15 December 2025 | 4 replies
It's always the quality that matters, not the quantity.
10 December 2025 | 7 replies
Buyers are a lot more educated than sellers just by the quantity of listings they look at for months - they get typically VERY good understaning value in their particular taregt segement.
11 December 2025 | 24 replies
I say the # of reviews b/c quantity shows longevity.
5 December 2025 | 6 replies
Idk - the older I get the more I prefer quality over quantity - this leads me to quality luxury on a beach over the section 8 quantity.
5 December 2025 | 0 replies
Write your rehab scope with no room for interpretation.Every line should state:• Task• Material• Quantity• Location• StandardAmbiguity is what drains budgets.
19 December 2025 | 154 replies
You do not need my background to apply the same approach of focusing on quality over quantity.
28 November 2025 | 13 replies
They offer a year of deliveries for $95, no matter the address or the quantity.
2 December 2025 | 33 replies
It’s good to know that they can be profitable when the provider is solid, even if the returns aren’t as strong as more hands-on strategies.I totally get your point about the $125K price range and the trade-off between quantity and quality.
24 November 2025 | 11 replies
Great question — building a solid cash buyer list is a big part of consistency in wholesaling.A lot of investors I work with in Florida use a mix of strategies like public records searches, connecting with active flippers, and networking with agents who work distressed properties or investment-focused deals.I’ve also seen that quality matters more than quantity — a smaller list of serious buyers tends to outperform a large list of inactive contacts.If you're still active in Tampa, happy to connect and compare criteria.
20 November 2025 | 36 replies
A 'bird dog' is a 'finder'... and while there are clear cases of advertisers overstepping their bounds into brokerage (http://caselaw.findlaw.com/il-court-of-appeals/1546961.html) there are also (many not so clear) cases where a 'finder' is not a broker (http://law.justia.com/cases/new-york/other-courts/2010/2010-20104.html).I would encourage anyone to browse the last link for 'finder' and also to look at the section 'Quality and Quantity of Services', 'Fiduciary Duty', 'Differences in Entitlement to Fee'.