
12 June 2018 | 35 replies
The healthy, wealthy, and wise distinction is genius and I can review this book for the rest of my life and still gain something new every time I look at it.3.

10 November 2017 | 44 replies
All segments of our population must be served, housing is not an option and your target market will be unique.

20 September 2019 | 84 replies
Note there is a subtle distinction there in the sense that she enjoys mostly what she does, so she hustles, whereas my grind is a means to an end.

4 January 2018 | 57 replies
To place in the top 1 percent of Americans, they would need to bring in at least $389,436.But do either of these comparative distinctions make you wealthy?

12 April 2018 | 113 replies
The world need me to be clear about that distinction.

20 April 2022 | 556 replies
Anyway just was a little amused at your thought of a realtor and a wholesaler being distinctly different when in fact they are exactly a like only the wholesaler has a much smaller amount of inventory to work with.

25 October 2018 | 61 replies
But entry level $600k-$1M segment is still red hot with bidding wars and homes selling for more than list price.

15 February 2019 | 59 replies
We’re seeing about a pretty even three-way split among our clients in terms of behavior:One segment of landlords doesn’t seem to be aware of the changes (we’re constantly trying to update all with updated info as it becomes available) and are surprised to hear about them.

23 January 2024 | 72 replies
Nonetheless I still plan on my next RE investments being in the Phoenix area, specifically the retirement areas, as I see that segment growing...plus Phoenix has been one of the hottest (pun intended) RE areas in the country over the past decade.....

3 December 2021 | 80 replies
The numbers look good on paper but what Caleb is saying, based on his personal experience in this exact market segment, is that cheap low rent properties often end up being paper tigers because one or two unexpected issues can easily devour several years worth of cash flow.