31 March 2025 | 89 replies
It's always been about digging through the coal to find the diamonds.
19 March 2025 | 1 reply
Hi @Griffin Spence I would first learn about how to underwrite a deal because with this knowledge you will know how to speak intelligently to that "motivated seller" when you find that diamond.
17 March 2025 | 46 replies
They also take the students as use them as ( ants marching ) to source deals hoping they dig up a diamond as sourcing is the often the most time consuming part ( finding the deal ).I do not mentor people by choice with the coach stuff.
11 March 2025 | 4 replies
If you do attend some auctions, do the due diligence, and find the diamond in rough.
10 March 2025 | 20 replies
Typically by the time it reaches the MLS, it is listed at retail value, and you're not going to get a screaming deal, although there are those diamonds in the rough and my team frequently does "fixer" deals off the MLS.
28 February 2025 | 1 reply
And that's before factoring in competition from seasoned investors who often have the cash reserves to avoid these costs entirely—allowing them to outbid you and still make a solid profit.If you don’t have significant cash reserves or can’t find a true off-market diamond in the rough, I wouldn’t recommend flipping as your first real estate strategy in Boston.
27 February 2025 | 40 replies
I recommend my Students/Partners read several books, #1 for you would be Acres of Diamonds If you're serious, and this seems like you're an AI traffic generating post, how about a short Book Report on that story?
24 February 2025 | 71 replies
@Eric Greenberg yes, I own a property at 9th and Diamond.
6 March 2025 | 2057 replies
Diamond v.
21 February 2025 | 2 replies
I'm thinking of ways to invest some money to bring me a residual income so I have watched Bob Diamond blueprint on overages.Has anyone tried hus program or currently using the program today.