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Updated 11 days ago on . Most recent reply

User Stats

16
Posts
10
Votes
Darrell Gibson
  • New to Real Estate
  • Mishawaka, IN
10
Votes |
16
Posts

Analysis, paralysis, and mentorship

Darrell Gibson
  • New to Real Estate
  • Mishawaka, IN
Posted

Hey yo! Long time listener first time caller.I’m 48 years old and tired of making other people money. My grandparents had about 20 rentals back in the day. Unfortunately, they were lost during the recession. I’m ready to move on and start my own adventure in renting. I’m struggling with how to analyze a property correctly. That has given me some analysis paralysis on taking the next step.

I guess what I’m asking is how do I know if a deal is good? How do I find a trustworthy mentor that doesn’t cost an arm and a leg?

Thank you for taking time to read. I look forward to hearing your guys advice.


Darrell

Real Estate Investor

Most Popular Reply

User Stats

127
Posts
74
Votes
Travis Goodwin#2 Wholesaling Contributor
  • Wholesaler
  • Charleston WV
74
Votes |
127
Posts
Travis Goodwin#2 Wholesaling Contributor
  • Wholesaler
  • Charleston WV
Replied

A “good deal” usually comes down to simple fundamentals: buying below realistic value, understanding repairs, knowing local rents/demand, and leaving enough margin for mistakes. Keep it conservative and don’t force deals. As for mentors, be careful of anyone selling shortcuts or hype. Find someone actively doing deals who’s willing to answer questions, let you observe, or even partner on smaller opportunities. Real mentorship usually starts through relationships and conversations, not giant coaching payments.

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