Epic Real Estate Investing - Sean Terry, The Clever Investor Cody Sperber, Joe McCall - Mastermind Saturday | 1048
Episode Date: June 13, 2020Meet Sean Terry, The Clever Investor Cody Sperber, and Joe McCall, the veterans of real estate investing that share timeless wisdom in today’s mastermind! Find out their best sources of off-market d...eals, their cold calling approaches, why the number of offers that you make per week is all that matters, and much, much more! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This is the Epic Field Report.
Hey, Roberto, how goes it?
It's going. How you doing?
Good, good. And where are you calling from?
Goesboro, North Carolina, about a hour outside of Raleigh.
Got it. Is that where you're doing your real estate as well?
Yes, Eastern North Carolina at the moment.
Okay, perfect. So I noticed in the flight club, the private Facebook group,
and I think it was last Friday or maybe the Friday before, you posted a deal.
You're part of our pilot program.
And I wanted to just bring you on and talk to you about it real quickly.
And you kind of have all the stats right here, but I'll just let you share it in your words.
How did you find this deal?
The deal came through Bandit Sign, actually.
So from there, the seller drove from L.A., downtown L.A.,
all the way to Goldsboro, North Carolina, to sell pretty much their last rental property.
and from there they called my bandit sign.
I showed up to the property,
and after some negotiation,
I was the best option for them at the time.
Wow, okay, so this is the last bandit sign
that the city did not take down.
So this is your last sign standing.
And this seller drove all the way from California.
Downtown L.A.
Yes.
That's what you call a motivated seller.
Yes, at least a 9.5 out of 10
in terms of motivation.
Pretty much. So your exit strategy, did you flip this? Did you wholesale it?
No, I decided to hold on to the property. And reason being, I contacted my property manager who actually
manages another property we have about a quarter of a mile away. And there's a waiting list
for a two-bedroom, one bath, under $1,000. So it worked out, it worked out like a charm.
Wholesal it really didn't make a whole lot of sense when I calculated a cash on cash return.
Got it. Okay. Yeah.
No, holding is always better.
So how did you acquire it?
Did you have the cash?
Did you get a loan?
Did the seller carry back?
I did not.
So through a relationship, I was able to get private financing.
I have really good terms.
Yes, and they were able to front the acquisition costs
and we're going to pay for the rehab out of pocket.
Oh, perfect, perfect.
So is that too much of a struggle arranging those funds?
It was not.
I'm starting to develop somewhat of a track record in the area.
And again, we've done business with this particular private lender
in the past. So it worked out for them. They were able to get the terms and the return, I should say,
that they wanted on their money and they were able to come through and provide funding for this deal
in about two or three days after they took a look at what we had on paper. That's awesome. That's awesome.
So after they looked at what you had on paper, so because you had the deal, made the money a little
easier to find? That's correct. I had the deal, so the money pretty much followed that particular
purchase price because we know what the comps were. But how to that, you know, how to that, you know,
house right next door. And then we did a couple of comparisons on three other properties.
Yeah. Comparables. So it was a no-brainer for the lender. Right. For sure. So I'm kind of steering
you that way on purpose, kind of a self-serving question because, you know, you find the deal first.
The money finds you essentially. It's much easier to find, right? That was my experience. Yeah, perfect.
Okay, cool. So the lender got the ROI that they wanted. What is the ROI that you got?
The ROI that we received right now is looking at about 36% is going to be our cash on cash return
because we have next to no money in the deal outside of the rehab costs.
And it should bring in about a 36% cash on cash return.
That's the first year.
We're sitting at over 20 in equity.
You could build your wealth pretty darn quickly and escape the rat race pretty darn quickly with returns like that.
I hope so.
All right. Good. So in this transaction, Roberto, what was the biggest lesson that you learned?
The biggest lesson learned would probably to continue to be consistent because we were trying other marketing strategies.
And for this particular market, with the age of the typical homeowners, sellers in this market, bandit signs actually worked.
And I have a lack of knowledge when it comes to property inspection.
So I've taken the time to learn more about the HVAC systems when it reached to be.
replace and that way I can better estimate repair costs going forward.
Fantastic. Fantastic. So yeah, Bandit Signs, they seem, they come and go because it's been
a common deal source for a lot of people lately. So glad it's working for you. How are you going
to celebrate? That's a great question. I haven't slowed down. Ever since we went to closing,
I'm at the property in the morning and then I have my night gig where I'm working all night
on the flight line. So I haven't had an opportunity to celebrate just yet, but we will pretty soon.
All right. What branch are you in?
United States Air Force.
United States Air Force. Thank you, Roberto, for your service.
On behalf of everyone here at Epic and the whole audience.
Thank you from your support. I do appreciate it.
You bet. So keep doing what you're doing.
Let us know how we can help and we'll do this again soon.
Got it. Sounds like a plan.
All right. Take care.
Thank you.
Bye-bye.
This is Terrio Media.
Success in real estate has nothing to do with shiny objects.
It has everything to do with mastering the basics.
The three pillars of real estate investing.
Attract, convert, exit.
Matt Terrio has been helping real estate investors do just that for more than a decade now.
If you want to make money in real estate, keep listening.
If you want it faster, visit r-e-I-Ase.com.
Here's Matt.
Hello.
And welcome to the epic real estate investing show.
Got a little carried away there.
Sorry.
I'm super excited about this show today.
It's going to be a big one.
But welcome to the show where we meet here each and every week to help everyday people escape the rat race using real estate.
And I just want to thank you.
Thank you for listening to the show.
We wouldn't be here unless it was for you and you sharing this with your friends and your family and your associates and all the referrals.
That's just been fantastic.
Very, very grateful for that.
And you can stay connected with us here by hitting the.
the subscribe button inside of iTunes.
You can stay connected with us on Instagram at Epic Real Estate.
And in case you didn't know, from time to time,
it's going to be obvious here on the podcast that there are visuals to see as I'm talking
because sometimes we pull the audio away from some of our YouTube videos and we'll play
that here as a podcast.
And when you hear something like that, head over to EpicR-E-I.TV.
And that'll take you to the Epic YouTube channel where the video versions of the podcast are
uploaded there every single week.
All righty?
Let's start the show.
It's a big one, right?
And if you're listening right now and you might have been attracted here just by the title
of the show.
And it's something that I've been thinking about for a while.
And once you, if you don't know what it is already, once you do know what it is, you
could only probably imagine how challenging this was to really pull together to coordinate
the schedules of my guest today.
And I have to give all of the credit to my amazing assistant, Ash.
she chased these dudes around relentlessly to get this coordinated.
I don't envy her at all what she had to do to make this happen.
So I'm really grateful that she did, though,
as I have so much respect for these people,
because as I was first looking to get into real estate investing,
coming up on, wow, 15 years ago,
I've been investing in real estate almost as long as I was in the music business.
So that's weird.
Getting old. Time is flying.
But back then when I was looking to get started,
it seemed that really every educator out there,
was on their last leg, meaning they were old.
And I couldn't help it wonder how long it had been since they last bought a property.
Like, when was the last time they even put any of the stuff to work?
You know, was what they were teaching even current.
Would it work in today's market?
You know, a lot of those infomercials were playing in the 70s and the 80s.
And here I was in the year 2000 trying to figure this out.
And I was wondering, like, is it still going to work?
It just, you know, it seemed too good to be true.
and blah, blah, blah, blah, all those things go through your head when you're just starting out.
But since then, I've come to know most of what you need to know about investing in real estate.
It's rather timeless.
There's not a whole lot of things that change.
But there are certainly nuances of the day that might give you an edge.
The Internet has certainly changed all kinds of stuff.
It's changed everything.
And there may be some technology or systems or approaches that enable you to be more efficient.
But these are all things that only active practitioners would know.
current practitioners.
And that's what attracts me to my guests today.
You know, although they have each made huge names for themselves
and showing other people how to invest,
I mean, they're so good at it and they're so effective in doing that
because they're all still in the trenches.
They all, to this day, practice what they preach.
They walk the talk.
So let's just get into it.
Without further ado, let's kick off today's Mastermind Monday session
with Mr. Joe McCall, Mr. Sean Terry,
and Mr. Cody Spurber.
welcome to the epic real estate investing show.
There they are.
Love it.
Matt, who are you talking to?
You're looking the other way.
Who are you talking?
Yeah, so we do this multi-purposing of content.
So we've got like four cameras going on right now.
And then I got you guys online.
So we cut this up into a bunch of little pieces so everyone can get a taste of the goodness that we do here.
Boom.
Boom.
All right.
So let's just kind of go around the table and introduce yourself what market you're in.
and then a little bit about your current real estate investing business.
Joe, why don't you lead us off?
Well, hey, Matt.
Right now we're actually wholesaling a lot of deals in Birmingham, Alabama,
Jackson, Mississippi.
I live in St. Louis, Missouri.
We're starting to do some lease options in San Diego as well,
venturing into California,
because things are calming down a little bit,
cooling down a little bit there.
But I love virtual wholesaling.
and I'm doing this with one of our students
and one of my coaching business partners.
We're doing 10 to 15 deals a month right now
and it's going really, really well.
That's great up old-fashioned cold cone.
Nice, nice. Yeah, a lot of change since I talked to you last.
So interesting. We'll talk about it.
Mr. Sean Terry.
What's up? What's up? Sean Terry, Phoenix, Arizona.
I am, been in the wholesaling business for about 15 years.
currently went from a one-man show to build the team now.
We're doing about 150,000 a week in wholesale fees right now in Phoenix.
So we're crushing.
Markets great.
Started a podcast back in 2010, had a ton of listeners, started to get an information space.
So that's a blast education, teaching people, helping people.
Just closed on a 120 unit student housing project in Columbus, Georgia.
First, we did private placement, real estate syndication.
So it's kind of all prospects real estate loan it.
Awesome.
Yeah, a lot of change over there too.
So congrats on your recent success.
Matt, I got to say, you and I both have more higher ratings and reviews than Sean Terry does for our podcasts.
It must be your beard.
And then he does one every, like he does this new podcast a day.
So I mean, I can do it.
You got to make up in volume, right?
I just wanted to let everybody know.
Thank you, Joe.
I appreciate it.
Mr. Spurber.
What's going on, guys?
Hey, Matt, first off, thanks for having me on.
I always love watching your stuff, man.
You are a freaking workhorse.
You got these tons of good stuff out there.
I love the fact that you really focus on wealth creation,
creating sustainable wealth through real estate.
You know, us deal junkie guys, we're all about flipping houses,
and we keep putting ourselves out of a job because we're always looking for the next deal fix.
But I always really admired your hustle and everything you got going.
You got a great community.
So,
and you must be doing something right because you lined up some beasts on this one.
I sure did.
You know, this is good-looking guys.
This is a fantastic assistant to pull it off.
There you go.
Anyways, my name's Cody Sprerber.
My wife started calling me the clever investor long before I was clever.
And, you know, the term sticks.
Is that how I say it?
The coin term?
Anyway, I'm actually in the Phoenix market as well.
Me and Sean Terry have been going toe to toe for over a decade now.
And, you know, I having a lot of fun.
I started off wholesaling because I didn't have any money.
And I had to get creative and create the money.
And then I finally got the courage to do some rehabs,
worked my way up.
I've done a little over a thousand deals,
probably like 13,400 deals by now.
I've kind of lost track.
But in 2010, I started, clever invested, the education company.
It was going to be a software company.
I was using some pretty cool tools in my own personal business.
And, you know, people were asking me, can I get my hands on that software?
And then it took off.
And the education came right behind it.
And we blew up the business.
Got 77 amazing team members now.
We're one of the larger education businesses in the space.
And it's been a wild ride, so much fun.
And right now my real estate business, I actually just partnered with my two best friends.
So this is going to be new and interesting for me.
We're all old.
We're all 40 plus at this point.
And one guy owns a Buffalo Wild Wings.
He's never done a real estate deal in his life, but he watches a lot of HG TV.
My other buddy sold T-shirts for a living.
So what could go wrong?
We got the guru, the chicken wing guy, and the kid.
t-shirt guy. And we literally just started last week. And every single day they come and sit down
in front of me like, what do we do? We want to go out and get deals. But, you know, what works works.
You know, we already have four or five rehabs that we're getting started and we're buying from
other wholesalers. The business is going to be a rehabbing business. We're going to wholesale some,
but it's going to be a rehabbing business. I want to, you know, just get those big fat payday.
so I can then listen to your podcast, Matt, and figure out how to put the money to work.
I can fire myself from this business.
Right.
Do the fun stuff in life.
That's good.
So, yeah, I haven't talked to you guys on so long, and everyone's doing something a little different,
got some new nuances.
So I'm interested to dive deep into all of that.
The most common question here on the show is what's your best source of off-market deals at the moment?
Cody, you want to take that one?
Yeah, and I'm sure they're going to jump in on this.
There used to be riches in the niches, right? For a long time, I was, you know, door knocking. And when
that stopped working, door knocking foreclosures, the market started melting down. And then I was down
at the foreclosure auction and then the REOs happened and the short sales happened. And there was all
these niches. And lately, there hasn't really been these ability to go really wide and aggressive
like we could when there was all this distressed property coming through. So what's working right now is,
just dialing for dollars.
Honestly, you're probably going to hear that from everybody, but it's direct mail was
killing it for a while.
It still works.
It's a consistent man's game.
You've got to really send a lot of mail pieces consistently to get that hockey stick kind
of returns.
So what we're focusing on right now is just, you know, being able to go after really good
targeted type of lead.
Maybe we're farming areas of high equity, you know, absentee owners or foreclosures or
probates or whatever.
But instead of sending a mail, we're actually getting those lists, skip tracing them, and putting
on a headset, putting on a smile, and just dialing for dollars.
And that seemed to be pulling a good amount of deals.
And the last thing I'll say before I let it go is I honestly think of marketing as like a seven-layer
cake.
You've got to layer in a bunch of different layers.
You can't just be focused on just one strategy.
I know that was the original question, what's your best way.
But they all kind of play together in today's world.
It's more about like omnipresent in the mind of your prospect.
If they see you on social, they see you when they Google and they see you on paper click and they see you on Facebook ad,
you pixel them and you go over to YouTube and they're chasing them all over.
And then they're getting direct mail from you.
All of a sudden, they feel like you're bigger than life.
You've almost created an experience for them.
And that's how we're able to get more deals just because we're everywhere.
Once they get into our web, we're doing multiple layers of marketing to them at the same time.
Question on that, Cody.
You talked about this multi-level marketing machine that you've got built.
And I see it everywhere.
You've got this monster training program and training course.
And do you separate that from your real estate business as far as when you're looking for the sellers?
and do the same practices?
Yeah, it's pretty much the same thing.
It's just, you know, my real estate business, the education side of things is it's a digital,
we're really digital marketers that sell real estate investing education, right?
And so there's certain things I'm going to do online.
And with homeowners, it's a little different.
I'm still doing the Facebook ads.
I'm still retargeting.
I'm chasing around on YouTube and all that stuff.
but I send a lot more direct mail in my real estate business to acquire deals.
Like in my education business, I'm not putting out bandit signs, you know, that kind of thing.
It's really a relationship business on the real estate side.
So I'm networking with lots of real estate agents, lots of wholesalers.
Since I'm rehabbing, I'm kind of everybody's best friend because I'm a cash buyer or rehabbing.
I can go out there really easily and tell people, hey, we got cash, we want to buy the deals before they hit the market,
the pocket listings, the pre-listings, you know, if I'm talking to agents.
So there are some nuances and there's some similarities.
I'm still working on search engine optimization.
I'm still consistently posting on social for real estate leads.
So it's close.
I'm still building a funnel, right?
You've got to think of this business and marketing.
Everybody focuses on the front end of the funnel, which is lead generation.
I could hand you 10,000 homeowners right now that own houses.
Maybe they want to sell.
Maybe they don't.
I can drive them towards your website or I can get them to call you.
But if you don't have a conversion process to put them through,
conversions the actual key to this business.
The lead gen, the front end of the funnel is not that difficult.
It's like a recipe, a formula.
Sean Terry is one of the best lead gen guys out there, right?
Joe McCaul, he knows how to get VAs to like do amazing things to generate all these leaves.
But the reality is the conversion part is, in my opinion, way more important because nowadays,
people need an experience.
Everybody's selling something.
Everybody's pitching something.
There's 50 million blinky lights on social media.
People's brains are geeking out.
But if you can cut through that noise and create an experience for people, meet them where they
are and understand how to talk to.
to them on a deeper level, almost like a doctor with a stethoscope. You've got to listen to their
soul a little bit more nowadays. And if you can cut through everything and get there, that's when
you have a higher chance of getting the deal. That art of building rapport, that art of influence
is very important. So didn't mean to go off tangent, but our main strategy is dialing for dollars,
but we are layering it in with everything else. That's what makes it way more effective.
Got it. That's awesome. Sean, what can you ask?
to that. What's your best source of off-market deals at the moment?
Well, actually, Cody, pretty much nailed it on the head when it came to layering.
So what we'll do is we'll pull a huge property tax default list. We'll take that list.
And then we'll skip trace it with like an IDI. It'll give us a ton of different numbers.
Now we have that skip trace list. We'll direct mail that list with like a street view postcard.
Then we'll take that list and then we'll rip out all the cell phone numbers and then we'll RVM on
ringless voice mail them. Then we take that list with all the numbers that have on there.
And then we put them into call tools, which is our dialer. And I have basically five co-caller
or co-calling, about a thousand dials today on those. And then after co-calling, we'll take that
entire list, upload it to Facebook with the email addresses or phone numbers and everything.
And then we're going to retarget them with Facebook ads. So that's basically the combination of,
you know, just like you're repurposing content, we'll basically repurpose that list.
and we're going to hit them from every angle.
So what we're finding is the results are we're about $43 cost per lead when it comes to
RVM, ringless voice mail.
That's the cheapest, fastest, easiest way to get in front of someone very quickly,
to get leads coming in almost instantly.
Co-calling, we're seeing about $110 cost per lead, direct mail is to see you in 341 cost per lead.
So when you combine all those on a blended cost per lead, you know, we're getting,
we're driving our cost per lead down significantly lower.
So once those leads come in, we basically have three lead managers.
They're booking all the calls.
We have three sales guys going out there going on appointments, 20 appointments a week.
And it is that process of creating that experience.
And the conversion is incredibly important.
We have iPad presentations.
They have repair sheets on iPads.
We docien everything with Sellers.
So they're bringing in anywhere from three to five contracts a week, each individual sales guy.
And then from there, you know, we're just pumping them out and sell them quick.
Awesome. Mr. McCall, your best source of off-market deals at the moment.
We are pulling lists of absentee owners at high equity. We're targeting high cash flow markets.
I'm finding the easiest deals to wholesale are the ones that there's a lot of out-of-state investors
that are coming in and buying up these properties for cash flow. So Birmingham, Alabama is really good.
Jackson, Mississippi is really good. And we're targeting these homeowners. We're targeting. We're
targeting absentee landlords.
So we're getting addresses.
We're skip tracing them.
We're doing ringless voicemail.
And then we are cold calling with Mojo.
We're using Mojo sales.
I want to start using call tools.
I've heard a lot of good things about it.
But we have $5 an hour VAs in the Philippines that are doing the initial cold calling
to these high equity absentee owners.
And then we have a boots on the ground.
One of my students who's a wholesaler in Birmingham who is
actually getting on the phone and closing all these deals over the phone. She's making offers
over the phone. And here's the key to it all, no matter what kind of marketing you're doing,
the key to what us, what we have found is the follow-up. I don't know my cost per lead. I should,
but we're spending on average of about $500 in marketing per deal. And our average profits are
right around $8,000. So the ROI is incredible, right? But the key to it all is follow-up.
we're finding on average it takes three to four months from initial contact to finally doing the deal and making the money.
On average, about six to seven touches.
And so our Podio, we use Podio.
It's super simple.
We don't have any fancy automations and workflows.
It's just every time that lead is touched, we create a new task to follow up again the next day, the next week, the next month.
And so every lead in Podio has an open task assigned to somebody.
with a due date. And all of this marketing is awesome, but unless you're doing the follow-up,
you're not going to go anywhere with this. So probably, I need to look at the numbers,
but last I looked, it was about 80%, 85% of our deals comes from the follow-up. It's not that
first initial contact. That's what I'm, oh, let me say one more thing too. We're still doing
texting. We'll find landlords and for sale by owners on Craigslist and Zillow, and we send
them individual personalized texts one at a time. I found that works really well when you're doing
some more creative things like lease options and stuff. So we're doing that in some other markets.
Sweet. So yeah, it seems to be the common answer is, you know, what's old becomes new again.
It comes back around and people are really picking up the phones and just putting in the work
and working their repetitions. What have you found, Joel, I'll start with you since we're talking
already. What have you found to be the best approach when you're picking up the phone and initiating
these conversations? And I guess a part two of that question would be how much training is going into
your five VAs and, you know, how important is their effectiveness or is it just a straight
numbers game? It's a straight numbers game, but also one of the reasons why we're so successful
with using virtual assistance for these initial cold calls is we're talking to them every single
day. A lot of people just hire VAs and expect them to take it and run with it. In fact, we're talking
to them by text or by Skype every single day. And we just started something where we're having a once
a week for 30 minutes, a training where all of the VAs, we only have four or five, but they get
online together once a week for some training. And so that constant regular communication is really,
really critical and important. And you asked me two questions. I forget the first one.
You approach. Like when they pick up the phone, what does that initiation sound like?
It's like, hey, sorry for calling you out of the blue. Jim, we're calling about your property at 1, 2, 3, Main Street. So we're assuming that that person is Jim who owns the house at 1, 2, 3 Main Street. We're not asking them, do you own the house or whatever. And so, you know, we get a lot of angry nose and FUs and all of that. So we just blacklist them. You know, we don't call them anymore after that. But our initial pre-screening is super simple, like maybe three or three.
or four questions. That lead then goes into podium through a web form and our local wholesaler,
who's, she's the key to all of this. She's amazing. She immediately calls that lead back right
away. And she's on them like white on rice. She's calling them four or five times a day until she
gets a hold of them. She's texting them. And she is super relentless, but she's,
she's really sweet too. She's got this nice, charming southern accent, you know, which by the way,
if you ever looking to hire somebody on acquisitions,
you should think about looking for somebody in the South.
I'm not kidding.
Who's got a sweet,
Southern charming accent,
you know,
that just kind of disarms people.
But she's really good.
I mean,
she calls people honey all the time.
She's got these big,
angry,
gruff landlords that she talks to,
and she softens them up right away.
But she's also relentless.
She's just following up.
And there's really no fancy script that we use.
We just talk to them and ask them a lot of questions and make a lot of offers.
Got it.
Sean, your approach similar or do you have a different way of going about it?
Actually, there's two different approaches we tested.
One approach is where the person is diving deep on with the stellar, so they're co-calling,
and then they're booking all the way to an appointment.
That entails a lot more training.
There's a lot more drop-off, and there's a lot more breakage.
So our approach we're currently doing right now is literally just getting
them on the phone, finding out if they have a house to sell, if they have a house to sell, then we
immediately do a transfer to a live, a lead manager. We have three lead managers that will
take the call over, and then from then, they're trained, and they'll book the appointment.
The lead managers work in house, and the BAs are out. So that works a lot better. So the BAs
are only trying to find out if they have a house to sell, and the answer to yes, they'll do a transfer.
Sweet. Cody, do you have a different approach or similar?
Pretty similar to what Sean's doing.
I'm definitely not as, you know, I listen to Sean talk and I'm just like, yep, that's how to do it.
I'm not, I don't really have it together like that.
To be honest, when we call, I've tested a lot of different things.
And sometimes just something simple like, hey, listen, I'm not collecting the debt and I'm not trying to sell you anything.
The area, I really like your house.
I want to send you a big fat check.
You want to sell.
If not, I'll hang up.
No hard feelings. Sorry about that.
You know, but you got to do something to break that ice.
And just one more piece of advice that we've learned along the way, don't leave a voicemail if they don't answer.
Just a little, you know, phone tip just because I found that, you know, a lot of times I'll hang up, I'll call right back.
I'll hang up, I'll car right back.
And if three tries, they don't answer that I don't leave a voicemail.
And I put them back and we'll try calling them again.
If I do leave them a voicemail, it's a really strong hook, like, you know, something like John,
This is Cody. I got really, really great news. I really need to share it with you.
You know, I have a big fat check. I want to send it your way. Listen, give me a holler back at 48055.
I'm not trying to sell you anything, but I really need to talk to you. Right. So it's kind of hype you like that.
Let me. I love that, Cody. One of the things we do is we'll say, hey, John, I got the contract right here for your house ready to go.
Call me back. I got to talk to you right now. Perfect. You get a ton of people really mad.
but it gets them to call you,
which is...
The one that we do all the time here,
they'll call and say,
hey, my assistant has the contract
ready to go out to you,
but I'm not sure if she has the right address.
I'd hate for this to end up in the wrong hand,
so before she sends it out, give me a call.
Right?
So, same type of thing.
Sean, what's your opinion on voicemail?
Yeah, we actually do something very similar.
We just, you know,
we don't say we have a big, fat check,
but I do like that.
I think I'm feeling it.
We do it, yeah, just similar.
Like, we have some incredible important information.
Please give us to call ASAP.
Sweet.
I can tell you what I'm going to know is that make sure you're changing your caller ID number,
literally every campaign you're doing, because the carriers will blacklist your caller ID
and your leads will drop off the cliff and you're wondering why.
So make sure you rotate it through call rail.
Pull those numbers out and just rotate them out.
Let me give you another huge tip.
You break out your lists.
You call them the first time at the morning.
the next time you call that list, call them later in the day. And the next time, call them later in the day.
So if you've got a VA that only, you should have like three VAs that work nine to 12, 12 to three and three to six, right?
You need to be rotating your calls through those time zones, those time areas, because if somebody doesn't answer their phones in the mornings, they probably never answer the phones.
But they may answer their phones in the evening. So you've got to be rotating that list through those different hours. Does that make sense?
Yeah, totally.
Let me throw one more thing in.
This is what happens when you mastermind.
All right.
So best advice for somebody who's new that's trying to create a success habit of making these calls,
just like set a time, even though maybe in the evening it's better.
If you don't have a VA, call every day from like nine to noon.
And create a habit of calling every single day at nine to noon.
Even though you'll get a bigger response rate at night, at least you'll,
force yourself to do your lead gen for at least three hours a day. I see so many people,
Joe or Sean, somebody said, you have to make offers, right? Like, just make offers, right?
I talk to students all the time and they maybe spend a lot of money on education somewhere else.
And then they finally somehow get into my world and they go, I've been trying this real estate thing
for six months. I say, awesome. How many offers did you made? They said, oh, I haven't made an offer yet.
you're like what how is that possible like we got to get to work like you're writing an offer today
and um when you start creating those like just pick up the phone and i'm going to call every single
day for 90 days straight and i'm going to create that success habit you'll get past all that fear
all those challenges you'll be able to test all the best ways in your local market to to get past
all the objections and i at least in the beginning don't kid yourself if you're like
I'll call later today.
You're not going to call later today, right?
Force yourself from nine to new.
I don't set appointments in the morning times.
I don't do anything else.
Just call.
All right, very important.
Then once you get good and you start hiring other people,
then you could start or you do VAs where it's not your time
and then you can bounce around.
But I know in the beginning so many people will make every excuse under the sun.
But if you create that habit, I'm telling you it's a game changer.
And right now,
dialing for dollars is working. It won't work maybe next year. We don't know, right? They keep
moving the cheese. But right now that you've just heard it from three experts, it works,
but you got to put in the work to make it work. You said something that there's so much you can do
and you can have these great habits and you can take this from lead generation to lead
conversion and you get all the way to the end, if you don't write the offer, it was all for waste.
right you'll never do the deal i remember one of the the videos that i've had that's got the most
dislikes ever on my youtube channel it was how to do more deals and it was a very short video i just
said write more offers and people didn't appreciate it back in the video right more offers right
right more offers yeah it was uh it came from stephen king he said how do you become a better writer
and he said write more and it was like hey that's there's some truth to that right let me let me say
something to this yeah because a lot of people listening to this maybe
you're just getting started. You don't have the time or the resources to go and learn some fancy
auto dialing software, right? That's overwhelming to you. What Cody said is really good. You need to just
make it a goal to talk to five sellers a day. And if you can make offers to at least three of those
five, but if you can make it a goal to talk to five sellers a day and make an offer to every one of them,
even if they tell you to F off, send them an offer anyway, right? And just get in that habit of talking to
Because here's the thing, your speed to income is directly proportional to the number of offers that you make.
And if you want to make money in this business, you've got to make a lot of offers.
I think all four of us, when we coach our students, we give them scorecards.
And the first thing that we ask them is, how many offers have you made in the last week?
That's all that matters.
Nothing else matters in this business.
Yep.
Yeah.
If you're not doing deals and you're not writing offers and you don't have the right to complain about
anything else in my opinion, right? Exactly. Just put some numbers, just put some numbers to it.
So, um, for an expectation. So typically, you know, with co-calling or ringless voicemail,
it's more of disruptive marketing. Someone's going along on their day. They're doing whatever.
And all of a sudden they get a call and all of a sudden, boom. So the conversion rate on those
for what we're finding is one in 39. So one, you get one deal or one deal that comes in for every
39 leads that come in. So you got 39 leads. So that means that's 39 offers that you're making
before you're going to get one. So back to Cody's point, back to Joe's point, back to Matt's point.
If you're looking at it, you go, people come in and go, well, I've only made 12 offers.
I've made seven offers or eight offers. Well, you're not even playing in the numbers. Get in the
numbers first. Make 50 offers, then come back and talk. And now we can reassess exactly what's happening
within that off-construction.
Well, Sean, what you're saying is important because there's a difference between
getting excited about real estate and going out and trying to flip a house versus owning a real estate,
active real estate investing business where you're either wholesaling or flipping houses as a
business, right?
That business means you've got to think like a businessman or woman,
and you've got to track your key performance indicators, your KPIs.
And you're like one of the best in the world at this.
You know, I just always kept it simple.
How many phone calls do I have to make to fill up to get an answer?
Right.
How many just rings have to happen before I get an answer on average?
How many answers before I have a conversation and you can fill out a lead intake form,
which means we actually talked and it's not a F you pick me off your list.
There's actually a potential.
Now I know how many phone calls I have to make.
to get an answer, how many answers before I feel a lead intake form, how many lead intake forms
before I get to a point where I can write an offer, how many written offers before I get to one
accepted, how many accepted before I get to a closed deal on a profit check. And if you start tracking those,
you can start to see the funnel, right, and all the touch points that have to happen. And then,
like you said, you've already, you've tracked it to the point where you know it takes us
39 lead intake forms or conversations before we get to that deal, right? Or whatever you just said,
I think it was 39. So then I'll send you, you could look at your team or yourself in the mirror and go,
how much money do I want to make this month? And then you could just go back to the front of the
funnel and say, all right, I got a five exit to get that result on the back end because I know all the
metrics in the middle, right? You could start to plan out how much money you want to make each quarter or
each year. But if you're not tracking that stuff, there's no hope for you. And winning it is not a
strategy. If you're running a business, you've got to think like a business. And that's very important.
Amen. Yeah. It creates a predictable business, right? You can hire people. You can do. There's a whole
bunch of things they will allow you to do knowing executive. So good 100%. Sean, what are you seeing in your
business or the market that has you maybe concerned or maybe has you excited? And how is it changing the
way you're operating?
Concerned or excited?
So first off, it's not concern at all, but basically what we look at every single month
is inventory.
We look at our current inventory every single month.
How many units are currently on the market?
How many pending sales are there?
And what's our average monthly supply, which is roughly about 2.6 months right now.
So we're watching that every single month.
And so obviously Phoenix is going to be different from St. Louis or
any other market, California, across the country.
So anybody who's in the business right now,
you know, if you're fixing and flipping business,
and if that's going to be your core element of business,
you have to watch that inventory levels.
And if it ticks up,
then you want to kind of start scaling off the whole fix-and-flip model,
you know,
and maybe go toward the more toward the wholesale model.
In Phoenix, we're not seeing that right now.
We're seeing anywhere.
I mean, it's literally staying within 2.4 to 2.6 month.
supply and if it starts to increase, I mean, I do fix and flips as well. Our mandate is,
company mandate, if there's not at least a minimum of a hundred thousand hour spread, we won't
touch it, you know, but as as the market, you know, changes and shifts over the next 12 to 18
months, you know, these are something we watch every single month. It will make a determination
to take down a property or not or potentially wholesale it. So it's all driven by the inventory
and anybody can look in their market. And what I was highly suggest is look at your current
inventory, look where you were a year ago, and look where you were back in 2005 and maybe in 2008.
And that will give you a historical inventory level. And then, you know, as prices, I can
definitely see as wholesale prices. We're pushing prices upwards to 80 to 83% of the actual
ARB after repair value. They've come down a little bit. We're actually under 80% right, about
78, 79%. Is that what you're offering, Sean, or is that what you're selling them for?
That's where our exit number is.
Exit number of an actual true ARV is roughly 79, 79%, 79% right now,
unless it has just ridiculous amount of rehab, the place is completely trashed.
Got it.
Let's say that threshold for you, Sean, as far as inventory.
Maybe you said it, I might have missed it.
But that threshold where you can like, okay, maybe we're going to pull back on the fix and flip model a little bit,
kind of transition a little bit more on the quicker wholesale model.
Yeah, so currently, I mean, just to give the example, in basically July of 2005,
There was 5,000 units on the market.
The market was crazy.
Everything was nuts, right?
In August of 2008, when Washington Mutual Crash, we had about 50,000 units on the market here in Phoenix.
So 50,000 units, from 5 to 50,000 units.
A stable market in Phoenix is about 30, 32,000 units.
We're currently sitting right now at about 16,000 units on the market right now.
And we're staying pretty steady and we're just kind of going in a sideways channel right now.
We haven't broke down.
We haven't broke up yet.
So if it breaks up, right, then we're going to start obviously looking for basically taking that fix and foot model kind of takes it off the show.
Got it.
Joe, what are you seeing in your business or the marketplace that has you concerned or excited?
How is it changing the way you're operating?
That's a good question.
I've always loved wholesaling because wholesaling works, whether the market's going up or down.
I'd bit my teeth into this business doing lease options in 2009 when everybody was running to the hills.
So I think it's important for people to know how to do creative deals if the market starts falling
because you get more sellers that are motivated.
You have less cash buyers, investor buyers, maybe buying homes.
So you need to learn how to buy deals creatively, land contracts, subject to's, owner financing, lease options.
So I love wholesaling because no matter of the market, what direction it's going, I'm in and out really quick, right?
I'm not taking ownership of anything.
And even the same with lease options, you can flip or sign those lease options.
You can still wholesale a land contract or subject to or owner financing rights.
So it's important to listen to podcasts.
It's important to get educated and to stay in touch with what's going.
on in the industry.
And because the cool thing about real estate, too, is that it's not like the stock market
where it drops on a dime, right?
The housing market always is much slower.
And so you always have more time to kind of see the direction that it's going in.
And that's why I love this.
Here's the thing, too, I'll say this.
I was just seeing this.
I've been seeing this more and more on Facebook.
I'm not very active in there, but I like to read and see what kind of questions people are
asking.
and I'm starting to see a lot more people talk about things like cash out refinance, right?
I'm starting to see more people talk about what does it matter if it cash flows?
Just buy it because it's appreciating.
Just cash out refinance.
Like all that same stuff that we heard way back in 2006 and 7, you're starting to hear people talking about it again.
And I'm just saying you've got to be careful of that kind of stuff, right?
Yeah, I just took my son to sports clips over the weekend.
He likes to go there and watch the TV while he gets his hair.
pick. And two of the barbers were actually talking about the house that they're flipping. And I was like,
uh-oh, here we go again. Well, Sean, tell your story real quick when you were getting a haircut
back in those seven or something. Yeah, well, interestingly, same thing happened. A lady,
she made $40,000 on a flip. And currently I owned at the time, this was like early 2005 was
120 rentals, about $36 million worth at the time.
And literally, I was like, I went back to my partner at the time.
So we got to sell everything.
So we had loaded all of our inventory and I'll kind of relate it back.
All of our inventory in 2005 at the height of the market.
So I was brilliant, right?
I was like, I'm the man.
I got rid of everything, had all this cash, tens of millions of millions of dollars coming in.
It was insane.
But that was my brilliant move.
And then my stupid move was I had to deploy the cash.
into investment. So I put it into land, right, in the land. And I'm going to relate this back on when we're talking about the market risk and what I did wrong and then what I would do different and what I am doing different today. But the bottom line is I put money in the land. We owned $30 million with the land at the time, about controlled about 580 lots in Phoenix. We'd buy land. We'd assemble land. We'd entitle land, turning it basically in a plighted engineer lots. And we had them, you know,
sold to builders right during this crash happened and all the builders backed out on it.
Now we're stuck with this land and what to do, which got in a very, very tough situation.
Never filed bankruptcy or anything like that.
I had to go shape with lenders.
And it was about a two to three year miserable situation going through that process.
So I came out the other side, right, and I said, okay, I'm going to basically start a whole thing.
I wrote letters from my kitchen table just to start talking to sellers and making offers,
start getting deals and crawled out of that hole that I was in.
I was not only in a mental hole, but I was in a financial hole, got out of that hole,
and went back and kind of looked at what was the biggest, why did that happen and what was the biggest mistake?
So I literally talked to, I don't know how many countless people,
being part of masterminds and groups and stuff like that.
The bottom line is, you want to protect your stuff going in the future?
You got to buy cash flow.
That's the number one.
And obviously, Matt, that's your mantra, right?
Got to buy cash flow.
You do not buy on speculation, right?
You don't buy it and say, oh, it's going to go up and then I'm going to buy it, right?
That's speculating.
I did that one land.
So the land had no cash flow.
I bought it on speculation because I could do a fourth appreciation on it with providing
private client-engineered lots.
And the third key component is long-term debt.
If you have long-term debt on the properties, then you can suffice any market dips or
market corrections. And I had short-term debt. I had no cash flow and I was buying an appreciation.
And that was the recipe for disasters. So going on in the future, you're buying properties now.
Like we just closed on a 128 bed student housing project. That project, it cash flows in the start,
$130,000 first year. We have long-term 10-year debt, 30-year amortization, 10-year debt on the
property. And it's literally cash-wills. And we're not buying it for appreciation. We're buying it.
We had basically a very conservative cap parade exit on five years.
But if we have to hang on to it, we can hang on to it for a full 10 years.
So it's the different approach than it was back in 2008.
So lessons learned.
It's good job.
Cody, the biggest win that you've had in the last 12 months, and what did you learn from it?
Biggest win?
Yeah.
I win every day.
That's all we do is win win, win.
No.
To be honest with you, Matt, at this point in my career, I've been doing this for a long time now.
And I made my first million at age 28, came a multimillioner at age 30.
I haven't made under $10 million a year.
I'm not bragging, but I just scale, you know.
And so financially, I don't think of it like money as a win anymore.
My biggest win is probably the fact that I can, you know, my kids are off school right now.
I'm throwing them in a car.
I'm taking them on vacation and we're checking out and I'm not stressed. That's my biggest win.
You know, I'm not worried about asking somebody for some time off.
You know, I'm just going. Unfortunately, where I'm taking them, just flooded.
I got pictured. I'm taking them to Port of Panasco Rocky Point for a couple of days and then we're
going to head over to, we're coming back and then we're going to Cabo.
But I just got a picture of the whole place is flooded. So now I got to scramble and figure out
what we're going to do. But, you know, that's, to me, if you're talking real estate,
I'm now in business with my two best friends.
I think that's a major win.
You know, we're going to go flip some houses and have some fun.
And it's bulletproof.
It's that one thing that is always going to be there.
People are always going to need a place to live.
So I love, that's why I'm so passionate about it, is it's helped me create massive amounts of wealth.
Then I went and taught other people how to create wealth.
And that's a freaking rad story to tell.
You know, it's like, what better thing to do than serve people at a deep level like that,
help them achieve their financial goals and feel like a rock star in the process and just be able to
control your time. So I don't know if that answer your question. It's kind of hard. Let me rephrase it.
As good as life is for you and it's all panned out wonderfully. What is one thing if you had to go back
and do it differently, what would that one thing be? Oh, man, I think about that a lot. I think I
I would have probably just told myself to get more committed sooner.
Because I see this happen all the time with entrepreneurs.
You see guys like Sean Terry or Joe McCall and they're playing the game at a very high level.
And they're on social media and they're on four different social media channels.
And then they're, you know, doing big things with direct mail and they're, you know, doing podcasting and they've got their real estate business.
And, you know, they got their big rental portfolios.
They got all this stuff going on.
So you sit there and maybe you're not.
not anywhere near that. And you're like, oh, my God, I want to do that. Right. And so you do
10 different things at 10 percent. And you don't get any traction on any of them. Right? And then
six months goes by and a year goes by and you start running out of motivation and you look back and
you don't feel progress and you're defeated. And you start abandoning ship on things. Oh, that doesn't
work. You know, why, you know, maybe the market's not right for that. All the president's not the right
president right now. So that's probably why that's not working. And you're making all these
excuses. You know, prices are a pain in the ass and it's depreciated. No, wait, now it's appreciating.
And, you know, you're never going to get where you want to go. So if I could give myself any
better advice is get committed to dominating whatever you're going to do. Don't dabble.
Don't be average. Don't be a little bit in and try to do 10 things. Screw that. Go all in.
Like be a freaking obsessed, insane maniac and just conquer it like a savage, right?
And then when you do that, that's when you can start to add the other pieces to it.
You know, if you're going to be the best on the phones, be the freaking best.
If you're going to dominate YouTube, and the thing I'm most excited about is YouTube right now.
I think it's the future.
I think right now, whoever owns YouTube as far as in their niche, in their market,
I'm seeing guys right now that are putting out a video a day on YouTube.
They're relentlessly posting.
They're driving all around the country doing collaborations with other influencers.
They're doing whatever it takes to build their little brand on YouTube.
And they're saying things like, if you want to partner with me, click the link in the description below or give me a call.
And positioning themselves as a real estate expert.
and they're raising private money from all these people that have lazy money and they're coming to this person.
What happens on YouTube is unique.
You see a video.
You like what they have to say.
You binge watch 40 more videos from that.
Right.
And now you fall in love.
And that person gets put up on a pedestal like a rock star.
So then when you finally get an opportunity to talk with them, you're like, wow, you're a real estate expert.
I didn't even know.
You want a partner?
And they're like, I got, you know, I'm a dentist.
I got 250 grand.
It's like, okay, we're going to take your $250,000.
We're going to go buy three rentals together.
And by the way, you can pay me $5 grand as a processing fee to be my partner.
And I'm watching kids and people dominate their spaces.
And they have 50 rentals, 100 rentals, 175.
And I'm like, how the firk did you get so many rentals?
By the way, they didn't use any of their own money.
100% of it came from somewhere else.
And all they did was dominate YouTube.
just gave you my biggest secret that I'm focusing on right now.
Nice.
So the overall lesson, though, there is, and it's been a mantra around here for the last 24
months at least, because we made this mistake.
We've tried to go so wide, so fast.
But to go deep before going wide, conquer that before you add something to that layer here, right?
Yep.
I like it.
That's, yeah, I couldn't agree more.
Joe, let's be a big.
Go ahead, John.
I just think Cody is one of the best at that.
You know, it's funny because we both had like, I think it was like 8,000 Instagram followers at the time.
Cody goes to, he goes to Tony Robbins event.
He's doing on social media.
He's jumping around.
And literally, I think something shifted in his brain when it came to his commitment level.
And I think he chose Instagram as to be the thing.
And I saw him go from 8,000 to literally 1.3 million in a record.
setting time. He went all in. And I do absolutely think, you know, obviously whatever you put your
mind to, whatever you're committed to, do with everything you've got and you'll be amazed at what
happens on the other side. The problem with people I see that getting started, and I think we
talked about earlier, is people come in with a, you know, a half-ask commitment. They, you know,
partially committed. And then they're committed. And if they don't get the results, then they're not
committed now, then they want to change something else. Or they're, you know what I mean? So the
question is, what's it going to take for you to get so committed for so long that you're going
to do whatever it takes? And that's where the tenacity comes in. That's where the persistence comes in.
That's where if you are so committed and you have a long-term view and say, I'm going to do this for
five years, then guess what? If you suck for the first six months, guess what? It's a five-year game,
man. It's five-year plan. Who cares if you suck for six months? Guess what? You will get it if you
do it long and hard enough. Right. Amen. Joe, let's bring this,
Home, what's the best book you read in the last 12 months and what did you find most valuable about it?
You see that?
You teed him right up for that.
This is my book.
No, I'm just kidding.
The best book.
You mean a lot.
You've always got the most recent thing.
Yeah, but I was caught off guard.
I tell you a book I'm reading right now that I'm really giving.
into and digging is, where's Kindle? Here it is. Kindle. You want me to go, Joe, to save you?
Go ahead, Cody. All right. This is my favorite new book. And I'm read, right now, I'm reading,
like, four books at one time. But the one that I, like, geeked out on the most lately is never
split the difference by Chris Voss. If you don't want to go deep into negotiation and
understand the theory behind positioning and influence and negotiation, that book is by far,
like, I've read a lot of like neuro-linguistic programming books and art of negotiating books.
This guy is a freaking beast when it comes to negotiation.
So it's never split the difference by Chris Voss.
You will not be disappointed.
And it applies to real estate.
Awesome.
Yeah, it's come up here on the show more than once.
and it's been in my audible library for at least a year.
I think Cody might have pushed me over the edge to actually listen to it now.
Sean, best book in last 12 months.
What did you find most valuable about it?
I got two books.
One book I'm reading right now that's really, really good that just came out.
And a book that's a tried and true book that's great for just personal, literally personal growth,
personal progress in life and business.
So that book is organized tomorrow today to great.
great, great book.
It's literally one, and anybody I've ever recommended to two, literally text me back and
say that book is insane.
It's so good.
It's literally organized tomorrow today, and it's a phenomenal book.
Go check it out.
The book I'm reading currently right now, it's a great book, is Joe Fairless's book,
who, if you know, from the best ever real estate podcast, great guy,
28-year-old kid built a $400 million dollar multifamily portfolio.
Guys, it's total stud, right?
So he has a 400-page book right now called the best ever real estate or apartment syndication book in exactly how to do it.
It's very technical, very detailed, explains the entire process from start to finish.
I thought I've got some great takeaways from that.
I highly recommend it.
Yeah, great guy.
Great friend of the show.
We just had him on the show two weeks ago.
So I didn't know about this book.
Giving him ample time to opportunity to share it.
but thanks Sean for sharing that.
All right, Joe, did you figure it out?
Yeah, thank you.
There's a book called Endurance.
It was written in the 50s by, it's about Ernest Shackleton.
And it's a great book about leadership and never giving up.
I love the book.
And I'm sure they've done movies about it, but the book is, and there's been several
books, it's called Endurance.
It's about Ernest Shackleton.
Great book.
It's a historical book.
book, but it's really easy to read. And then the book I've been reading right now that I'm really
getting into, it's called Giving It All Away and Getting It All Back Again, written by David Green,
the guy who started Hobby Lobby. And it's about being generous, about living generously,
not just financially, although that's important, but also with giving away of your time,
your treasures, your talents, your knowledge, which I think all four of us here do a lot of
that in the real estate and the business space. But I like hanging out with people.
who are generous. I don't like hanging out with people that are stingy and, and, uh, hold all of their
secrets to themselves, you know. So that's a really good book, giving it all away.
Awesome. I'm glad you actually brought that up, Joe, because you three are the most generous
people that I know I've gotten so much from you and I just want to do something to, to share this
and give back to you guys as much as I possibly can. Joe, if someone wanted to get in touch with you,
what would be the best way for them to do that? Uh, good question. Um, don't, whatever you do,
Want to come back to you?
No, no, no.
All right.
Whatever you do, stop sending me Facebook messages.
I don't read those things, and it's frustrating because people get so mad at me that I'm not responding to their Facebook messages.
But anyway, the best way probably is just through my podcast, Real Estate Investing Mastery podcast.
Perfect.
Perfect.
One of the longest running ones on iTunes.
Congrats on that.
Cody Sperger, what's the best way for someone to get in contact with you?
Yeah, my address is.
I'm just kidding.
Yeah, just have people showing up at my house.
It'd be pretty funny.
You know what?
On Instagram, I'm at Clever Investor.
I'm pretty much at Clever Investor on all social platforms.
But, you know, I'm out there.
I put myself out there.
I invite people into my world on a daily basis.
I'm constantly going live.
I got marketing stamina.
So I'm always putting myself out there.
And I think, you know, you want to come.
out, find me on social, download my book at fliphousesbook.com. It's a free resource for you.
So that way, at least you want to learn how to get into the real estate investing business.
That's a great step-by-step guide. And I want to, can I just leave them with something real
quick? Sure. You know, you have an amazing array of talent right here on this mastermind.
And I agreed to do it because I respect you guys so much. And the biggest needle,
movers in my life have always been and come out of events and masterminds. When you get plugged
into a community like what you put together, Matt, or Sean's community or Joe's community,
I mean, like it's different than just buying a product or course from a lot of other, you know,
gurus that are out there. You guys really take a lot of time to create that community environment.
And I think that's, it's so needed in the real estate space because real estate's scary.
It's really freaking scary the first year.
And my best advice to somebody who's new is get plugged into somebody like Sean or Joe or Matt.
And stop wearing this, I'm bloody, I'm beat up.
I got scars as a badge of honor.
I'm figuring it out on my own.
Screw that.
Who wants bloody noses to get beat up every single day?
Pick up where these guys have left off.
They're playing the game at such a high level.
they've been through decades of trial and error.
Stop kidding yourself that it's cool to fail miserably and figure it out.
What's cool is getting in the game, learning from those that have already cracked the code,
and then going off and making your millions of dollars,
and then using that money to empower yourself to do cool shit,
like help your environment, help your community, you know, cut checks to solve big world problems,
take care of your family, whatever you're into.
That's cool, right?
Being broke sucks, right? Being broke's not cool. Being average is not cool. But figuring out on your own is
definitely the wrong way to go, especially in the real estate space. And you're at the right place with
this guy, Matt. So, you know, let me add to that something that's really important to. You can't go broke
making money. Okay. I'll say it again. You can't go broke making money. So what are you focusing on?
Like here's the thing. Focus will make you rich. Focus will make you rich. So if you're
you want to be successful in business, focus on what matters most. Become brilliant at the basic
things, right? I wrote a book called Brilliant at the Basics. Focus on those basic things,
talking to five sellers a day. If you don't have leads, if you can't afford marketing,
go find other wholesalers out there that have old leads and offer to follow up with their old
leads for them and split the deals with them or something like that. So you literally have no
excuses, none out there. If you focus on your highest revenue generating activities, which is
talking to sellers and making offers, you're going to have success in this business. And so I just
think that's important. You can't go broke making money. Focus will make you rich. You know,
shiny objects will make you go blind. So get rid of those shiny objects and just focus on those
basic elemental things in this business. And you're going to do fine. You're going to crush it.
Thanks for that, Joe. Sean, if someone wanted to get in contact with you, what would be the best way
for them to do that?
They can go to flip the number two
freedom.com, flip two freedom.com.
I have a book there. They can download free.
Read it if they want.
And to add to what these guys are saying,
I remember you and I, Matt,
sat down in Tommy Bahama
Cafe, we're going to beach, California.
I remember that, had a couple cocktails.
Beautiful day outside. How long ago?
You had a huge impact on my wardrobe, Sean, since that day.
Great.
We had a great time
And we were both not there
We were both still figuring it out
We were both bouncing ideas off either
You were very giving
I was very we went back and forth
We're still
We're still navigating the path
Of really trying to make our way
In the industry, make our path
You know
And I remember how to it was a great conversation
We had a great time
And to add to what these guys are talking about
To kind of wrap it up
And now I've seen what you've accomplished
and what's great about it is you've had relentless focus,
which talks before what Joe talks about.
You've been part of masterminds.
You surround yourself with the right people,
Cody's talking about.
And you had one other element that wasn't discussed,
and it was the consistent action.
You had absolute consistency.
And from that meeting and from that many,
I think I took away,
you have consistently put out content,
consistently put out podcasts consistently been there.
And if you look at that effort and energy of being consistent,
you've risen to the top of the game in all aspects,
from the coaching that you've done,
the masterminds that you're putting on right now,
the education, your training and stuff,
which, and it's created of being now an industry leader.
And it's done through all those different aspects
and being consistent and putting your head down,
staying focused and surrounding yourself for the right people.
So I commend you to do an incredible job, thoroughly impressive what you've accomplished.
And, Matt, do you know how much stuff I've stolen from you?
I mean, I mean.
Yes, I actually do, Joe.
No, but I don't steal it.
I model it.
Yes.
I'm really grateful for you, Matt.
You're such a great teacher.
You lay things out super simple.
and I really look up to you, all the rest of you guys, sort of.
But like, Matt, you keep doing what you're doing.
And I love your passion for simplifying things for the average investor.
You know what I'm saying?
I just want to say one thing.
I wish I could grow a beard and part it, just the way he does with a little gray on the
old.
That nice accent he's got going on, right?
That is awesome.
Well, guys, I got like 17 more questions.
So go ahead and block up.
rest of the day.
No.
Let's wrap it up
and maybe we can do a part two.
Let's put that on the books for soon.
All right.
So if you'd like to do deals,
stay tuned.
Everything that you need to do deals
is right here on the show.
If you'd like to go fast,
check out one of our three guests today
or go to R-E-I-Ase.com
and we'll see you next week
on another episode of Epic Real Estate Investing.
Take care.
Yeah, yeah, we got the cash flow.
Yeah, yeah, we got the cash flow.
Yeah, yeah.
we got the cash flow
You didn't know home for us
We got the cash low
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