have a great person to do the rehabs. I was wondering, is there any creative
financing so that we can get that rehab done until we get to the burr level? Because three of them are
empty right now. Okay. So if I understand this correctly, you have a couple rental properties.
Several of them are vacant. They need rehabs, but you don't have the funds to rehab them.
And they need to be rehab before you can refinance them. We have some funds, but I want to be able to
not be stressed about the funding. We have 25% of the investment loan equity. And then we have probably
50 to 80,000 sitting around to get started on these rehabs. But I was wondering, is there a loan
or is there besides a hard money loan,
is there another way to fund rehabs
or any creative investing ideas you have, David?
Yeah, I can start with this one.
The easiest answer would be
if you found private money from somebody else.
I guess the first thing I'm hesitating with
is if you have $50,000 to $80,000,
how much do you need for the rehab of the first house?
Our contractor said 40,
but that's not including like appliances,
cabinets.
Okay.
new hot water haters roofing.
So most of that money is probably going to go to the first property, right?
Right.
And then the other two are just going to be sitting vacant until you can do the work on those.
So did you buy three houses at one time?
Four duplexes.
And each duplex it's empty as in a different duplex.
So it's not like we can totally rehab one duplex and then burrow it out.
You'd have to do both of them is what you're saying.
Right.
So one thing I would consider would be do the,
the bare minimum to get a tenant in there.
So you're collecting rent on the ones you're not rehabbing.
And then the one you are rehabbing, you can put your funds towards that.
So it would look like get started on the first one, getting the first two units rehab so that you could refinance it and pull your money out.
During that time, have tenants and the other ones.
If you can use them as short-term rentals or medium-term rentals or whatever you have to do if it's a long-term rental.
So you have some income coming in and they're not just dying.
and then after you refinance the first one, you'll have money that you could put towards the next one.
And then that could be the money that you use. You don't necessarily have to borrow it.
So really all you have to do is solve the problem of how do you get the first one going.
Okay.
Do you have anything you want to weigh in there, Rob?
Yeah. I was just going to ask, well, A, any amount of cash flow is going to be no amount of cash flow.
And so I know it might seem like it's, you know, putting you further from your goal of having it all done if you can only get one rocking and rolling.
but, you know, it is a bit of a snowball effect. And regardless, I think you're going to get more value out of just getting one ready, rented, you know, refinance that you can start it. You just may not, I think like the big thing to understand here is you just may not get it all done at once and, you know, is going to have to be okay possibly. You know, a lot of people get these projects and they want to be able to like do everything and finish it and redo the pain and the appliances. But, you know, at the end of the day, there is no magical money printing.
machine, right? So we have to like understand, all right, we're going to have to make sacrifices.
Maybe we can't do the expensive wallpaper or the expensive laminated floors. And you'll just have to
kind of like be very budget friendly with how you approach renovating each specific one.
But I did have a follow up question on this. Since you have four duplexes now, I'm kind of curious.
Do you have any other properties in your portfolio?
I do. One's in a retirement fund. One is I just refited out and pulled some cash out to finish another
property. And then I have a duplex that we have that's completely renovated, but we're using it as
equity on a historic building that we're going to renovate, which is great because it has great
dollar for dollar tax credits once we get it approved through all the appropriate state and
federal. So we'll get a lot of tax benefits from refurbing that one. So it's kind of holding,
anchoring that property down so we can get a million dollar line of credit to finish that one.
Yeah, okay.
I mean, I'd have to dig into some of these details, but you may just have to focus on kind of
which of those properties, because it sounds like you have a lot going on.
Yeah.
So it sounds like you might have to focus on whichever properties are going to get you the biggest
kind of return or cash out so that you can then funnel it into the next one.
I mean, I know it's not the sexiest answer, but sometimes it is the waiting game in real estate.
right and these are going on simultaneously in two different states yeah you sort of just like
took a really big bite and you're like man how do i swallow this whole thing you got a lot of deals
going on at one time what stops you from taking a hard money loan to do the construction on the
first one rehabbing it pulling out the money putting that towards the next one rehabbing it pulling out
the money putting it towards the next one well i actually have a hard money lender i just hate to
feel like i'm going further upside down or
you know, it's a little hesitant because once you commit to paying something back or once you commit to, I'm only going to have it for this long. You're kind of committed there. And I want to be a person on my word. So do you worry about not being able to pay back the hard money loan? Right. Like getting it finished. And we just bought these properties a month ago. And the bank said it would take six months before you could pull out that burr on what the increased equity would be. So having a
it done, both sides done by then and then being able to get the loan at that time with another
major renovation going on on the historic property in another state. I'm just a little concerned about that.
I think this concern's not going to go away. This is just what happens when you buy this many
properties at one time. And that's not to put you down because I'm glad that you took action.
But I would say you probably need to lower your expectations of how quickly you're going to get your
money out of these that you're not going to hit it right on the six month mark. You're going to have to
take this big steak and cut it up into kind of like bite-sized pieces and you're not going to be able
to take the second bite until the first one's done. I have to do this all the time. This is a big part
of managing different businesses as I see all this opportunity come. And it becomes kind of complicated
because you realize, well, we can't do this one until this part gets done, but this is being held
back by this thing and this problem stopping all three of those from working. So it becomes a complicated
endeavor to try to keep all these moving pieces going and it sort of feels like a Rubik's cube.
You got to get all of them lined up just right.
I want to sort of encourage you that this does not mean you did something bad or wrong or you're
a bad investor.
You just bought a lot of properties at one time and you don't have enough resources to add to all
of them.
So what Rob and I are really talking about is how do we stop the bleeding?
How do we get some tenants in the ones that you can't fix to buy you some time?
Focus your resources on one, maybe two if you possibly could, but probably one.
get it stabilized and move on to the next one and give yourself grace that it's not all going to
happen perfectly. Here's what will likely happen. Okay. You're starting off at like ground zero and you're
looking at how I can build my equity in my passive income. You're probably going to dip down from ground
zero before you go back up. And you have to be okay. This happens to me all the time. It's very hard,
but it's an emotional problem. It's not an actual logistical one. You have funds. You have money.
You have access to loans. You can do this. You have
to release in your heart this idea that it shouldn't go bad. Like this happens to me. I just bought a
$1.8 million place and the tenant was supposed to the, I bought it from the owner and he decided
not to leave. And it was costing me 10 grand a month for this mortgage and I can't even start
construction. And then not only would the owner not leave, but we couldn't send anyone to the house to get
measurements to submit to the city for permits. So we fell behind on that too. And then finally he gets out
of there. And now my contractor had taken another job. Okay. So now like every one of these delays is
$10,000 a month, it just keeps adding up.
And I'm looking at like, my goodness, like every month I'm losing money.
And if that's all I see, I'll never invest.
But when I look back at this five years later, I'll say, yeah, it just took me six more
months or nine more months before I hit the profit I was expecting.
And over a 30 year period of time, who cares?
It's when we only look at right now that you feel like crap.
You're probably not sleeping that well.
It's on your mind all the time.
You feel like you screwed up.
You're like, why am I even doing this?
A lot of people would have those emotions.
it's okay to let something get worse before it gets better.
And here's the bright side.
Most likely you probably got these houses at a good price.
So you probably had some built in equity when you walked into it.
During this period of rehabs, to you is going to feel unreasonably long and like you're losing money because you suck.
You're actually going to be making money as they're appreciating in value.
Okay.
Like there's always something that balances it out and you're like, oh, that actually worked out great.
our brains just harbor in on that one mistake and we miss the, you know, the several things
working in your favor. Right. Thank you so much. Yeah. And, you know, I also want to bring up that it's not
like a loss. It's not like a bad thing if you have to sell something. You know, I like to hold. Obviously,
I'm sure David likes to hold too. But, you know, if you have to sell one of these duplexes to get your
25% back, that's fine. Like, I would rather you feel very comfortable and safe with 25% down to
finish three of your duplexes, then you hold on to them and bleed out from the funds, right?
So I might consider that. Like it might be a break-even. You might lose a little bit. I'm not
100% sure on that. But that's always an option. And that's not a loss. That is, it's actually
very smart and strategic in a situation where you're not sure how you're going to pay for any of
these rehabs. That's an idea I hadn't thought of or maybe get the first one done and sell it.
Yes. There you go. And then that could fund the rest of them. I,
I had a comment or I was going to ask you a couple of questions.
Did you have questions you wanted to get answered before we wrap that up?
No, that kind of answered my questions.
I'm a little nervous about taking the hard money loan because I've done that before
and it took a little longer to pay back than I had originally planned.
But that all worked out.
I'd be interested to hear what you have to say or your advice, David.
Do I have your permission to go a little deep here?
Yes, absolutely.
I think this will help a lot of listeners.
All right.
So what you just said right now absolutely supports what I was going to ask where you said,
I was nervous to take out a hard money loan because I've done it before and I went longer than
expected.
And I've noticed this theme has come up with almost every question you have is there's an
expectation of how it should work.
And if it doesn't go according to that plan, you get very nervous and anxious.
And it's almost like there's emotional pain that's associated with I messed up.
I didn't do it right.
And I wanted to ask you.
did you have an experience when you were younger with a like a parent or a person that was important to you that was a perfectionist?
And it was not unfamiliar for you to be reminded that you were not up to par and you made mistakes and you needed to be better.
I would say not parent wise, but I've been really tough on myself of meeting my own expectations.
And I'm probably my heart is critic on meeting goals, meeting deadlines, meeting financing, that sort of thing.
but not parent-wise, no.
So that usually comes from some form of relationship.
Could be someone you dated, could be someone a sibling.
Who knows where it comes from?
But there's usually a feeling that I'm not enough.
I don't measure up.
And in order to get rid of that, we start telling ourselves,
you need to be better, you need to do more.
And here's why I'm bringing this up right now.
It's affecting your ability as a real estate investor.
Because these things that you're talking about,
nobody would be expected to hit all of these timelines perfectly.
Like, real estate just doesn't work that way.
And as you're thinking, I got to get both of these birds done exactly at the six-month thing.
That perfectionism is starting to cause emotional pain, which stops you from taking action
and keeps you like spending energy that could be used to solve problems.
And instead, you're just feeling bad about yourself and you're using that energy to try
to protect yourself from bad feelings.
So as crazy as this might sound because it's not practical advice, if you could identify
where that started, what relationship it came from or where you picked up this habit,
it like, I don't know. Maybe like, let's say I got cut from a sports team and I felt horrible and I had
to watch all my friends playing basketball and I didn't get to play anymore. And I made that
agreement with myself that I will never again let myself not be the best or not be good. I don't
want to feel this anymore. And that perfectionism takes root and then I carried around my whole
life. Well, it stops me from ever playing another sport because I'm afraid like what if I find out I'm not
good enough. That's an example from my life. I don't know yours. But if you can identify where that's
coming from and forgive that person or forgive yourself or just say, hey, no one ever said,
I have to be perfect.
There is no perfect.
Outside of Rob's hair right now, perfection does not exist.
All right.
And I really think that if you can release whatever that is, a lot of these questions that
you're asking us here, the solutions will hit you.
It's like they're probably right there in front of you, Suzanne.
There's a source of money or there's a solution to this deal or there's a way that you
can figure out this problem very easily and you just can't see it because you're putting
all this energy into feeling bad about yourself because you're not being perfect. And I just want to,
if no one else tells you, I want to tell you, this is normal. They never go perfect. Like we,
we have another caller on this show and we talk about how he's terrified of like, what if I miss
something? Like, you're going to miss something. There's no way you're not going to miss something.
Everybody misses something all the time. Like that shouldn't stop you from wanting to move forward.
You shouldn't be feeling fear and pain and anxiety over that. And I can see that that's a great thing.
It's probably one of the best parts of you as a person is you don't let people down. You probably
always show up for them. But if you're holding your seat,
to that same standard. If you can't let yourself down and doing anything less than perfection
as letting somebody down, you got to adjust that standard and stopping you from being able to hit
your potential when it comes to investing. If you're buying this many properties at one time,
you're a person meant for greatness. You're going to go do great things. So change your definition
of greatness from perfect to really good. Okay. Sounds great. Thank you, Suzanne. Thanks so much.
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Hey, thank you guys so much for taking me on as a guest. Big fan of both your content.
So it's a great experience for me. So I just recently got my first short term rental under
contract in Blue Ridge, Georgia. I'm not taking the advice of staying in my backyard, which I know
Rob would be shaking his head at, but it's just a market I really liked and wanted to jump into.
Well, first off, Scott, Rob says to stay in your own backyard because he's got 17 backyards.
He moves all over the place all the time. So fair, fair, fair point. Yeah, that's true. That's a
good point. He's all over the country. So I guess that's easy for him to say, right?
You never know you'll find me. But yeah, anyway, I'm the plan for.
me would be to essentially pack up my car. I want to get down there to see the property in person
and then putting together my shopping list for Amazon, Costco, and then the plan is essentially
to just start purchasing things, work remotely there for a couple weeks, you know, get my cleaner
in my photographer in, and then once I go live, just make my drive home. I've done all the research,
watched all the videos, but I still just have this big pit in my stomach that I'm going to get
down there and realize I forgot something or that I'm just going to slip in my preparation
somewhere end up being there way longer than I thought. So just like hearing my initial plan,
was wondering if you two had any kind of like things like keep in mind type things or just like
any kind of guidance or advice, if any part of my plan strikes you as a bad idea. I know you both
have short-term rentals, Rob, I know it's your specialty. So just looking for a little validation
slash like any kind of guidance because I've done all the preparation I can,
but I still just can't shake this like pit in my stomach that I'm going to be halfway
down there and be like,
what am I doing?
I made a mistake.
So just anything you guys have to say.
I'll say two things.
The first is that's normal,
what you're feeling.
It doesn't mean you did anything wrong.
Everybody feels that.
The second thing I'll say is I don't think there's a better person I could possibly
advise you to talk to than Rob.
So I'm going to let him jump in and tell you everything that he's thinking.
because he's probably the best person I know at this type of a question.
All right. Let's dive in.
Okay, so here's a good news, bad news.
Good news is, or bad news, let's start with the bad news.
You are going to forget something.
You're going to forget a lot of things.
That's the bad news.
The good news is, it's okay.
You know why?
Because you can buy anything anywhere.
And honestly, like, Blue Ridge is a really great market.
Did you buy your place fully furnished by any chance or was it an empty house?
Yeah, it's pretty much fully furnished.
Like, the main things are taken care of.
But I know there's like still stuff I'm going to want to add.
So I'm still putting together in my shopping list.
So it won't be like huge assembly full furnishing, but I still plan to spend like at least a few thousand to just make it like as perfect as I can and just make sure I'm not like cutting corners up front trying to like cheap out.
I want to make sure I like I'm really going all in to make this like a great stay.
Awesome.
Well, you know, biggest mistake I see hosts make is not.
They don't splurge, especially in these situations.
They're like, oh, it's Blue Ridge or the Smoky Mountains.
It's already fully furnished.
There's nothing to worry about here.
I'll just like kind of come and like, you know, change a thing here. And they kind of cheap out. And that's what really ends up biting you in the butt. So I'll say this. I mean, you know, your short term rental is really not going to be ready for the first three months of hosting. And that's just like the truth. Like even with me, I've got like a bunch of resources that I put out there. It sounds like you probably have my shopping list. If you don't, I have a shopping list that's out there. Great. And you're going to buy all those things. And you're going to, you're going to think you're ready to go. It's going to be fully first. And it's going to be fully first. And
You're going to be like, ah, I did it. And then like, you know, one month in, you're going to have a guess that's like, hey, the Roku's not working. And then you're going to think, oh, my goodness, like, I didn't set that up. How did no one ever flag this beforehand? So the good news is that when it's like a brand new listing and people understand that, they're typically pretty flexible. I mean, you might have to refund people like 50 to 100 bucks here and there because, you know, the Roku remote didn't have batteries. And that was.
one thing you forgot, but that's fine. Like, use your first set of guests as an opportunity to
optimize your listing. Anytime a guest checks in, hey, how's everything? This is a brand new listing,
by the way. So if you have any feedback, please let me know. Like, I want to make this a five-star
experience. And rather than just like, you know, fixing that or addressing that feedback after
they've checked out, try to fix it right then and there. Anytime a guest brings anything up to me,
I will usually Amazon Prime something to them like overnight it if I can or I'll just pay the extra shipping to have it there. And like I'm able to solve problems like very, very quickly. So don't feel like it has to be like perfect. Just so long as there's a couch, there's a bed, there's a TV and a toilet. That's all people really care about. Right. So you can like optimize as you go. Obviously you want it to be as ready to go before you go live. But it's just it's just not how short term rentals work. And,
That's going to be like the big nuance between a long-term rental where you don't have to
furnish at all in a short-term rental where, you know, you have to buy 2,000 things. So you're,
you're correct in feeling this pit in your stomach because that's how it always feels when we get
started. But it is the way it goes. Even me having done this, I've set up 25, 30 Airbnb's at this
point. I forget stuff all the time. And it's always like a little thorn in my side. But that is just,
it's part of the process. And really the only way that you can get better at becoming an
Airbnb host or really just like being like the best Airbnb host out there, an expert is you kind of
have to forget things and you have to learn things the hard way. So like, you know, as much as I want you
to have like a very seamless and perfect experience, I kind of want you to like fall down every so
often, have some bumps and bruises, because that's what makes us a better host. So, you know,
conceptually, your plan here does work. If you're going to move out there for a couple weeks,
great. I've set up all my Airbnbs in a weekend. So, you know, already your steps ahead.
ahead of me. If you're staying there for three weeks, awesome. One big warning I'm going to give you
is that 99% of the work that you're going to be doing is on the final three days. I just know that.
So, you know, like try to really space it out as much as you can. But anytime I have like two or three
weeks that I'm going to set up in Airbnb, it all happens like down to the wire when I'm leaving.
So as long as you kind of know that going in, maybe it'll help you kind of hustle throughout the
whole time. But yeah, there's no downtime, man. So it's like,
very stressful in the moment, but it's a very big laughing experience after the fact. And it's a
very happy thing once you actually have those professional photos in hand. And you smile and you're
like, man, I made this. So with that, thank you for coming to my TED Talk. Sorry, you have any
other, any follow up questions on anything I said? Yeah, first of all, thank you for the guidance,
makes you feel a little better. And yeah, I was going to just use my phone to take like the photos of
the listing. That's like, cool of you, right? Yeah. I know. I know. I know. I know.
you're messing with me. I know you're messing with me. No. You know, to get it up and running, it's fine. I do say
that. But yes, pay that $300 to the professional photographer. You'll make that back in the first week.
Yeah, absolutely. I got some reserve set aside. So I want to make sure that I'm like not choosing to
cut corners on the little things, you know, go with the furniture that's durable, get the pictures I really like,
you know, just try to like make it so I can I can charge a reasonable amount and cover my expenses by a bit.
And yeah, hopefully this is my first of many.
But yeah, huge fan of all the content you guys put out.
I've like binge-wash everything you've put out, Rob, David,
reread your books a million times.
So I just want to thank you guys both.
And don't be surprised if you see me continuing to pester you on Instagram because I
tend to do that to both of you here and there.
So really appreciate it, guys.
We encourage it, man.
Yeah, you're going to crush it, dude.
Right on, Scott.
Thanks, guys.
Tyler, coming live from the 1920s.
It looks like you're in black and white there.
Yeah, unfinished basement office is what it is.
And it kind of plays a part into this story, I guess.
So just looking for a little bit of guidance or thoughts from you guys, big fans of yours too,
but quit my job back in 2018, pursue real estate as a realtor,
which did pretty good my first few years here and wasn't looking for employment.
We bought our first property, and now we have two more that we bought, and then we have about
eight more units that we're negotiating on.
But taking this job about seven months ago, which is a, I mean, it was a pretty big opportunity
averaging about on track to make 160K a year doing it.
But it's been affecting, you know, like my mental health, essentially, family.
I mean, it's been, it's been tough.
And then the hours have been really tough in the sense of we have seven doors right now.
two of them are occupied. We have two remodels going on right now, one that's getting wrapped up, two that are like down to the studs right now, and then a single family house that's on the back burner. It was a cheaper cash purchase, so not a big deal. But we're seeing it affect our scalability or our growth in our real estate side. My wife and I have kind of already talked about it. We're kind of like to the point where we need to look at what, why did we quit our jobs in 2018 to begin with?
So we didn't really seek out employment opportunity, but just kind of wanted to get your guys'
thoughts and see what you guys' thoughts on that were.
So are you questioning like if it's worth keeping the job because it's like affecting
your mental health and?
Yeah, no, I don't think it's worth keeping the job just because it's affecting my real estate
business too.
And we want that to grow.
That's why, I mean, 90% of people that are on the podcast or that are in real estate,
do it for family usually or whatever it is.
everyone around us kind of thinks, you know,
most of the people around us are not in real estate and investing in it.
They think it's crazy to leave a job that's, you know, paying, you know,
six figures and wife stays home.
And we've got a pretty comfortable life doing it.
But we were comfortable before.
So it's like, is that extra income worth it, you know?
Let me ask you this.
Like, are you a salaried employee, hourly employee?
How does that work for your job?
It's a straight commission.
Oh, okay.
Cool, cool.
And what is the line of work?
work at territory manager for an HVAC distributor essentially. So dealing with dealers and, you know,
selling HVAC, which is I was in the trades. I was on the dealer side of it before. That's when I left because
that was, I mean, labor intensive as well. But we're just seeing in effect. I mean,
the biggest thing is it's affecting our rental portfolio. Okay. Well, I guess there's a couple
things here. You know, it sounds like if you're on commission for the most part and you're making
$160,000, it sounds like you're very good at your job. And it also sounds like you're giving like
all of your mental health to your job and you're just absolutely crushing it. You know,
I would say that it's, it sounds likely that, you know, someone else's 100% effort is pretty
close to your 20, 30 or 40%. So typically when I find people in this scenario,
it's they're working too hard and they don't have to. They all want to be a good employee and they all
want to serve their company and I get that. But at the end of the day, I don't know, this is kind of
unconventional advice. So David, I'm going to see my wealth grow than the company at work. You know what I mean?
Yeah. And at the end of the day, I'm always like, you know, you don't have to like come guns blazing
into work with like just the greatest performance all the time. I think it's okay sometimes to not give
everything you have to a job so that you can give that leftover energy to your side hustle.
And so I would say, look, I'm not really going to sit here and tell you to quit a $160,000 job,
especially if that pays the bills and it's covering all your debt service.
But I am going to say, like, maybe don't, like, don't work so hard on it, you know?
Like, try to, like, perform.
If you're on commission, maybe take on less leads or less lead generation and cut back
on your time and hours in that job so that you can at least not.
dislike the real estate side of your job. Because at the end of the day, like, it sounds to me like
you want to do real estate. What I don't want is for you to not have the cash to fuel that.
And it's not fun. It's not fun to work a job that you don't want to. I did it for a long time.
I was in advertising for 10 years. I had a great team and great company behind me. But towards the
end of it, I was like, I am not going to let this company be my identity. And I kind of
melded in a little bit. But in doing that, I was absolutely crushing it on the real estate side of
things to the point where I overcompensated and when I quit, I was making a lot more money on
the real estate side of things than I was at my company. So I don't know. If that's an option to
just maybe cut back on hours or the leads that you're taking on, I might try to transition
slowly versus just like cold turkey quitting my personal advice. But David, what do you think?
Let me ask you with your portfolio, what do you have going on there that you don't have enough
time to get to? Well, so contractors are an issue with, you know, everybody.
But yeah, so having the vacancies is obvious an issue.
You know, we're not, we're not upside down on them.
We have enough cash flow coming in to cover even the vacancies we do have.
But we just want to see it scale faster.
And we kind of feel like if I left, like I said, I didn't pursue this job.
They came to me and offered me the position.
And I was like, I told them no at first and probably should have stuck with that answer to begin with.
Because I don't need the job.
But, you know, we just, we kind of thought, oh,
having that job is going to maybe make us be able to scale real estate, but actually we've seen
it be more of a hindrance. Even though that the money's there, the time to put into the real estate's
not, you know, working 12, 13 hours a day in this job, make it, you know, when you convert the hourly
rate, I might as well be working 100% on my real estate portfolio at that point. You know what I'm saying?
And I guess I don't really know what I'm looking for as far as, you know, we kind of know where we,
where we want to be with things.
And like last year,
we took an RV trip for a month and a half.
Can't do that now.
So we want that time freedom back.
But at the same time,
we want to continue to scale,
which we've got good relationships with lenders and everybody that we can still
buy properties.
We've got plenty of capital to back it as well.
You know,
we've got,
we've got liquid cash,
plus we got like 250K and line of credit that we can purchase property.
So here's what I,
here's how I would simplify this.
In order to build a real estate portfolio,
you need capital or money, time, and then opportunity, or maybe you can make skill.
You have to know what you're doing.
So assuming you have skill, then you have to have like opportunity.
So deals, okay?
The job is offering you money, but it's taking away the energy.
It doesn't sound like when I say take away your time.
That's a better way.
Right.
It doesn't sound like opportunity is a problem for you.
And if you're telling me that the only value that the job is offering is money, but you already
have money, then it's a stumbling block.
It's getting in your way of your goal.
What Rob was saying earlier was under the assumption that maybe you need this money.
We kind of assume that's why you have the job because why else you'll be doing it, right?
So here's what is most likely going on with you.
And I have to deal with this all the time in my own life.
And so that's why I recognize it.
You're getting something out of that job of knowing you're good at it.
They wanted you.
You told them no.
they kept coming. You know you're skilled. You know you're good at sales. It feels really good
every time you hit that number or you see your name at the top of a list. And what you're actually
doing is you're trading your time for that. You're telling yourself it's for the money, but it's not because
you have access to lines of credit and money in other areas. So that will sort of make this a much more
easy decision for you to make if you recognize that the real reason I'm working there is the
recognition I'm getting or the feeling of significance because they need me. I don't know. You'll,
you can figure that part out talking to your friends about it.
But if you don't need the money, you don't need the job.
So all we have to be figuring out now is how do you decide if you want to cut back your hours,
like Rob said, or if you want to leave the job completely.
And maybe you leave that door open, right?
Maybe you go scale your portfolio and then you, I mean, honestly, gets a point of buying rental properties like I did where that actually stopped being fun.
I don't want another single family house.
I can't do this anymore.
And I wanted to go take another job and do another thing.
So beware of that as well.
But this habit of understanding, like, is this helping me with my goal that we're walking through
right now will serve you no matter what stage of your career you're in?
Yeah, I do have a POV now.
Now that I have a little bit more context, what I have always told people, because this was very
true for me.
And of course, your mileage may vary.
But I say like with the whole job thing that, you know, a lot of people that want to get into
real estate and they say, okay, I want to quit my job.
And I'm like, okay, well, first, you know, you have to work that job.
to get to the point where you are making the maximum amount of money doing that and working
your W-2 or your full-time job.
And so when I start thinking about when I should quit my job or when that actually becomes
like a real opportunity is the moment that you can no longer scale, you can physically,
you can literally not scale until you quit your job.
And it kind of sounds like that's where you're at.
So that's what happened to me.
I could not scale my Airbnb stuff.
I couldn't scale my YouTube platform.
I couldn't scale anything because I was working 40 hours a week.
And so I had to make that decision.
It's time to quit because it's actually holding me back.
And the moment that I quit my full-time job,
I was making $110,000 at this job.
I significantly, by many factors,
increased my salary that same week.
And it's because I got 40 hours a week back
to focus on everything that I was talking about.
So it sounds like you need your time back to me.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I think that, yeah, I think that gives a little more comfort to it too.
I mean, right now we have two, four units that are pretty much going to be under contract
and then another 25 unit storage facility too that we're working on.
But we've got the deal flow.
We know how to find deal.
I mean, I've, you know, before I even quit my job, I got my four-year education on bigger
pockets, you know, just working in my work truck every day and putting the podcast on.
So we've got the knowledge and we've got the capital built up.
You know, we flipped houses all through while both my wife and I were working.
But once we had kids, it was like, hey, we got to do something where we're trading,
I think it was just on a podcast recently.
We're trading five days a week just to get to, you know, and then it's hindering our real estate too.
So I mean to give you some encouragement that will make this easier for you.
Yeah, let's hear, David.
We're in a highly inflationary environment.
What that means is that money itself becomes less valuable.
and assets become more valuable.
So you're actually putting the majority of your effort
into the thing that's giving you less of a return.
Saving up all that money is great,
but it's not worth as much as you think.
Right?
That $160,000 a year,
next year might be worth $15,000.
Next year it might be worth $95,000.
It's really bad.
And the properties that you could have been buying,
they're going to go up exponentially.
So this is actually something that is happening in my own life
where I'm recognizing inflation is just getting so bad
that I need to put less,
time towards making money and more time towards getting more assets under contract because that's
the smarter wealth building move. I like it. It's great. All right, Tyler. Thanks, man. This was
really good. Thanks, dude. Yeah, appreciate it. Hey, good luck, dude. I think you're close. You're close to
being where you need to be, my friend. Yeah. I think we're on the right track. So, appreciate it.
What's you got for us, Rachel? So calling in to get your advice on a property that I purchased last year.
It's a five-plex that sits on a bit of extra land where potentially we could build more units,
but I'm having some difficulty with the property.
Like I knew we were going to have some issues going into it.
The property wasn't in the best condition.
And I knew in that state the tenants that kind of came along with the property may have some issues as far as paying their rent, et cetera.
So since then we have continued to experience delinquencies.
and we just can't seem to get the property performing.
So I'm wondering, you know, at what point should I consider other options such as selling?
Well, let me ask a couple clarifying questions here.
When you say you can't get it performing, if we're just being straightforward and honest,
what's stopping it from performing?
Getting tenants on track with their rent payments.
Okay.
And I'm going to take you down a line of questions here that I'm going to let Rob jump in.
But if we're digging into why we're having a problem getting tenants on track with their rent payments,
payments. Why do you think that is? So one one issue is that the tenants have been there long term.
And I didn't have the opportunity to screen them. And I should have mentioned at the beginning that
this purchase was somewhat of a rush. I had a 1031 exchange and some proceeds from it that I had to
put into another deal. Yep. And I'll just let me jump in for everyone listening to this.
It still often makes sense to buy a deal with problems like this. If it's a 1031, this is one of the
reasons that people overpay for property when we're like, I'd never buy that. That's only a 4%
return. They're paying too much. No, not if they're saving $300,000 in taxes, they're not paying
too much. So different people are in different situations. I'll also say, in my experience,
landlords don't sell their property when they have good tenants. So almost every time that you're
buying a property that has tenants in it, you're buying a problem or the landlord wouldn't
be selling it. So, okay, go ahead and jump in where you basically inherited these bad tenants.
Do you feel that if you could get them out that your tenant base would be solid and it would be easy to find good tenants?
I believe so because that would give me the opportunity to, if everyone were out at the same time, to go in, we have it a little bit and then, you know, put potential tenants through a proper screening process.
But are the people that live there likely to be the kind of tenants you want to manage?
Are we talking about the current tenants or?
No, the ones you replace them with.
Yes.
People live in that area.
There's a lot of people there.
Is this like an oil field where you're going to have like a bunch of crazy people getting in fights in your tenant, right?
Is it like a rough and tumble area or is it pretty solid?
No, I wouldn't say that.
It's actually a university town.
So I see there's potential there.
Okay.
That's what I was worried about.
I was afraid that you just ended up with a property in a stinker location and there wasn't going to be much you could do to improve the experience.
But if it's just that you inherited some problem childs, I would say you should start down the path of,
of if they don't pay their rent, just going down the eviction road.
Possibly, like, once you get them motivated enough, they realize they're going to be evicted.
It's going to ruin their credit.
You could look into cash for keys.
I would say at this point, when you already have these bad habits in place, to try to change
their mind is just not going to happen.
They are used to having the landlord before you that let them get away with this type of behavior.
Now you asking for rent on time, in their head, they resent that.
They think you're being a jerk and you're being a tyrant, right?
And you're looking at it like, I'm letting you guys off the hook every single month.
You should be so grateful, but they're not.
The only way you reset expectations in this is a clean break.
So I would have a property manager and I would tell them I need to get the tenants out.
When they miss a rent payment, when they violate the lease, what options do I have for just saying we are not going to continue your lease?
And if you don't have enough funds to float it during that time, maybe you just systematically do this one by one.
Right. No, that makes sense. And I do have a property management company in place. We just haven't really made a lot of progress. I think because of where the property is located and the moratoriums that were in place and just the local laws, it's more difficult to get tenants out.
Yeah, I think I've, you know, I'm not super experienced on the long-term side of things, but with the long-term tenants that I have had, unfortunately, I think David's right here, which is like, once they, you know, have a track record of paying late, there really is no way to reverse that. So you may have to, I probably wouldn't go all at once because, you know, there might be not a statement, but if you evict one person over this, then maybe the other people in the property will, uh,
will start to, you know, shape up a little bit. But it does sound like you need a clean break on this.
I was just kind of curious. I mean, I would never really say like sell it or anything like that if
you can fix the problem, which I think you can. But I'm kind of curious, do you have equity in this
property that you could roll into a new property and, you know, kind of help you get to a property
that can maybe help compensate for this one at the same time? Right. At this point, probably not because I
bought it mid-year 2020. Oh, okay. And,
based on the condition of the property not being able to really go in and make repairs.
I don't think I'm going to see a lot of upside right now.
What about a refi?
Could you do a catch-out refi, put that money towards another property that makes money while this one's struggling?
I could.
I haven't actually looked into that yet because the purchase was so recent, but I can definitely
ask my lender.
That's what I would recommend.
That's when people come to us with these problems, that's like one way that we would look at it.
And I believe you'd have to have them double check and check with your CPA.
But you could probably pull the money out that you put in on the 1031 exchange on the refi without any kind of a tax penalty.
Okay. That's a good point to look into, actually. So you would just hang on and kind of try to turn the property around and play the waiting game.
There's always so many nuances when like, because this is kind of my job as people come to me with a property that they own and I give them advice on what we could do with that. Should we keep it? Should we sell it? There's a few things I look at. One is this comparison of return on equity versus return on.
investment. So all of us know about ROI. If I put this much money in the property, this is the
return that I will get. But you also have to look at the equity in the property and say, what
return am I getting on the equity? So a lot of the properties that I first bought, my ROI, when I bought
it was like maybe 12%. And with rent increases, it's at like 65, 75%, and I look like I'm crushing it.
Like, oh, I have 75% ROI. But then I look at the equity that's in the property and I'm getting a 2%
return on that money. It's terrible, right?
So the next question would become, I need to take the equity out of that property that's not working hard for me and put it somewhere else.
So there's two ways to do that, a refinance or selling.
If it's an area that I like that I believe will continue to appreciate where I'm going to get good tenants, I just want to own there, I look at the refi option first.
If it's an area that I don't like, or it's a property I don't like, like it just has a floor plan that is going to work.
It's on a super busy street that I'm always going to have a hard time getting tenants or something, then I look at the sell option.
So it's not a hard and fast rule.
Like it's not a computer code that you can just say, if this, then that.
But that's generally the path that I start looking at for clients.
And what you're saying is it sounds like this is a good area.
It's a good property.
It just has like the tenants are the problem, right?
So you don't have to throw the baby out with the bathwater, so to speak.
You just have to either tell your property manager very firmly.
I want the tenants out if they don't pay on time.
Can you do that?
And if they aren't helping you, just find another property manager.
and interview them and say, I need to get these tenants out so I can get people in the
pay on time and we can all make money? If I hire you, can you do that? Yep. No, that makes
total sense. Any last words, Rob? No, I really like the strategy. That's kind of what I was getting at
here. Like, if you can use this to get into another property that can help sort of carry the slack,
it's very rare that in 5, 10, 15, 20, 30 years, this property is not going to be it. Like,
it will always appreciate to the point where you're very happy that you held on to it.
So I think, you know, whatever you can do to sort of fix the problem or at least get you
to the point where you're not draining money every single month, if that means that you
replace the tenants or you get another property that just, you know, kind of carries the slack
here for the next few years, I would probably go that route before just kind of like, you know,
getting rid of the property or anything like that.
All right.
Well, reach out if either of us can help anymore.
And thank you for being on the podcast.
Thanks a lot.
Have a good money.
Bye, Rachel.
And that was our show.
that was a great time. We got some challenging questions thrown at us, but I think that we,
we help some people. What do you think, Rob? We did, man. I was sweating there. We got a couple
legal questions and I just, you know, in case you didn't sense my uneasiness, I do want, I do want to
say we are not attorneys or legal professionals. So make sure to, make sure to a consultant attorney
for anything that has to do with legal. Absolutely. But everything else, we want you to bring that to us.
So go to biggerpockets.com slash David, biggerpockets.com slash live questions.
Submit your question.
We want to hear from you.
Also, if you're not already doing so, please subscribe to the Bigger Pockets YouTube channel
where you can share your likes, dislikes, questions, concerns, all of it.
In the comments, we all read those, especially the nice things that people say about me.
And you too, Rob.
I'm sure that we're probably going to get some Dragon Ball Z references pretty soon here.
And let us know what you're thinking because we watch that and we want to hear from you.
All right.
If you would like to follow me, I am.
I am David Green 24 on all social media. Rob, what are you?
Hey, just were there 23 other David Greens before you on social media?
It's so funny that you say that.
So once person asked me if it was like a Kobe thing, right?
Because I have that like killer attitude.
No, I wish it was something cool like that.
It was literally my basketball number in high school.
And when I first made social media, there was another David Green and I'm very impatient.
So I just was like, how do I get this done as fast as I can, having no idea that anyone would
ever actually be following me at some point in life. And so now I am locked in with David Green 24.
Brandon hates it, by the way. He constantly tells me I need to change it to like the underscore
real David Green or something like that. But I think you should change it to the realist,
David Green. The realist? Yeah. That's not bad. Well, we want to hear from you. What do you guys
think my social media should be? Great point there, Rob. So, oh, so to answer your question,
sorry, I always derail you on these. You can find me on YouTube.
YouTube, obviously. Hit that, smash that subscribe and the like, but and leave me a comment at
Rob Built on Instagram. I'm Rob Built. And on TikTok, someone beat me to the punch, unfortunately.
So you can find me at Rob Biltow, because I had to add an O to it. It's a Rob Biltow.
That's funny. I'm sure it was a complete coincidence that another person picked Rob Bilt on TikTok
before you got there. No, man. You know what? Someone reached out to me the other day and they're like,
hey, do you want to buy Robbilt.com for $24,000? And I was like, you're the guy on TikTok. Yeah.
So Rob Biltow it is.
I had to settle for the dot co.
All right.
Well, thank you very much for your effort today, Rob.
It was well appreciated and well received.
This is David Green for Rob Rob Bilto Abasolo.
Signing off.
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