BiggerPockets Real Estate Podcast - 678: Is the Buyer’s Market Back? How to Find Deals and Steals on the MLS w/Jamil Damji
Episode Date: October 23, 2022Let’s be honest. The housing market has been a pain over the past few years. Sellers wouldn’t entertain any offer that wasn’t 10% over the listing price, real estate agents wouldn’t return you...r calls, and you may have thought that the time to buy rental properties was over. Fortunately, the tides have turned, and the seller’s market has almost overnight become a buyer’s market. Price drops are aplenty on the MLS, real estate agents want to be your best friend, and sellers desperately need to get their homes offloaded. This creates an opportunity for you to start buying deals at a discount. Jamil Damji, America’s leading wholesaler, knows that now is the time to get properties under contract. He’s been an expert at off-market deal-finding for decades, but now, he says that on-market deals are becoming far easier to find. Combine his nationwide knowledge with David Greene’s agent expertise, and you have a masterclass on finding steals, not just deals, in today’s housing market. David and Jamil go through eight different techniques you can use to find deals, lock them in at a low price, and grow your real estate portfolio, while everyone else is too scared to act. In times like these, when fear is at an all-time high, smart investors keep their cool, continue buying based on the numbers, and walk away far richer than the average investor. Interested in doing the same? Grab your notepad and write down these eight techniques. There’s a good chance you’ll be using them soon! In This Episode We Cover: How the housing market has shifted and whether or not we’ve become a buyer’s market Off-market vs. on-market deal-finding strategies and which makes sense in 2022/2023 Using “emotional influence” to get a seller to agree to your terms as soon as possible Building relationships with listing agents so they act as your ally in a deal How to leverage “bad news” to turn frustration into motivation for a seller Tell-tale signs of a motivated seller that will quickly get a deal done And So Much More! Links from the Show Find an Investor-Friendly Real Estate Agent BiggerPockets Youtube Channel BiggerPockets Forums BiggerPockets Pro Membership BiggerPockets Bookstore BiggerPockets Bootcamps BiggerPockets Podcast BiggerPockets Merch Listen to All Your Favorite BiggerPockets Podcasts in One Place Learn About Real Estate, The Housing Market, and Money Management with The BiggerPockets Podcasts Get More Deals Done with The BiggerPockets Investing Tools Find a BiggerPockets Real Estate Meetup in Your Area David's BiggerPockets Profile David's Instagram BiggerPockets Podcast 677 BiggerPockets Podcast 667 These 20 Housing Markets Are Cooling the Fastest, According to Redfin Connect with Jamil: Jamil's BiggerPockets Profile Jamil's Instagram Jamil's YouTube Click here to check the full show notes: https://www.biggerpockets.com/blog/real-estate-678 Interested in learning more about today’s sponsors or becoming a BiggerPockets partner yourself? Check out our sponsor page! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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This is the Bigger Pockets Podcast Show 678.
Now is the time for you to talk to your real estate agent about pitching creative options to their sellers.
Maybe this is just the right time where you can go get a seller finance or a seller carryback is subject to.
These are the conversations that we can start having when there's motivation and not a lot of equity to deal with.
So I think that all of the things that we talked about today were fantastic.
and they open the door to even more creative opportunities.
What's going on, everyone?
This is David Green,
you're our host of the Bigger Pockets Real Estate podcast here today
with a special episode where we talk about on versus off-market opportunities
and what strategies work in both.
I'm joined today by my co-host, Jameel Damjee, joining me live from San Diego.
Jamil, what's going on?
Man, I'm just enjoying the market, enjoying San Diego,
and all the deals out there just sitting on the market ready for me to grab them.
Right for the picking.
that's exactly right. And in today's show, we share some very tactical strategies that anyone can
implement to get the best deal possible while the market is in a place where it's actually
favorable for buyers to do so. Finally, before we get into that, today's quick tip is real estate
is a relationship business and now more so than ever, really focus on building relationships
with the right people. Jamil talks in today's show about how he gets deals before they hit the market.
Realtors literally bring it to him and he gets to write an offer before he.
even goes on the MLS, and he even wholesales deals like this. Bigger Pockets wants to help you do this.
There's lots of agents like me that are on the agent finder. You can use the Bigger Pockets agent
finder to be connected to an agent in your area. Or reach out to me or Jamil if we happen
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All right, Jamil, any last words before we get into the show?
I'm excited to get these techniques out there so that people can get out there,
take action, and get some business.
Now, last week, you and I had a very interesting interview with Taylor Wing,
who is a young man who's crushing it finding off-market deals.
And it's not that uncommon to hear about off-market.
In fact, it's sort of been the talk of the town.
for the last couple years. Off market has been idolized. If you just said I have an off market deal,
immediately people were like, ooh, tell me more. It was the pocket listing, right?
Off market was just, yes, that was the coveted thing that everybody was pearl jam tickets in the 90s.
Everybody wanted it. It was very hard to get. But the market has shifted. And as someone who has
their finger on the pulse of the markets, I think that you and I are pretty well qualified to talk
about this because we both purchase off market and on market. And then we also make our
livings from on-market dealing. So tell me, Jamil, what have you been noticing in the last
couple months that's changed regarding the on-market, off-market dynamic? Well, oddly enough,
I think that it has reversed with respect to how good of a deal you can actually get. Here's
what I mean. When you're talking to a homeowner, going direct to seller, and you are trying to
explain to them how the market has shifted, that prices have dramatically corrected in certain
markets, I think that it's a much more difficult conversation to have with people where their
entire life isn't dedicated to real estate. Imagine this. You live in a neighborhood, a nice subdivision.
The guy across the road has a model match to the house that you have. They completed a nice renovation
and they sold at, say, $500,000 in March of this year. Now, we know March of this year was a very,
very interesting time because the competition for housing was insane. Everything got bid up.
Sometimes $50, $60,000 or $100,000 over what I think the house was really worth, that emotional
equity comes into play. And what I think is happening now is sellers still haven't come to terms
that things have shifted massively. So what I've been seeing is that if you engage with a
real estate agent, or if you go online and go to the MLS and look for opportunities that might
have been sitting for some time or houses that might be listed at a higher price but are still
an original condition. You know those listings I'm talking about where the agent is literally
basing their price expectation or the seller is basing their price expectation with respect to
something that had sold in the same subdivision but was fully remodeled. You know, those houses
exist all the time. I think right now you are finding some incredible opportunities having real
conversations with realtors because they see it. Their phones have stopped ringing, right? Everything
that we're experiencing in the market, they're experiencing in the market as well. And so it gives you
that layer of relatability. And I think that if you can have that advocate that is speaking sense to
your seller, you'll do better. Yeah, we can dissect that a little bit. Let's think about why
the dynamic has changed. So when you would go off market, and I would even, I would even add this,
off market used to be valuable because you weren't competing with other buyers. That was the main
value is theoretically it was you and the seller. You didn't get that 12 offer competition where like,
well, do I have to go a million over? Can I just go 800,000 over? I don't want to go 200,000 more than I
have to. Nobody likes to do that. So with off market, you can make a offer, get a counter. But the other
benefit that still exists is you get to talk to the seller, you get to figure out the story.
That's very, very, very valuable, especially if someone isn't necessarily sophisticated on what
the asset is worth or good with finances.
They just have a problem.
You can help solve it.
It's trickier to do that when you're having to go through your agents.
But what you're describing, I really like it.
If you get to know the agents who have these deals, they know their client story.
It used to be with listing agents that you couldn't get them to say anything other than highest and best.
It was like a parrot squawking on a pirate shoulder.
It's the best.
I ask the best.
And they called themselves an agent.
It was very frustrating.
Well, now they know which of their clients are like, nah, I don't have to sell.
I'll hold on to this thing and I'll wait for the market to shift and which one are like, nope, I've got a house being built in Texas right now.
I got a sell to pay for it.
Bring me an offer.
And if you can figure out that story, you'll know which deals you should be pursuing with the more motivated sellers.
It's exactly right.
You know, there's four pillars that I would say.
really determine whether or not an opportunity is going to make sense for what we do as investors.
You know, first and foremost, you always want to understand price.
You want to understand condition.
You need to understand the seller's timeline and their motivation.
See, for us, when we're typically negotiating belly to belly with a seller, you can get the
answers to those, like you just said, very easily or through some rapport building and
conversation. But typically in the past, real estate agents, because of the fiduciary duty that they
have to their sellers, and as well as if you're talking to a listing agent direct, they've got to be
very careful. But I think people are more open right now to sharing the reality. And I,
and I'm hearing it more and more and more. You know, you've got these sellers that are in a desperate
situation right now, especially if they've taken the time to list the property. You and I both know
that very rarely can you just list a house, put it on the market and it sell, you've got to prepare
for these things. You've got to do some repairs or maybe clean up the house and maybe even move out
of the house. There's things that people do to make their house more attractive to a retail
buyer. So if you're taking that investment, if you're doing these things, I think it's really
to your advantage to have a conversation with the agent to at least find out motivation and timeline.
I think those things can really help you make adjustments to the price.
Well, off market could have been in many cases it was.
It was sort of the make me move approach.
Like, I don't have to sell my house, but if you get me $2 million for it, I'll sell it.
You get me $800.
So then some realtor would go say, hey, I got an off market deal.
You know, it would probably sell for $9.50 if I put it on the market, but you could get it for $9.40.
And people were moving forward on those deals.
But now that that isn't the case, a lot of those non-motivated people,
they're sitting in the off market space.
The motivated people, like you said,
if you're putting your house on the MLS,
you've done some work.
You have to be motivated to do that.
You had to get it cleaned up.
You had to spruce things up.
You had to go get it ready for pictures.
You had to spend some money on the pictures.
You had to meet with the realtor.
The realtor had to put some time and attention into this.
It actually takes quite a bit of time
to get a house listed on the MLS.
It's not just you push a button and it happens.
So everyone's motivated.
The realtor is motivated.
The seller is motivated.
And the other people that are involved in the transaction are motivated.
So going on market, you typically will find a higher percentage of motivated buyers or sorry, motivated sellers.
And that's what we're looking for.
So I wanted to play a little bit of a game with you.
I wanted to take turns seeing if you and I could share some of the ways that we know that a market has shifted from a seller's market to a buyer's market.
Sound good?
I love it, man.
Let's go.
Okay.
I'll go first.
One way that I can tell.
The number of rings that it takes before a listing agent answers their phone, right?
You try to call a listing agent during the seller's market.
They don't answer their phone.
You had experiences like that.
No, they're overwhelmed.
Oh my gosh.
It was out of control.
It was one of the most challenging things I would actually find in connecting and trying to buy houses was realtors just took a completely different.
You know, and I, you know, all due respect to people who work at airports.
I travel a lot.
And so I definitely respect what they do.
but did you notice that that there was when when you couldn't get away with even saying boo to
anybody at the airport like you have to just be nice to everybody at an airport right that was that
whole you can't say bomb on an airplane skit right for meet the parents yeah yeah you can't you can't do
anything at an airport right now that that you know somebody wouldn't like because you can just
get put on the no-fly list and thrown out right it's like and that's just what it is and so everybody
at airports is just like insanely rude like I'm I can't I'm I'm
not finding, even the people at, you know, the coffee shop aren't really nice to you at the airport
anymore, right? So I feel like that's sort of what happened with real estate agents. They,
they got this power, this power rush. And they were like, no, I don't even have to answer my phone.
I don't, you know what? I'm going to go get a recent headshot. I'm going to go to get a
recent headshot and you're going to do business with me even though I look 90 years old.
That could be one of the ones you say, right? Like, you know the market shifted when realtor's
bold enough to put a recent headshot up. Yeah. That's a joke.
I'm going to go with that one next.
Realtors use headshots from.
Okay, that's going to be yours.
It reminds me of a scene in the office with Dwight and Jim where Dwight gets a raise.
And Jim says something like never before has such little power led to someone having such
a big head in the history of man.
That was listing agents, right?
Like I sell one house a year and I have a listing.
And they would just be like running around like a 16 year old in their dad's Ferrari
thinking that they were hot stuff.
So true.
Insane.
The other thing that I've noticed has happened.
very rapidly. And it never before is realtors are really interested in me now, right? When I do
get a hold of them on the phone and I start talking to them, they want to know all about me.
They want to, they want my full name now. They're taking the time to actually like write things down.
Right. Before it was just like, oh, no, you send me a text. Oh, no, you send me an email. Oh, no,
you do everything and make sure that you're like finding, I'll forget you. I get so many people call
me, so many people text me. There's no chance I'm going to remember you at 5 p.m. today.
Now it's like, oh, hold on a second.
Okay, you said your name was Jamil?
And how do I pronounce that?
Wonderful.
Oh my God, such an interesting name.
Where are you from?
Where are you from?
That's so true.
And you're getting like real.
They descended from Mount Olympus.
It's real!
They're rubbing elbows with mere mortals again.
So good.
Okay, that's a good one.
How about this?
The number of agents that will follow you on social media after you make contact.
So sometimes when I call the listing agent directly, not only do they answer their phone after one ring,
when it used to be you could call four times in row and they were just going to send you to voicemail.
Now you actually see that they go follow you on Instagram, follow you on Facebook.
Like after they get your name, they want to go like, see, what's up with this?
Is this a real buyer?
Is this someone I could actually make friends with?
Have you noticed that too?
My gosh, I have actually had that happen to me while I was on the phone with an agent.
And, you know, my life has gotten a little bit more.
public in the last couple of years and so I have a blue check and I was on a call with a realtor
who searched me and found me on Instagram and said, oh my gosh, you have a blue check mark
beside your name. And, you know, to me, that's like not a deal anymore. I, you know, when I first
got to blue check, I was, it got to my head a little bit. I purposely left comments on people's
pages just to be like, yeah, because I feel like I had jewelry now, you know, like you got like
Instagram jewelry when you have a blue check. I, I, I, I, I, I, I, just to be like, I, I,
over it now. But when I, when that agent said that, I was like, oh, wow, you literally just went to
IG right now, typed in my name, found me. And now you're scrolling through my photos to see if
I'm legit. That's very true. I've walked out of open houses and had realtors that looked me up.
And when I came back later that day, they were saying things that they wouldn't have normally
known. You didn't see that when the market was hot. Nobody cared who you were. All they cared about was
that price at the top of that residential purchase agreement that you better be sending over.
All right. How about this one? What about the percentage of time?
that we hear the phrase the sellers are open to all offers. Oh my God. What does that say? You know,
like, it's, it's tell me you're desperate without telling me you're desperate. Really, though.
The number of like, right, it's like the sellers are open to anything. Like, but back in the day,
well, when I say back in the day, I mean March. Okay. Yeah, right. Back in the day,
in the other world, you would, you would literally have no low balls. Don't you dare ask for repairs.
the seller is not open to anything.
I would love this to be a non-refundable earnest deposit.
Like, as is, all of the things.
And now it's like the sellers are open to all offers.
It's like the, what I almost want to know is, was it the sellers who became monsters?
Or was it their realtors who became monsters when the market went crazy?
Because I think a lot of those things, the sellers wouldn't even know to do, right?
Like what seller who is a, you know, an accountant out there in the world and doesn't trade real estate very often?
How many of them do you think know about escalation clauses?
I mean, escalation clauses weren't even talked about until it was like a ridiculously hot offer.
And it was a way for the buyer's agent to be like, look, I don't want to have to write 14 offers when a higher one comes in.
Can I just write an escalation clause and be done with it?
Yeah.
For those of you that don't know what an escalation clause, it's what David just said.
But like, think of it this way.
your agent was basically saying, hey, look, if you get an offer of $450, we'll go $5,000 higher up to $600,000.
How likely do you think that offer hit $600,000?
I mean, more often than not, it got there.
And I'm not trying to say that people were not being honest with respect to what those highest and best numbers were.
But there was a lot of money that got thrown on the table that probably shouldn't have.
Yeah, that's not hard to do.
When you're the listing agent and you get an escalation clause where they're like,
hey, we'll pay 10,000 more than your highest offer and your highest offer is 550.
You could just ask your buddy in the office, can you send me it over an offer at 575?
And then like, oh, now we're getting 585.
That type of stuff would happen frequently, which is why I never, ever advised escalation clauses.
Yeah, like there's no way that you can tell.
We never use those on the David Green team.
And sometimes buyers would get upset because they thought it was like a guarantee and far from it.
What was the one that you mentioned?
I forgot. You had an example.
Oh, I was just talking about those headshots, man, you know, just coming in and really,
and you know what I was thinking, too, these promotional companies that make the fridge magnets
and all the, you know, the notepads and the pens, you know, for a year, they had no business
from realtors, you know, like not a single realtor was like, I'm going to invest in promotional
items this year and going to make sure that people remember me when they're using magnets.
No, no, the agent stopped.
doing anything. They stopped caring, right? A lot of them just were like, I don't even have to
brush my teeth and I get paid. Uh-huh. And, you know, I think, I think everything, everything has changed.
Like, it's a totally different world. Totally different world. I, I, oh, there was another thing,
David, that I had noticed. So price reductions. Oh, my gosh, right? Price reductions, they,
they didn't happen for the better part of the early part of 2022.
But now they're very, very prevalent.
And I've talked to some realtors and I've asked them their opinion on price reductions
and why they do them.
Some of them think that when they make a reduction in price,
that it repopulates in the MLS and it bumps the listing up to a higher visibility.
And so they like doing that because if there's an agent,
that may be a little bit less likely to scroll through all of the listings, you know,
maybe they just want to skim off the top, those realtors will now see, or I should say
real estate agents, because now I learned the difference between a realtor and a real estate agent,
and I didn't realize that there was a distinction. But those real estate agents, they would see
that, and now these price reductions have become silly, right? It's like every real estate agent
wants their listing to be at the top. So you're getting like price,
reductions of a hundred bucks. There's a lot of that. So that you're right. What happens is when people
set their buyers up for a search, what happens is you can look for every house within parameters like
this price range, this size, and it will show you all of them. Then after that, it won't show you
the same house as every day you've seen. It will only show you the new stuff that just came on or
something that had a price reduction. So that was a little trick that we figured out. Like if we're not
getting traction, we can do a price reduction. People will see it again, which might make sense
after it's been on the market like a week. It's not still product yet, but it didn't get an offer in
the first week. We would do that. But like you said, people just, they always do what people do.
They get a good thing and they ruin it. So you have realtors dropping it by $100 or by $50. And then
it shows price reduction and it like the little negative 50 or something. So that's another sign that
you're in a buyer's market is when you start seeing ridiculous things like that or when the seller's
like, well, nobody wants my house for $900. So let's drop it to $8.75. I promise you, brother, if no one was
it at 900 because there's so much competition, it doesn't make sense at 875.
Right.
You actually have to accept, I need to drop my price to 800 or 775.
The market has gotten away from me.
So in these hot markets, you'll frequently see these price reductions that are just
minuscule that aren't even keep it up with how fast the market is dropping.
And it's almost funny.
Like, what is going on in their head that they're like, maybe if I just change this one
little thing, the universal bless me with the buyer that I'm looking for.
That's not how it works.
It's not. It's lazy.
Yeah, I agree with you. That's another like...
Yeah, it's super lazy. And I'm sorry if you're listening to this and I'm talking to you right now.
We're on to you.
We are on to you. And we are sharing the information with bigger pockets. As Jamil who works with realtors and me who is a realtor, we know the schemes, we know the tricks, we live in the Matrix and they're not going to work on us.
What about these interesting times that people are conducting their showings? Like, you know, back in the day, first and when I say back in the
the day again guys i mean march okay in march there were no open houses there was just it wasn't it wasn't
going to happen but like now they're doing broker opens and they're doing twilight open houses and
they're they get wine like you could actually feed your entire family uh for a whole i bet you could
feed your family for an entire month going around from open house to open house to open house and
have some of the best food like you'd get a chakutery board every way
where you went for the next 30 days if you wanted to on the house.
This is such a good example because I know what it's like to be in the agent's shoes when you
have that seller that you want to list at 975.
They insist on going in at 1.1 because they think they know better.
And they're looking at prices from back in the day, March, thinking that they're still
going to get that again, right?
And so the house isn't selling.
And you go back to them.
You're like, look, it's been four weeks.
We've had two showings.
Not only are they not writing offers.
No one's even looking at your house because.
is price too high.
When they see what 1.1 gets them,
they have better options.
And when they,
like the people that can actually afford this house
are looking at the 975 range,
they're not looking at the 1.1.
We got to drop it.
And they never say yes.
They always say,
well,
have you held a twilight open house?
Maybe,
maybe if you get the twilight and you get better cheese,
like what cheese are you putting out actually?
Are you using the cheap stuff?
I'm paying you 3%.
I want the nice cheese.
That's going to get people to come see my house.
And you just,
you scratch your head because they will never know there is an open house because they're not looking
at houses like yours in the 1.1 price range. It's like it's so frustrating when you're dealing with
those sellers that still think that way and you're as the agent and you have to tell them,
no, you maniac, this Twilight Open House with all your expensive cheese is not going to provide
any more people showing up. And if they do, it's just going to be your neighbors that come eat your
cheese. My gosh, dude. Now I just figured out where they came up with the name laughing cow cheese.
The cow is laughing at you for putting the cheese in there, you dummies.
That's it.
So if you're listening to this and your house is listed at 1.1, it's getting two showings.
Drop it to 975.
All right.
Let's move on to the next thing here.
We are going to talk about on market versus off market strategies, particularly what you can do if you
want to get a deal on an on market house.
Now, before we go there, Jamil, do you have any advice for off market deals?
Is there anything you're seeing particularly that's working or you just think that space
isn't as good of an option right now.
Well, I do have one, I got one trick.
For, you know, off market doesn't necessarily have to be without agent.
Okay, let's understand the distinction between off market just means it's not listed on the
MLS, but that doesn't mean that it doesn't have agent representation or could be a pocket
listing or there could be a relationship that a realtor has with a specific seller that
they know they're not quite ready yet, but it could be coming to market at some point.
point, there is a massive opportunity for the entire bigger pockets audience to hear this,
take action and get it done. You want to take advantage of all of the industry know-how or all the
industry knowledge, all of the current market condition knowledge, but still get an off-market
house? Start having conversations with realtors, building relationships with them, and finding out
if they have anything coming to market that's in original condition or needing a substantial
amount of work that you might be able to take a look at before it gets listed.
You see, there's nothing that an agent hates more than a stale listing.
And they know that if they list some of these really gnarly houses on the MLS, it's just going to
collect days on market.
And it's actually going to be to the detriment of the seller.
And you can convince a realtor to really take that into consideration and present that
solution to a seller to say, hey, would you just like to hear from this investor and see what their
offer would be? You know, I think that we might be able to get him to pay more than he may
would have, than he may have been able to pay if it was just on the market. And that gives you
that entrance through the side or back door guys that still gets you an off market deal,
but still is being dealt with through a real estate professional who can talk sense into your
seller. Yeah, and someone might hear that and immediately think, that's not going to work.
I tried it before. If you tried it during a seller's market, it wasn't the
likely to work because the agent wants the ego boost to being able to go drive their dad's Ferrari.
I have a listing.
I'm now posh.
I put my pinky out when I drink.
I swirl my wine that I have at breakfast.
Nothing gets a realtor going more than being able to say they have one or two expensive
listings.
And so you saw just the power went to their head right off the bat.
It was very frustrating.
Not like that.
The tides have turned.
These realtors are now desperate.
Like you got a buyer?
Oh my God.
Like let's talk.
My seller's open to any.
offer is what's coming out a lot. So I agree, like asking realtors for something they have coming,
especially if they're thinking they might get to double end it. They will prioritize you over putting it
on the market, having to spend money on pictures, having to put the worker going to MLS, having to have
the talk with their seller every single week, why nobody looked at the house. And everyone blames the
realtor when that happens. That's just how this works. The question is always, what are you doing to sell
my house? Yeah, and those gnarly houses, David, like those ones where the seller is like really, really
worried about how much they're going to have to do to get the house prepped for the listing.
I mean, when you're talking a hoarder situation or something that's just falling to pieces,
I mean, those people really need our offers. They need our help. And you can put together some
pretty great situations. Like, imagine this. The realtor gets to double end it. They take 4%
instead of 6%. The additional 2% goes back to the seller and it's a win, win, win. What a beautiful day.
So if you're going to look for off market deals that don't have representation, that can help you too.
Like I would say go for both.
Talk to realtors about what they have coming on.
And if you come across a seller that might want to sell their house,
they're probably hearing the same news as everyone else is hearing.
And there's a good chance they understand.
The market's turning.
I want to sell before it gets worse.
That was different than I won't sell unless I get a ridiculously good offer.
The psychology of the entire, the collective psychology of the entire market has shifted
drastically.
And that's a situation where you have an advantage as well.
The standard seller doesn't listen to the podcast, doesn't follow.
the news, doesn't know what the other houses are selling for. They're not aware of the market like
we are. They don't know what it costs to fix something. If they know they have a house with problems,
they don't know, they can't convert that problem into a dollar. Like we can because we live in this
industry all the time. So you have an advantage dealing with the seller who doesn't have representation.
And you also have an advantage dealing with an agent with the deal before it's gone to the market.
Take advantage of both of those situations and off market opportunities. Absolutely. All right. Let's talk
about some on market strategies now that will work. Frankly, this is what I've been using. I bought a
handful of deals off market. Maybe like, I can think of two, maybe three, but probably 15, 16 that I
bought on market. And it's funny because I'm finding that there is more motivation on market,
especially when you follow the techniques that we are about to give you. So take out your pencil or
if you're not old, take out your phone and write some notes down where people actually take notes now.
Don't know why I said pencil. I'm sure the day is coming when people will look at a
and be the same as if we looked at like a cassette player.
Do you think, you know, Jamil, I've always wondered,
how old do you think people are that don't know why the save icon is a floppy disk on a computer?
I mean, I bet you.
Right?
There's like a whole generation that doesn't understand that.
They have no idea what it is.
They don't even know what, like they'd never seen a three and a half inch floppy disk.
Or what about the floppy disks before that?
Remember the black ones with the little film on it and you couldn't touch them?
Because if you touched them in that little spot, then they would be like,
it would, it's like wiping the ferry dust off a ferry. They can't fly anymore.
Yeah, like exposing your camera film to the sun, which now there is no camera film.
Yeah. You don't have to worry about that. Yeah, that was a thing. We were really worried about that.
Like you hold your breath when you're like, oh, God, I have to take the film out of my camera,
I hope I don't do it wrong. Don't have to worry about that anymore either. All right.
So one of the things that we've talked about is sellers are going to be more motivated if they've
gone through the work of putting their house on the market. Another is the emotional influences
that are inherent in on-market deals.
So sellers are often looking at other homes while their house is on the market.
They don't just sit there like a disciplined person should and say,
I'm going to wait for my house to go into contract, see what price I get,
wait for contingencies to be waived.
Then I will go look at houses.
No, no, no, no, no.
They get emotionally involved in their next house while their house is sitting,
which creates this pressure cooker.
Because on one side they have pressure, like, I want to put this house in contract.
Someone else is going to buy it.
I want to move on.
And on the other side, they have this.
pressure of nobody's going to buy my house prices are dropping rates are going up and as rates go up
my house is worth less but at the same time the house i want to buy i'm going to have a higher rate i got to do
something now and you want to be the person to come in and take the pressure off of them i saw that play
out right in front of my eyes right now on a flip we had a we had a flip that we had a seller come in
they wanted the house so bad they said we have to sell our house and we thought no we can't do a
contingent offer this is never going to work but we have
asked if they would allow us to help them with pricing. So we had to approve the price that they
were going to list the property at in order for them to, for us to accept the contingent offer.
And they agreed. They agreed to that. And so we helped them come up with the listing price.
And they actually went under contract after multiple offers in this crazy market. So we had them
listed pretty low. But they still got multiple offers. And so that absolutely worked.
and what you just described right now, David, is on the nose.
It's on the nose.
When you create that pressure cooker and you can be the person that comes in and relieves the pressure, there's nothing like that.
And you want to talk about getting a tremendous opportunity.
Rewind what he just said.
Actually, what's the new word for rewind?
Is there like a new technical word for rewind?
Yeah, we don't rewind anymore.
We're talking about this old technology.
That's exactly right.
Put your finger on the red circle and move it to the left.
I love it.
Yeah, so that's why having a good agent really helps, right?
Because if you've got like me or another agent who actually owns property,
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not just the numbers element of it.
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All right, let's get into the next one.
This is the most important thing to look at of all of your thing.
It's that the number of days the houses are on market.
When I'm looking for deals, I don't even look at something that hasn't been on for 30 to 40 days.
When I put my search together, I start at 30 to 40 days and then I prioritize 80, 90, 100 days on the market.
So when people say, well, it's easy for you to find deals.
If you started looking at the, you know, the clearance bin, you'd find that the store was much more likely to negotiate on the price as well.
These are sellers that have already had their dreams destroyed of selling with multiple offers really easy.
They've been told at this point, you have to fix up your house, you have to make repairs, you have to clean it.
It can't smell like dog urine.
There's things that have to be done and they've just staunchly decided they would not do that.
They've already been marinating and worry and they are prime for you to come in with a very,
aggressive offer that won't look bad to them because it's better than no offer.
I totally agree. There's one caveat. There's one little scenario where this has a little bit of a
lower likelihood to work. And that's when they went under contract immediately after listing and it fell
out and then it sits. Oh, when a seller gets that first taste of we're under contract and they think
that that the house was going to work at that number and then all. And usually it's a whole
sailor that comes in and screws it up for everybody because they'll go in and put it under contract
too high. They're thinking that there's a deal there. They comped it wrong and there's no deal there.
And now all of a sudden the seller has this misguided belief that their house will actually
trade at that number. And now it's this standoff and the seller is trying to get it. But high day is on
market, David. It's, it is the holy grail of getting a good deal. Absolutely. Now, you bring up a really good
point that would relate to the next point we're going to make here, which is look for houses that
are back on the market. So back on the market means it was under contract. It fell out. It's back on the
market. There's two ways this goes. The first is what you just said, Jamil. They got a taste of
thinking their house is worth way more than it is. And now they don't want to accept that it's,
it didn't sell at that price. In their head, they've been, if they sell for less, they're losing
money, even though the market is clearly telling them that that wasn't accurate. The other person
receives that same information but goes a different direction.
They go, oh my God, I was this close to getting it sold.
I had my next house picked out.
I had the furniture ordered.
I walked the house with my kids and they picked out their bedrooms, right?
Like my whole family is ready to move in.
We're already researching the schools.
Like they made that mistake.
And now their house falls out of the market and their dream is being threatened.
And maybe their house was under contract at 900,000.
And they only owe 500,000 for that purpose.
person, you go write an offer at 775, that still makes sense because it keeps their dream alive.
They're not just looking at the money.
This is the magic scenario, right?
Because you've got that person emotionally invested.
And guys, we really have to take this to heart.
When David says this, it is absolutely facts.
people will walk away from hundreds of thousands of dollars of perceived value in order to keep
their emotional dream alive. And I can tell you this as a person who is a real estate investor myself,
the dumbest decisions I've ever made was buying personal residences. Ever! I know better. I always
know better. I know what to buy. I know how to get a deal. I'm, you know, but it's when I, when my wife
wife looks at me and says, but honey, I really love it. And my children are like, like you said,
picking out their rooms and thinking about, you know, which of their friends live nearby so that,
you know, who are they going to hang out with and play with? I was, I would, I was actually,
funny enough, I was trying to buy a house not too long ago. I was, you know, for tax purposes,
I was trying to see if I could, if I could buy a house in my LLC and then rent it to myself,
it doesn't work.
There's an arm's length situation there that didn't make it work.
And so, but we were going to go buy a very expensive home and to make this situation work as a tax break.
And my wife got really invested into it and my kids got really invested into it and it didn't work out for us.
And it was heartbreaking, brother.
I would have walked away from hundreds of thousands of dollars just to make that situation.
real. You know, there's a person involved in the bigger pockets community who I will not say
their name, who at one point wanted to buy a primary residence and didn't quite have enough
capital to make it happen. And they came to me and said, hey, can you lend me a couple hundred
thousand dollars so I can close on this house? I'll pay you back later. And it was a two million
dollar primary residence that they had fallen in love with. It was the same story that you're telling.
Beautiful backyard, every of many they could ever hope for. They fell in love with the house and there
was 10 other people that also fell in love with it. And I was like, all right, I'll just tell you
right now, you're my friend, I'll let you borrow the money if you want. So let's just set that
aside. Let's talk about it. This is a good move for you. Right? And I talk sensitive to
friends, when the friends don't let friends overspend on primary residence moments. And I am so
glad that they admitted, like, I don't want to do this. I'm kind of pissed at you for telling
me this, but I'm just going to listen to you because you've been in it longer than me.
Two months later, the entire market shifted. Like that would have been one of those stories that
you hear about someone bought their dream home and then lost it to foreclosure because they would
have overpaid. But man,
That never goes away.
That fear is real.
You got to talk to people when you're getting ready to make a decision like that because
you need that perspective.
It's like you get drunk on this home.
Home intoxication is a real thing.
So I agree.
Like you got to be careful on those primaries.
I want to get that put on a T-shirt.
Friends don't let friends overspend on their primary residences.
I'm going to put that on a shirt.
Yes, that's good.
Next thing is listen to the news, right?
If you hear Jerome Powell saying the market's going to crash, we're going to keep raising
rates where the sky is falling. All the home sellers are hearing that too. And I will purposely,
when I hear the Fed come out with bad news or all the YouTube channels saying, oh, terrible things are
going to happen. I make it a priority to go write more aggressive offers the next couple days,
because the sellers are probably hearing the exact same thing and you want to hit people when
they're in that panic mode. Yeah, that's a brilliant strategy. And you know what? I haven't used it enough,
but I think that that gives us, you know, a lot of days to look forward to.
I mean, like, leading up to a rate hike, I think you could, and we know that they're coming.
We know that there's more coming down the, around the corner.
I think that you could start having those conversations with homeowners prior to.
So if we're the week leading up to a rate hike and then the week following a rate hike,
I think that you've got two weeks of juicy negotiating opportunity there.
I think that's brilliant, David, and I would absolutely, absolutely advise people to do that.
That is actually another method. I call it having several lines in the water. So I don't usually
pursue one house at a time. I've got several offers. And actually, this can mine two methods here.
I'll say, let's say I've got six houses in areas I really like. I really like the property.
They're listed at let's just assume all of them are at 1.2 million. I don't want to write an offer
that's going to be accepted immediately upon issuing it. That means I went too high. I look at an offer in
in a seller's market when they have all the power, you've got to throw haymakers. You got to
knock them out in one punch that's your only chances. You better throw a Superman punch to start the
fight. And if you don't get it, you're getting torn apart. But in a buyer's market, you want to
throw a jab. An offer is just meant to test them. How motivated are they? How much, how far down do
they come up their price and their counteroffer? Are they eager or are they not eager? If they're not
eager, I just let it go. If they are, now that starts the negotiating process of like how far can
to get you down. And if I do that with five or six different homes, and I've got several different
sellers that I'm working on over the next coming weeks, like you said, they're at 1.2. I write it at
900 or I write it at 950. They counter me at a million 50. They came down a lot. Okay, that's a
motivated person. I stay in touch with them, but I don't try to put it into contract the next day, right?
I want to see, is the news going to turn bad while we're here? Our rates going to go up again.
What are they thinking? Are they falling into chicken little? As the days on market,
maybe I wrote the offer, it was at 40. Now it's at 60. Now it's at 70. That's stacking in my favor
as the buyer. I have the leverage. I have the thing they want, which is the ability to close.
They used to have the thing everyone else wanted, which was the asset. So I've got all these
lines in the water and the fish are coming towards the boat at varying degrees. And I'm just
waiting to see which one of these fish gives up and just jumps on into the boat.
Brother, that's such a masterful negotiation strategy. One of the ones that I've been really
paying attention to as well is how much of a relationship I can build with the listing agent.
And that brings us to the next one is really finding ways to create positive relationships
with these listing agents where, you know, maybe they'll let you do a dual representation.
Maybe there's some states that don't allow it and I understand that it's not going to work
all the time. But even in those markets where you can't do a dual representation, I will still
contact a listing agent, create a relationship with them, and then I'll ask,
Since I'm not working with anybody, do you have somebody that you could refer me to that could
write the offer for me? And now all of a sudden it's their daughter or their cousin or somebody in
their office that they owe a favor to. So you're still getting that proximity. You're still
aligning to their side of the equation, which wins them over essentially because, look, if it's a family
member, that might just be coming into their business as well. If it's a friend that they owe a favor
to, this is emotional income, right? This is, this is a, this is a,
opportunity for them to scratch somebody's back that they've been wanting to scratch for
a while. So aligning yourself with listing agents so that you gain proximity, closer proximity
to the seller, it's such a powerful way to play, guys. Because now they're gunning for your
offer to be accepted. They're telling the seller all the reasons why you're the person that
they should go with. That is another point we have on our list. Jamil, it's like you were born
to do this. You have to
went over the listing agent. And this is something I learned in the real estate agent game myself.
If the listing agent takes the offer, let's say their client's houses listed at a million and my
client wrote an offer at 900,000. There's two ways it can be presented. Hey guys, I have an offer.
I'm legally obligated to present you to, but just don't worry, we're not even going to consider it.
These idiots think that they can buy your house for 900,000. They're low-balling jerks. Don't
worry about it. I'm going to get you a better offer. Hang in there. We're just going to reject this.
okay versus hey guys good news we got an offer and it's actually not too far off we've been considering
a price reduction we might not have to do it this is close to what we were thinking we were going to have to
reduce it to and they're willing to shorten their contingencies they've wrote it at 900,000
and there's a very strong earnest money deposit here what do you guys think about this we can start looking
at your next house the lens that the listing agent presents that information to the client through
is wildly important and this is why if your agent is a butthead or has a big
ego and gets into it with the other people. It has a significant effect on how your offer is presented.
Now, when there's going to be 12 offers, it doesn't matter. They're just going to go with the highest
price and the best terms. But in the situation where there's not multiple offer, that human
component is very powerful. And what you're describing there, Jamil, is how you yourself can win
over the listing agent. One of the things, when I've got those six lines in the water, one of the actual
metrics I'm looking at is not just the home, it's the agent. If I got an agent who's not interested in us,
who doesn't really get back to us, who doesn't seem like he's that motivated, I won't prioritize
that fish or that line nearly as much as the other ones because I got an uphill battle trying
to convince that agent to sell the client. When I have an agent that's like, please get me an offer,
let's make this happen. And I know they're going to present my information in a positive light.
I will even coach that agent. I will say, hey, here's the way you should present this to the client.
I know the price is low. However, tell him that you negotiated an extra $12,000 high.
than I was stuck on and tell the clients that you saved them an extra 12 grand if they take this.
And then just we'll have a $25,000 closing cost credit, which you can just tell them is standard
in the market right now.
If they take what advice I give and they actually go say that, you'd be amazed how often the sellers
will come back and accept that.
I just, I had this on a house I put under contract a couple days ago.
They were listed at 1.175.
I wrote the offer at $1,0.50 with about $40,000 in closing cost credits.
They said, no, I waited.
or then they counted me in a million 75.
I waited.
They came back and accepted a million 50.
I said, well, that was my offer four weeks ago before they raised rates.
Now you're going to have to do better.
I didn't even send a new offer.
I told my agent what to say.
He went to their agent.
They came back and said, we'll do a million 25.
And I still got the closing cost credits, right?
So now I'm under a million on the net price on a house that was listed at 1.175
that I'm going to double the size of through the BIR method.
All of that was just because of the,
way that we got their agent to communicate the information to them. And I timed it with the rates
just went up and the Fed said they're going to keep raising rates. So now the agent can go to the
client. Guys, if we don't take this offer, it's going to be even worse in a month. The market's
going down. So those are all ways like Jamal. That what you said. There's nuanced this. It's not
just about shotgunning offers like what worked in 2015 when the advice was just write 100 offers and
five of them will be accepted. And of those, you'll close on three. This is a different space.
That was crummy advice then, too, though.
That was crummy advice back then as well.
You know what?
This guys, understand that this is a business of relationships, right?
Let me tell you there's one thing that I have very rarely done.
Multiple deals with a homeowner when I go seller direct.
Very rarely do you go and go direct a seller and build a relationship and do such a great job for them that they give you 10 more houses.
It doesn't happen, right?
because you build a relationship, but they have one house and they sell you their one house,
and that's the end of the day. But I can tell you, I've got multiple relationships. In fact,
dozens of relationships out there with real estate agents that I've done upwards of 10 to 15 houses
with on a year-to-year basis. Now, just imagine that. These are friends. These are people that
invite me to their Christmas parties. These are people that I hear about what's going on with their
lives and with their children's lives and like we're we're actually in each other's worlds i get first
look at any listing those agents have i get to write them a cash offer day one and they're always
telling their sellers how great of a investor i am and how i always perform and even when the market
was nutty even when prices went sky skyrocketed i was still in the conversation that's brilliant
that's where the money's going to come from okay we covered a couple points the example i
gave one of them was make your offer. And if they don't accept it right away, you can go back to
the agent and say, hey, that was our offer on that day. The market has decreased. If they want to
sell me their house, it's going to be less. I would advise you to accept the offer before it gets
worse. Jonathan Green mentioned that on what previous podcast we did. I think that that is good.
You don't always have to say it as directly, but if they come back to you, it is okay to say,
yeah, that was my offer three weeks ago. The market's not as good. Another one that we mentioned there
was to have several lines in the water, and then to set a follow-up system.
So I'll write an offer.
They say, thank you but no, or they counter, but their counter isn't aggressive enough.
That doesn't mean I give up.
They go into a CRM.
We get a reminder.
They go on a spreadsheet of offers I've written.
And every week we reach out and say, hey, has anything changed?
Because guys, things change.
They find that next house they want to buy.
They hear the news and they get scared.
They realize that, okay, I was listed way too high.
They hear some horror story of somebody else who had to sell their house
for way less.
They get emotional and in that moment, they go sell and this is how people do things.
This is why stocks, crypto, everything tends to crash at once.
Everyone hears the same news.
Everyone goes and immediately panics and does the same thing.
And this is why you see markets collectively go up and down.
So use that to your advantage.
The last point that I have here is going to be a silly one, but it's to look for poor marketing
pictures.
The way that real estate sales used to work is that you would have to as an agent actually do
work to go market a property. You had to find ways to get it in front of someone. The newspaper,
a periodical, a magazine, the classifieds, some billboard, right? Like, how can I get someone to see this
house and make them interested in it? And then they will call. And the problem is realtors still act
like that's how it works. You'll hear them say, I will get your house in front of more eyeballs
than anybody else ever can. I'm going to advertise it on Facebook where everyone's
going to see it until there's go, oh, that sounds good to me. We're on Facebook. And you never think,
has any of us ever saw a house on Facebook and said, I'm going to go buy it right now without looking
at any other houses? I haven't been shopping. I'm not pre-approved. I don't want to see any of the
homes. I'm just going to buy that one. It's crazy. That just gets advertisement for the realtor.
It's not for the house. The way it works now is like online dating. Everybody sees everything.
There's no secret place to go look at houses other people aren't seeing. Not only are they all in the
MLS, but they're on Zillow, Realtor, Redfin, Movoto, all of it. The key, just like in online dating,
is to have a picture that everyone sees and says, I want that one. Now, I'm not in online dating,
but a long time ago when I was in law enforcement, it's kind of my only option because the crazy
hours I worked. And I remember how horrible that was, because there was way more dudes than girls.
So it was kind of like being a buyer in a seller's market where it's very difficult to get any attention
there, right? And they're getting way more opportunities than a guy would be getting. They don't
know anything about you. So they don't know if you're a serious buyer or if you're not. They just
see a picture. And the only shot you have is that very first picture someone sees has to catch
their attention. If not, they're swiping the other direction. I don't even think it was swiping
at the time I was doing it. But you get the picture, right? So now if you want attention on your
listing, that first picture has to be amazing. The next couple really have to pull you in or
they're not even going to look at all of them. They're going to go like two, three pictures
in. Nope, forget it. I'm done. So I purposely look for
terrible listing photos. I like it when four pictures in, the photos sideways, or they skimped on
the commission so the realtor didn't get professional pictures taken. And you see them in the
bathroom mirror taking their own picture. It's dark. It's poor angles. Things are professional
photographer would never do. Because even if people see that house, if it's price well,
they don't look deep into it. It doesn't catch their attention and they don't want to set up a date,
which the equivalent would be going to actually look at the house where an emotional connection can
be made. David, it's so interesting that you bring this up. I remember laughing my
butt off at one photo that I'd seen an agent put up, and I actually ended up wholesaling this
property. I got under contract wholesale that made money. We literally fixed the marketing,
which is what you're talking about. The photo that this agent had taken was from the second
story bedroom window into the backyard, there is dog pooping in backyard. The perfect time,
Perfect place, perfect opportunity for a great, great segment.
I was waiting for you to drink that water and I'd swallow it.
No.
So the thing is we, I'm looking at this.
I'm like, there's no way this house is ever going to sell with this.
This is the most unappealing thing I think I've ever seen in a house.
And that a realtor thought, and maybe the agent thought this was like funny.
Or maybe they thought, oh, you know, cute.
Whatever it was, terrible decision.
and we ended up getting the house at a steep, steep, steep, steep discount.
I feel pretty confident, Jamil, that if you had looked into that, you would have seen
that it was a discounted commission.
That's what that sounds like to me.
Oh, absolutely.
Absolutely.
There was no care there.
There was no care there on the part of the realtor.
And the fact that the seller, I'm sure that they looked online and saw that and must have
been mortified by it, but what can they do?
You see, the thing about retail home buying is I've learned this, that.
when somebody's looking at a house that they potentially want to buy, they're not making that
decision by themselves. They're sending that listing to all of their friends and all of their family
and they're looking at the pictures. And then when they're looking through the pictures,
they're responding to their friend or family saying, that's the one, that's the house.
Oh my God. So not only does it have to create an emotional impact on the person who may be the
buyer, but it's got to win over all of their family and friends. And if you can't see how
somebody's marketing is going to be able to do that, there's a really good chance that you have an
opportunity to get in there and get a deal. Yeah, you're supporting my online dating theory here.
Like if your picture's terrible and that girl's sending it to her cousins and her aunt,
she's like, what do you think about this person? And they're like, you can do better than that.
It doesn't matter that you could have a lot of other good qualities. They don't show up in that
picture. You're not getting a chance there. So you have, like, this is how brains have been formulated
to work in the world that we live in now. Dating.
works this way, real estate works this way, a lot of things work this way. Pictures, photos,
the visual aesthetic of something has become more important than it probably should be.
So I'm a big fan of like, I want to see those pictures that look bad. I want to go look at the
house because odds are that house with a dog pooping in the backyard probably look just like
every other house on the block. When you actually saw it, it didn't give you the same impression
as that terrible picture, but you want to go look at that one because all your competition, all the
other buyers, they don't want to go look at it. They think that the pictures are terrible.
David, I got one last one for us.
Guys, in times like this, especially with all the things that we've just talked about,
now is the time for you to talk to your real estate agent about pitching creative options to their sellers.
Right?
Maybe, maybe this is just the right time where you can go get a seller finance or a seller carryback, a subject to.
These are the conversations that we can start having when there's motivation and not a lot of equity to deal with.
So I think that all of the things that we talked about today were.
fantastic and they open the door to even more creative opportunities.
That's exactly right. No, but no seller wants to do something scary when they don't have to.
When someone's just going to go get a loan from a bank and put a big down payment, of course,
they're going to take that option. However, when it's getting close to prom and you don't have
a date for the dance, you're willing to lower your standards a little bit. And some of these
creating options that we teach on a podcast like this can become much more useful. So you got to have
to coach your agent or the other agent and how they work, but you should definitely look at that
Jamil, I really appreciate you being here and sharing some of this information about what you're seeing for buying on-market deals.
Quite frankly, this is why I say I'm having more fun now investing in real estate than I ever have in my career.
Because I've never been able to use any of these techniques with the success that I am right now.
I've used them to a degree for my clients, like in some ways.
But oh boy, now, if you're a buyer, if you can get pre-approved, if you have the capital and you're willing to play, all of the balls are in your court.
I absolutely love this.
And I think, guys, now more than ever, especially if you're looking at how do I get involved,
how do I go and kick down the door of my real estate investing career, take some of these tactics,
take some of the things that we've taught you today, and go and get yourself your first deal.
Get that deal.
And you can steal it right now.
Go take advantage of the opportunity.
Go take advantage of the market.
Get yourself the best deal you would have ever been able to get and make a life out of it.
All right, Jamil, before I let you get out of here, where can people find out more about you?
You can find me on my Instagram at J-D-A-M-J-I.
That's at J-D-AmG.
Also, I have a YouTube page where I talk a lot about stuff like this.
It's just YouTube.com slash Jamil Damji.
There it is.
You can find me at David Green 24 all over social media talking real estate
and on YouTube at David Green Real Estate.
If anybody listening knows anyone at Instagram that can get me the blue check mark,
there are so many fake accounts they come up every single day.
It's exhausting trying to take care of that.
I've applied 25 times.
I can't get the checkmark.
I'd love it.
Jamil, you're raising your hand.
Does that mean that you can help?
Yeah, I got some people.
Okay.
Well, thank you for that.
Hopefully this happens.
It's been more difficult to break into than Fort Knox every single time I've tried.
But it would be very nice if people could know who the real David Green is.
Until then, be very, very careful.
Look for underscores.
Look for periods.
Look very closely at the screen name of whoever is messaging with my pictures because it's often not me.
Thank you very much.
Jamil.
I appreciate you being here.
I hope we see you on future shows and I will see you soon at BPCon.
Thank you, Dave.
This is David Green for Jamil's stealing deals like Ricky Henderson is stealing third.
Damngy.
Signed.
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