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All Forum Posts by: Zeth Daniel Vanegas

Zeth Daniel Vanegas has started 10 posts and replied 11 times.

I’ve been thinking about this a lot lately:
If a tenant moving out destroys our cash flow, why is that considered “normal?”
Isn’t that a broken system?

Two months of no rent.
Thousands in repairs.
Weeks spent finding someone new.
And we just call it part of the business?

What if there was a way to set up your lease—and your tenant relationship—so that you didn’t have to restart the clock every year?
I'm realizing it's not about avoiding turnover completely...
It’s about choosing tenants and agreements that make turnovers rare (or even unnecessary).

Curious if anyone else has made changes like this?
Would love to hear what’s worked for you.

Hey Pham, welcome to the Sarasota/Manatee market! That's a great area to be in — a lot of opportunity here.

I focus on working directly with property owners by becoming their last tenant — basically combining the role of tenant and property manager into one. It’s helped owners cut down on turnover, repairs, and vacancy costs.
Kind of a different lane, but it's been working really well so far!

How are you liking the transition from Orlando? Are you focusing on traditional residential sales or investment properties out here?

A lot of us think that owning a rental means we’re automatically in control.
But what I’ve found is—most of that control disappears the second you hand over the keys.

I used to think “ownership = stability.”
But when you’re constantly dealing with things like:

  • Late rent

  • Tenants breaking lease rules

  • Constant maintenance issues

…it doesn’t feel like control. It feels like chasing problems.

Real peace of mind doesn’t come from just owning the property.
It comes from having the right setup—where income is steady, the home is taken care of, and things don’t break down every year (literally or financially).

Just something I’ve been thinking about lately as I compare what’s working and what’s not. Curious—what’s helped you feel more “in control” of your rentals?

Post: How Can You Buy Freedom?

Zeth Daniel VanegasPosted
  • Florida, US
  • Posts 13
  • Votes 2

They’re not asking how to find better tenants…

They’re asking how to outgrow the need for one.

When your income doesn’t depend on who's living there—

You finally bought freedom, not just a property.

Want to see how?

Click my profile.

Hey BP Fam 

I’m currently building my corporate housing business here in Florida, and I’m looking to connect with:

  • Realtors who know the local rental market

  • Landlords with properties

  • Anyone with solid connections in the space

If you're active in real estate, manage rentals, or just know good people in Florida’s market—I’d love to connect. I’m not looking to sell anything, just genuinely hoping to build relationships and learn from others doing the work.

Appreciate you all—drop a comment or shoot me a DM if you're in the area or can make a warm intro

Hey BP Fam! I’m looking to connect with realtors or experienced landlords in the [City/Metro Area] who either:

- Have rental properties

- Have connections that can help me scale

DM me or drop a comment if that’s you!

Thanks in advance 🙌

Hey BP Fam! I’m looking to connect with realtors or experienced landlords in Florida who either:

- Have investment properties

- Have connections that can help me scale

I’m already leasing and managing properties as a business tenant in multiple cities, and looking for great landlords who want a reliable, long-term partner.

Thanks in advance 🙌

AT&T was installing internet in the neighborhood—and they hit a water line.
It started leaking. Bad.

❌ We didn’t cause it.
✅ But we were the first to catch it.

Now here’s the part most landlords miss:

I’m not just the tenant. I’m the business tenant.
So instead of calling the landlord to complain…
I started calling the city to get it handled.

AT&T wouldn’t take responsibility.
Turns out only the city could fix it.
So I stayed on it—until the trucks showed up.

The landlord?
Didn’t even hear about it until it was already solved.

Post: How Should We Run A Rental Property?

Zeth Daniel VanegasPosted
  • Florida, US
  • Posts 13
  • Votes 2

Post: Why Choose A Business Tenant?

Zeth Daniel VanegasPosted
  • Florida, US
  • Posts 13
  • Votes 2

Most landlords are tired of late rent, constant repairs, and tenant turnover. That’s why I do things differently. As a business tenant, I guarantee on-time rent, handle maintenance, and stay long-term. You get peace of mind, not phone calls. Want a tenant who treats your property like a business, not a burden? Let’s connect.

#RealEstateInvestor #LandlordTips #PassiveIncome #PropertyManagement #BusinessTenant

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