| A Real Estate Course For You |
We are all different, aren't we? Would a man who loves to fix up and sell old homes
necessarily have the motivation and mind set to make money with speculative commercial
real estate? He could learn, but would he do as well as when investing in an area he
enjoys? Would he do as well with a real estate course that taught him how to talk to
families facing foreclosure, to convince them to sell to him?
The point is that you need to discover what kinds of real estate investing are best
suited to your personality and skills. Spend an afternoon in the local bookstore for
this. A good one will have fifty books on twenty different ways to make money with real
estate. Browse them, take notes, imagine yourself doing the things described in them,
and see what types of investing appeal to you.
I hated being a landlord, but you may love it. Fixer uppers can yield quick profits,
and you get to be very creative in this type of investing, but are you ready for the
risk and uncertainty? Flipping real estate contracts can be a low-risk low-investment
strategy that pays well, but requires a willingness to spend a lot of time face-to-face
with sellers and other investors, negotiating.
Again, there are dozens and dozens of ways to make money in real estate, and some will
work better for you than others. Find the ones that make sense and start getting
educated. Of course, you may not find all the information you need to know all in one
place. In that case, it is time to design your own real estate investing course.
Your Personal Real Estate Course
On a piece of paper make three columns, labeled "books," "people" and "other
resources." Then start creating a plan or "course" that involves all three of these.
You can, for example, seek out the books that are most directly relevant to the type of
investing you'll be doing, and put them on the list. You can find the books online, at
the bookstore, or in the library.
Those who can help teach you belong in the "people" category. They may include
investors that have experience in the area you are interested in - find these at a
local real estate club. Add real estate agents to the list - browse advertisements to
see which ones sell a lot of the types of properties you'll be looking at.
"Other resources" might include seminars, tapes, internet real estate investing forums,
and anything else that can be part of your course.
Make a list of everything you need to learn. There should be a corresponding source for
each of these necessary lessons in one of your three columns. Add to this master list
as you learn more about what you need to learn.
Finally, write down your study goals based on your lists. Set completion dates for
reading each of the books on your list. Make appointments to go to real estate club
meetings or to meet with real estate agents who can help you. Set goals for using any
other resources, and fashion it all into a real estate investing course that gives you
the knowledge and confidence necessary to make your first (or next) investment.
Copyright Steve Gillman. For a Free
Real Estate Investing Course
contact_email: stevengillman@hotmail.com
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