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All Forum Posts by: Brian Gibbons

Brian Gibbons has started 114 posts and replied 4413 times.

Post: ​How can I attract a marketing partner? A New Wholesaler….

Brian GibbonsPosted
  • Investor
  • Sherman Oaks, CA
  • Posts 6,088
  • Votes 3,921
Originally posted by @Hattie Dizmond:

@Brian Gibbons

Hey...where's my vote?!?  LMAO!!!

 I just voted!!!!

Wheeeeeeeeeeeee!

Post: ​How can I attract a marketing partner? A New Wholesaler….

Brian GibbonsPosted
  • Investor
  • Sherman Oaks, CA
  • Posts 6,088
  • Votes 3,921

@Hattie Dizmond

I'm voting for that post of yours!

---

@Account Closed

An unknown way of raising money is to ask your aunt or uncle for business loan that has money in an IRA

You would use a custodian like trustetc .com for a promissory note and the IRA Le a business lends you money

In my owner financing and rent to own tenant buyers that are broke, I have them do the same thing

Write a letter to your aunt or uncle that you think has IRA money and basically say:

"I have a great business opportunity and I need to borrow $10,000 

if you're interested in lending money out of your IRA please let me know

I would pay you back over 6 to 12 months with interest"

Post: What would you do with $60K?

Brian GibbonsPosted
  • Investor
  • Sherman Oaks, CA
  • Posts 6,088
  • Votes 3,921

At the paper in Indiana Indianapolis paper

---------------

I am looking for rehab projects to fund

must be in first position if the numbers make sense 

Personal credit is not a problem 

money in the deal is not a problem

My phone number

------------

Post: Advice to set up Seller Financed deal

Brian GibbonsPosted
  • Investor
  • Sherman Oaks, CA
  • Posts 6,088
  • Votes 3,921

Well it takes a really long time to talk about negotiating with Sellers, but I basically build rapport with the seller first, I might take 15 minutes,  and then I talk about a cash offer and terms offer 

With Old geezers,  if The property is free of mortgages,  I tell him 

you can make a lot more money if youre the bank and you creates a private mortgage

I tell him 

the banks of been making money forever and the IRS let you do this

So whatever the ARV is I usually give them a little bit more on installment sale price and get my payment well under the monthly rents, it's all about can flow

Search Brian Gibbons installment sale and you get a lot of information on it 

This is only for free and clear properties

If there's a loan or  existing financing its a different conversation

@Steve Vaughan has great insights too

Post: 1 on 1 Mentor Coach Brian Gibbons

Brian GibbonsPosted
  • Investor
  • Sherman Oaks, CA
  • Posts 6,088
  • Votes 3,921

I am seeking students that want to make money in real esttate investing.

My approach is giving the seller 2 or 3 offers.

See the video.

See what people think of me on BiggerPockets

http://www.biggerpockets.com/search?utf8=%E2%9C%93...

Thank you for watching the video.

Best wishes,

Brian

Post: Closing Cost when Using a Transactional Funding

Brian GibbonsPosted
  • Investor
  • Sherman Oaks, CA
  • Posts 6,088
  • Votes 3,921

@Jay Hinrichs

Funds rehabbers all day as a transaction funder and he may want to chime in here

Post: Double Closing & Closing Costs Question

Brian GibbonsPosted
  • Investor
  • Sherman Oaks, CA
  • Posts 6,088
  • Votes 3,921

@Kenneth LeBeau

#1 and #2 is your business.

#3 is your Investor Buyer's business.

See a seasoned wholesaler and a manager of a good title co in LV, NV for a mock HUD1.

Post: An investor in the Inland Empire but not investing in the IE...Whaaaa?

Brian GibbonsPosted
  • Investor
  • Sherman Oaks, CA
  • Posts 6,088
  • Votes 3,921
Originally posted by @Aaron Mazzrillo:

The problem with most investors is that they are working with a limited skill set, but trying to survive in a dynamic environment. They think in one dimension. I didn't read a book on how to flip houses and suddenly I'm buying properties that cash flow because I learned how to be a great MLS shopper and get a bank loan. That last house I bought out of the MLS was maybe 2012.

When a seminar comes up that has people speaking who are much more experienced than I, I go. Again and again and again and again. I have flown to Florida, San Francisco, Reno, Chicago, Atlanta, Salt Lake City, Las Vegas. I study and go to seminars taught by Jimmy Napier, John Schaub, Jack Miller, Peter Fortunato, Jack Shea, Dyches Boddiford, Walter Woffard, Jackie Lange. I used to go to every REIA in SoCal every month for years - from San DIego to Los Angeles. I still attend a few, but speak at more than I sit through these days.

I study marketing. I read the books written by the best marketers in the world. Books written recently and some written 75 years ago, plus everything in between. I also study copy writing. I read books such as Words That Sell, Phrases That Sell, The Ultimate Sales Letter, The Letter Book, Scientific Advertising, Confessions of an Advertising Man. I study Jay Abraham, Dan Kennedy, Claude Hopkins, Gary Halbert, Joe Polish. I signed up on email lists, I watch youtube videos and listen to podcasts. 

I test and test and test. I have advertised by letter, post card, Pennysaver, radio, t-shirts, vehicles, internet, door knocking, word of mouth, bandit signs, every door direct mail, lumpy mail.

I pay consultants when I need it. I befriend the best investors I can find. I figure out how to bring value to them. I figure out how to get into their life. I study and learn from them. I copy, I mimic, I reinvent, but most importantly, I listen to find out what is working.

This isn't a hobby. It is all I think about. I got out of bed at 6:30 AM (on a Sunday) and drove a neighborhood I've never been in. I went to a yard sale to see if they were moving and work on my negotiation (but I didn't end up buying anything). After that, as I drove 1.5 hours up into the mountains, I listened to an advanced house buying strategies course on CD. While I fished and hiked for 7 hours, I thought about deals I'm working on and better ways to find more deals. As I came up with ideas, I emailed them to myself from my phone so I can go over them in the morning with fresh eyes. It is almost midnight and I'm browsing this real estate website answering questions and participating. Soon, I'll go to bed and read yet another book on marketing, real estate, strategy, mindset, or maybe finance. 

I immersed myself in this business for many years. I am forever a student of this business. This is not my job. It is what I do.

So, I can get a cash flowing house in SoCal, in this market, because I don't just look at price, rent rates, and debt payments. A house is like a side of beef. It has lots of useful parts; depreciation, rent income, occupancy, appreciation, amortization, leverage, interest, management. Like a good chef who can take any cut of beef and serve it up in unlimited numbers of ways, a good investor should be able to utilize and possibly spread around any of those house parts to find a solution. 

I talk to hundreds of potential sellers every year. I would say the real number is over 1,000 a year. I analyze potential deals every day. I hate to let a day go by without making an offer. That is the goal: An offer every day, 7 days a week. That is a minimum 365 offers a year. If I miss a day, I owe it the next. If I get 2 today, I don't get credit tomorrow. The minimum is 7 new offers every week. And remember, I don't buy out of the MLS so I am making 7 offers direct to property owners.

When you look at as many deals as I do, and you are willing to put in the effort to learn how to identify opportunity, structure transactions to create deals that work for both you and the seller, you'll find what you are looking for. Until then, you'll only find what you think you can find because you are working with a much smaller skill set than your competitors. 

Frankly, I don't think I do that many deals. While I always try to have at least one escrow going, I'm not really ever that busy. I know people who do dozens more than me year after year. If you can't figure out how to find a cash flowing rental, learn how to find a property you can buy below market and flip for a profit. Do enough of those, take the cash, and pay cash for a rental. Nothing cash flows like a free & clear house! See, there's always a way. You just have to uncover the way that works best for you.

 Best Post of a Seasoned Transaction Engineer August 2015

I thought I heard Jack Miller or Peter Fortunato in there....lol

Post: Master Lease Hotel?

Brian GibbonsPosted
  • Investor
  • Sherman Oaks, CA
  • Posts 6,088
  • Votes 3,921

@Marty True

It is based on the NOI of the hotel. Look at the income.

But you are not leasing it.  You are managing the hotel, like a rent a car business.  

Customers need to lease 100% to maximize business.

I would set up a management contract for salary plus bonus.  

@Marty True 

@Bill Gulley any thoughts?

Post: Rental Tenants or Lease Option Tenants

Brian GibbonsPosted
  • Investor
  • Sherman Oaks, CA
  • Posts 6,088
  • Votes 3,921
Originally posted by @John Jackson:

@DG 

@DG H.   !!!

Weatherford!  BAM BABY!

Reading your post I see the issue very clearly....

Price point baby!!! BAM!

If you are trying to lease option a trailer in Springtown or a 3-1 in Brock.....LO's are NOT the best way to go!

The T/B will almost never exercise the option!

That price point is a rental or owner finance. 

Get me a 4-2 in Aledo for $225k and that is a L/O!

 For you folks not in Texas, what John means is "CD" areas where there's not great schools and not the best crime rate, don't even bother doing a lease option

If you want to deal with nice owners that are intelligent, well-educated, they want to sink their feet for five years or more in a good neighborhood, good schools, go into "AB" areas and go after 

expireds, 

landlords, 

listed houses, 

for sale by owners, and 

talk to "we buy houses" people that have leads that are thrown away due to low equity

If you get the product right meaning a four bedroom two bath, quiet street, something that people really want, then filling it with the tenant buyer is quite easy, and making your 3 to 5% is a lot easier if the product is right

Think of it like the car business:

you've got a Ford Fiesta on a car lot, and a Toyota Camry. Which does a family want and pay top dollar for?