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Posted over 9 years ago

Learn How To Build Your First System: A House Hunting Database!

(TLDR: What is a system and use mymaps to create a housing database. Reading Time: 4 Minute & 15 Seconds)

“Measurement is the first step that leads to control and eventually to improvement. If you can’t measure something, you can’t understand it. If you can’t understand it, you can’t control it. If you can’t control it, you can’t improve it.” - James Harrington

Wise words, but unfortunately I didn’t follow them when I began my real estate journey.

Before I bought my first property in Sacramento, I would drive for 2 and a half hours to Sacramento almost every weekend for 6 months. Unfortunately I didn’t create a system to track: the 100+ houses I previewed, what I thought of those houses, and more importantly I didn’t create a system to track the condition of the neighborhoods I visited. This was a huge mistake, and it wasted my time, gas, and sanity.

What is a system?

A system is a set of procedures that lead to a desired result. Have you ever noticed no matter which Starbucks your visit the drink you order is virtually identical to any previous order? Thats the result of a healthy system. A well constructed system creates consistency, saves time, and leads to a repeatable desired result. Without these systems you will find yourself spinning your wheels and you won’t know how to evaluate your decisions.

Beginning your real estate journey you need to create systems with repeatable processes to create consistent outputs, and if you intend to survive in Real Estate, you need these systems to track what matters. Be it a system to track potential fixers, buy and hold prospects, or potential wholesale deals.

Our First System: A Housing Database

A housing database is an example of a system. Without a housing database you have no way of knowing which houses you visited, when you visited them, what you thought of the price at that time, what you were willing to offer, and more importantly the status of the neighborhood.

Can you remember the house you previewed 3 years ago? Yes, we can all remember that one meth house we visited or the cat lady's house that wreaked, but can we remember the unnoteworthy houses? More importantly can you remember the condition of these houses? And the condition of the surrounding area?

Memories fade, waste line grow, hair recedes (thanks dad), and sadly houses that could have provided us with steady income are forgotten. Yet, properly built systems can last the test of time.

Once you create your database you will have the ability to quickly plug in a house into this database to do the following:

  1. Prescreen houses you find from the MLS, realtors, or wholesalers.
  2. Save valuable time and money from visiting a house in an undesirable area.
  3. Begin the due diligence process on a house before seeing it in person.
  4. Have a record of all of the offers you have made on houses and the sellers reaction to your offer.
  5. Track homeowners who are considering selling their homes months from now and the last time you have checked in with them.

This allows you to put perspective in what you are purchasing. More importantly this is one of the first system you should create as an investor to develop the systems mindset. The systems mindset builds discipline which allows you to improve your operations, scale your business, and eventually teach a vendor or employee your system so you can focus on other projects.

Creating Your First System: A House Hunting Database

There are numerous ways you can create a house hunting database: You can use a pen and paper, a physical map, websites, or excel spreadsheets. I wanted to focus on one simple system I've been using, but hey if you know of a better way of doing this, please let me know!

Now with Google's MyMaps you can easily create a personalized real estate map to track all of the houses you previewed.

  1. Create a new map titled "Real Estate."
  2. Enter the address of a house you recently previewed.
  3. Select a pin type. I use the following types of pins:
    1. House Pin: The property you own.
    2. Red Pin: The property you previewed but decided to skip.
    3. Green Pin: The property you will or have made an offer on.
    4. Bar Graph with Arrow: Neighborhood which meets your criteria.
  4. In the notes section of your pin you can list:
    1. The condition of the house.
    2. Condition of the surrounding neighborhood.
    3. Listing price.
    4. Your offer.
    5. The date you visited the area.

This is just one of the many ways to use MyMaps to track your Real Estate prospects. Feel free to tailor this system to your individual needs.

Do you use other methods for tracking homes you preview? If so, let me know.

Happy Hunting!


Comments (25)

  1. Nice heads up, and awesome tool!!!! thank you for taking time to help those of us in the trenches, Rosendo


    1. You're welcome @Rosendo Gonzales  . Let me know how it works for you.


  2. I love this. So easy.  Thanks man.


    1. You're welcome sir! Let me know how it works.


  3. @Jordan T. Thank you for the tip!


    1. You're welcome sir! Let me know how it works.


  4. This is a fantastic idea! Thanks so much for sharing @Jordan T. 


    1. @Jessica Sorensen You're welcome Jessica! Let me know how it works for you!


  5. Hey @Jordan T. , is there a way to add an address to the dropped pin automatically? If not, let me know. I think I have a better way of doing this. One that doesn't involve manually entering the addresses. 


    1. Hey Carlos! What's your plan? Importing a CSV?

      1. @Jordan T. 

        I downloaded this android program called called Map Marker. It's awesome. It allows you to put a pin on any location and it automatically retrieves the address and lets you choose whether to put it in into the description or title of that marker. Once you are done, you can e-mail yourself a kml file that can then be imported into My Maps. This is the solution I came up with to solve the problem of being able to quickly identify properties on the go (driving for dollars) and keep track of them. Map Marker also allows for color coding.


      2. That's a great idea man. Thanks for sharing.


  6. @Jaime Franklin Thanks! Have you tried to zoom in, click the 3 dots next to share, select print map, select PDF & landscape?


  7. This is really great!  I spent a few minutes outlining the properties and it gives a great visual, plus awesome reminder and validation that despite it all, we continue to move forward.  I plan to integrate this into our platform so we can easily share our project portfolio list with investors and clients.  

    <Question> Is there a way to minimize and print out in a way that does not blur properties that are close to each other?  


    1. Hi Jaime! Thank you sir! Send me a personal message with an example and lets see if we can figure this out.


  8. Awesome tip. Thanks! 


    1. @Kyle Doney 

      Thanks Kyle. Let me know how it works for you. How goes RE investing in Colorado? 


  9. @Jordan T. this is a great hack, thank you for sharing! excel tabs with all the information are great, but this adds the missing visual component :)


    1. You're welcome. Let me know how it works.


  10. @Jordan T. Great stuff!


    1. Thanks Andrew.

  11. @Jordan T.  Thanks for sharing!  This is very helpful!


    1. You're welcome Ryan. Let me know if it helps you out.


  12. WOW!  Blown away by this!  I've been using Zillow, but I do not like the functionality.  It combines too many unnecessary variables.  This is perfect for me, thanks for sharing!


    1. @Frankie Woods Thanks Frankie!