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4 Life-Changing Lessons My Real Estate Mentor Taught Me

Ali Boone
6 min read
4 Life-Changing Lessons My Real Estate Mentor Taught Me

There is no question about it—everyone in this industry needs a mentor. I can truly say that if I didn’t have the mentor that I do, I wouldn’t have made it this far—if not just for his teachings, but for his moral support during my freakouts.

I’d say the latter has been the most important, but all the while, there is no reason to reinvent the wheel either. If someone has already done what I’m trying to do, why would I not listen to that person and save myself the time (and headache) of making the same mistakes?

When I started thinking of some of the best things I’ve learned from my mentor, a couple specifics come to mind. If you’ve read any of my previous articles, you’ve probably seen a couple of these things already. But even if you have seen them before, read them again. They are that big of game-changers! (They were for me, at least.)

I hope these four life-changing lessons I learned from my mentor help you in your real estate investing career as much as they have mine.

4 Life-Changing Lessons My Real Estate Mentor Taught Me

1. Don’t take advice from someone you wouldn’t trade shoes with.

This is my favorite quote in life. My mentor didn’t teach me this quote, but instead, he demonstrated it. The reason my mentor is my mentor is because when I first met him, I wanted his life. He was working his own schedule, we met at his rooftop pool deck overlooking downtown L.A., he didn’t have a briefcase or a notepad or anything formal or fancy, and he was wearing flip flops!

After we met about a real estate contract I had been going over, I paused and asked him how I could have his life. Because I wanted his life, I was very willing to take everything he said seriously. I took advice from someone I would trade shoes with (or in this case, flip flops).

It’s funny to me how many people want to force their advice on me and yet they aren’t living any kind of life I want to live, so why would I take them seriously?

Another example involves a mentor of mine that I’ve never actually met—Robert Kiyosaki. People can knock him left and right, but I would trade shoes with him all day long. So, I pay attention to what he writes in his books (and it’s worked for me!).

The point is, find people who are living the kind of life you want to be living, and take their advice seriously. Be leery about advice you receive from anyone else.

Man and woman feeling happy, and positive facing sunset sky

Related: 7 Ways to Find a Real Estate Mentor for Free

2. Don’t ask “if” you can do something—ask “how” to do it.

This was huge piece of advice for me from my mentor. He said this exact phrase to me a few times. He was right, too.

So often you may ask if you can do something, and people are very likely to say no. Why would they say that? Either because they couldn’t do it themselves, they weren’t willing to look for creative solutions, or maybe they simply weren’t too excited about you succeeding.

If you know deeply that you want to do something, don’t ask whether you can or can’t do it. Start asking how you can do it. You can ask people that directly, but you can also make that your intention—to figure out how to do whatever it is you want to do.

Now, a caveat: just as I talked about reinventing the wheel before, use some judgment on this. If one or more experts in a field are telling you something that goes against what you want to do, take a moment to assess and think about whether they might actually know what they are talking about. This is not to kill your dreams; it’s to make sure your dreams aren’t going completely against reality.

Going against the crowds and making things happen how you want them to is one thing (and a cool thing!), but trying to force something completely unrealistic will be frustrating and potentially time-wasting.

The trick is—how do you decide if something is a good thing to be pursuing despite any naysayers or if it’s actually completely unrealistic? I’m not sure how to answer that other than to say, “Be as educated as possible.”

With education, you can know whether something is doable or not—even if it may require some creativity!

Also, assess who is naysaying the idea. Are they educated? How well are they doing things? Are they doing things that you want to be involved in? What’s their credibility?

Use your judgment. Either way, if you know something can work, spend your time figuring out how to make that happen.

3. Don’t speculate.

This advice started out being strictly about the investment-buying realm but it eventually trickled into other things, as well. I’ll get to those in a minute.

As far as investing, though, my mentor doesn’t buy for appreciation, nor does he support it. I will say, however, that I do believe buying for appreciation can work in a lot of ways, so I’m not going to tell you I’m completely against speculating. I believe there are educated, smart ways of doing it. But there’s the key—educated and smart.

You can’t just run around buying properties assuming appreciation is coming your way. There are market fundamentals involved, timing strategies, and most importantly, contingency plans. If you are buying for speculation, don’t buy something you can’t afford if it doesn’t appreciate. If you can afford it without appreciation, go for it. And then if the appreciation happens as planned, excellent.

But if you really can’t afford the operating costs of a property while you wait for appreciation, you are putting yourself at a lot of risk, assuming said appreciation is guaranteed to happen and within some guaranteed timeframe.

If you don’t believe me, ask investors how well 2009 treated them. The option instead of speculating is buying real estate based on solid fundamentals—numbers, market factors, known exit strategies, and with known risk mitigation.

Now, for the second version of speculating that I learned not to do.

hard money-loan

Related: 4 Rookie Mistakes That Drive Potential Real Estate Mentors Away

4. Life works better and is less stressful when we constructively work together.

Guess what causes people to “jump off the ledge and go bananas”? Emotions. Guess what most often leads to emotions? Speculating.

Speculating on someone’s intentions and speculating on what is really going on when you don’t actually know are far too common. This is true for life, but it’s especially true in real estate investing. The fact is, real estate investing has nothing to do with emotions. It’s about facts and numbers, period.

There are two things I recommend for keeping sneaky emotions from creeping in when it comes to your properties. First, don’t speculate on numbers or facts about the property. Instead, get as much fact as possible.

It doesn’t matter a seller’s intention—it matters about the property itself. It either passes the due diligence test or it doesn’t. If you do full due diligence (cough, cough—be educated and actually know how to do it!) and something goes wrong after that, none of it’s personal, it’s just a thing. No room for emotions there.

Second, if something does go wrong, give everyone involved a chance to speak. Ten dollars says it was nothing personal against you. Even if someone totally sucks, it’s not about you. It is what it is, and you move forward.

As much as I’m normally an advocate for supporting anyone’s emotions (and I fully support everyone having their own emotions), in the case of real estate investing, it really will behoove you to understand that none of it is personal. Reacting out of emotion is unlikely to help you get closer to resolution.

Certainly, if something happens with your property and you become livid or whatever else you might feel, feel that. But feel that first and process it, and then respond. Respond constructively and concisely. If someone does not respond to that, stop doing business with them and move on.

Though I say all of this, I am the first one to react emotionally to something stressful regarding my property. I immediately get pissed, and I immediately think someone seriously blows for letting whatever “it is” that happened happen.

However, in the years I’ve been in the industry, I’ve realized none of it is personal and assuming anything of anyone is pointless. I just need to state the problem, state what is necessary to remedy it, and go from there. I now save my emotional freakouts for venting to my mentor. Or my dog.

I hope these things that I learned from my mentor help you in your real estate journey. Realizing it all has certainly helped with mine. My mentor has been an integral part of my career, and I really don’t think I would’ve survived such a bumpy road had it not been for him.

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What are some of the most key learnings your mentor(s) have taught you?

Let me know with a comment!

Note By BiggerPockets: These are opinions written by the author and do not necessarily represent the opinions of BiggerPockets.