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All Forum Posts by: Dominik Porobic

Dominik Porobic has started 1 posts and replied 24 times.

Post: Reducing rent to place a tenant?

Dominik PorobicPosted
  • Realtor
  • Southern Maine
  • Posts 24
  • Votes 19
Quote from @Michele Velazquez:

I am relatively new to investing. I have 2 quadplexes in Atlanta being managed by a PM since I am in California.  I bought these units because the PM said the rent in the area was $1250 and they believe I could get between $1250-$1275 a month per unit. So I bought these units assuming these numbers as that would make me cashflow.  However, the unit has been on the market for one month and now they are saying to lower the rent $25 every week. My question is, how low do I go? Do I go down past $1200 where I won't cash flow every month but it's better than no tenant?  I would love to hear feedback from the seasoned investors.  Thank you.


 Trust but verify, I would message a few PMs and perform my own due diligence on the rental market (look at comps on Zillow,etc). I know this isn't the answer to your question, but I would make sure that the apartment is cross-listed to as many websites/platforms as possible to get the most exposure. If still no activity, then consider dropping the price... probably by a more significant increment. Also, I would make sure that the photos taken and listed are taken by a professional real estate photographer ~$200... it makes a big difference. 

Post: Is this a reasonable request to Tenant?

Dominik PorobicPosted
  • Realtor
  • Southern Maine
  • Posts 24
  • Votes 19

Landlord should be responsible for this... PLUS if she is an excellent tenant I would most certainly not ask her for this request.

Post: My Desired "Sweet Spot" is Dry

Dominik PorobicPosted
  • Realtor
  • Southern Maine
  • Posts 24
  • Votes 19

Sounds like you need a well connected Realtor in the area...

Post: Looking for advice of muti unit investing

Dominik PorobicPosted
  • Realtor
  • Southern Maine
  • Posts 24
  • Votes 19
Quote from @Matt Soares:
Quote from @Dominik Porobic:

Lots of people from California are moving to southern Maine - Greater Portland Area. Really great place to invest given the close proximity to Boston (1.5hr drive) NYC (45 minute flight). I've traveled across the U.S throughout my previous line of work and have yet to find a better place to call my home base. You have the ocean, lakes, rivers, mountains, city, and just about everything else you could imagine. Winter is a bit of a stretch, but if you take a week and go somewhere warm, it's much more manageable. 

Plenty of multis to invest in.

Hi Dominick, I have not even considered Maine. What cities could you recommend with market growth?



I think if you look at Biddeford, Maine and what is happening there, it will have a similar trajectory to Portland, Maine which has already become pretty pricey for the average local. It is the youngest city in Maine now and there's lots of development in the works. 

For a first timer - I am not sure whether I would go this route.

My suggestion would be to purchase an established 2-unit that needs a little TLC so you can build equity, and get a hang of things as there's a decent amount of learning to do with real estate...



Post: Looking for advice of muti unit investing

Dominik PorobicPosted
  • Realtor
  • Southern Maine
  • Posts 24
  • Votes 19

Lots of people from California are moving to southern Maine - Greater Portland Area. Really great place to invest given the close proximity to Boston (1.5hr drive) NYC (45 minute flight). I've traveled across the U.S throughout my previous line of work and have yet to find a better place to call my home base. You have the ocean, lakes, rivers, mountains, city, and just about everything else you could imagine. Winter is a bit of a stretch, but if you take a week and go somewhere warm, it's much more manageable. 

Plenty of multis to invest in.

Post: Carpet vs Hardwood

Dominik PorobicPosted
  • Realtor
  • Southern Maine
  • Posts 24
  • Votes 19

LVP is most durable and best bang for the buck.

Hardwood is nice and luxurious, depending on the property, this may appeal to a certain clientele. Also, depending on the hardwood flooring you can refinish it every so often up to a certain amount of times.

Carpet is nice depending on what floor the apartment is located on as it transmits less sound, but they do hold smell and can get dirty quickly...

The winner LVP.


Post: Becoming an agent

Dominik PorobicPosted
  • Realtor
  • Southern Maine
  • Posts 24
  • Votes 19
Quote from @Charlie MacPherson:

Go in with your eyes wide open.

It's a BRUTAL business.  The barriers to entry are so low that it's impossible to make yourself stand out from other agents.  When I lived in Plymouth, MA, and sold real estate there, there were 787 licensed agents in that one town.  Something like 1.5% of the entire population of the town was licensed!

There's so much competition that you'll hear from buyers over and over "Sorry - I just found out that my mother's babysitter has a dog walker whose 2nd cousin's house painter has a 3rd cousin that's a Realtor.  I have to buy from him to keep peace in the family".  Even if you have a Buyer's Broker contract. 

The buyers just don't care and your broker will be very unlikely to take them to court to enforce the contract for fear of wrecking their reputation. 

And no matter how hard you work, buyers give you the same loyalty as they would a used piece of tissue paper.

Sure, you want to be a seller's agent.  So does every single one of the other hundreds of Realtors in the same market.  That's not a unique idea.

Having done residential and rehabber sales for years (and thankfully having gotten out of the business completely) my opinion, gleaned from experience, is that if you take a dozen agents who have been at it for at least 5 years full-time and have no other source of income, there's not a dime's worth of difference between them. 

Part-timers are the absolute bane of the business, but that's another story.

Sure, every brokerage has a story about "we're better / we're different", but in reality, they just aren't - especially in a hot market. In fact in the red hot market of a couple of years ago, sellers really could FSBO and do quite well without an agent.

I'm very skeptical of the widely touted "studies" that say that selling through a Realtor gets you 16% more in the sale price. Every one of those studies I've seen were paid for by NAR or an affiliate, so they're not exactly objective.

Prepare to go for at least 3 months (probably much more) without a paycheck. In the mean time, you'll pay for your business cards, For Sale signs, open house signs, MLS fees (mandatory membership in many places), desk fees, NAR fees, CRM/tech fees, gas and mileage and for all of your own marketing costs - which can be crushing. And let's not forget paying for your own health and dental insurance.

You'll walk in the door with your shiny new license and have to pay all those costs - with no income.

Everybody and their brother is looking for money from you.  The worst are the likes of Zillow, Trulia (owned by Zillow) and Realtor.com.  They'll sell you leads at a very high cost - but unless you buy a crazy expensive program, 4 agents get the same lead simultaneously.  You had better be the first one to call or your chances of success are very, very low.  That means responding within 30 seconds.  Day or night, weekdays, weekends and holidays.  By the time the third or fourth agent calls, you can bet that the seller is going to be getting testy.

Even if you do get the listing appointment, be prepared for the competing agent to promise the seller that he can get a higher price than you can.  If you've run your comps right, that won't be true, and the seller will eventually figure out that you were right - but you will have lost the listing.

Even NAR says that 87% of agents are out of the business within 5 years.

On the bright side, if you can stick it out and grind *hard* for 5+ years, you should start to see some referrals and repeat business - but you have to ask yourself, "is this the best use of my time, money and effort?"  Or would you be better off with a W-2 job?

Sorry to sound so negative, but that's my experience.  I really want prospective agents to have a realistic idea of what they're getting into.

Whatever you decide, good luck!


 I recommend everyone read this prior to thinking about getting into real estate. Charlie, great job on this...

Sometimes you are better off sticking out your W-2 job and accumulating rental/investment properties until you could free yourself from a 9-5. Then go back and figure out the best utilization for each, STR/MTR/LTR.

Just be mindful of your time and who wastes it.