Archive for March, 2010

Love is in the air at MyHouseDeals.com

Wednesday, March 24th, 2010

Last week was cause for celebration here at MyHouseDeals.com. Our lead website developer Travis tied the knot to his beautiful fiancee Jo. Travis and Jo got married in a beautiful and intimate ceremony in Galveston Bay.

Take a look at this picture of the two lovebirds moments after they officially became Mr. and Mrs. Miller.

Jo and Travis celebrate their big day

Jo and Travis celebrate their big day

It was party time after that, and we sure had a good time.

A toast to their happiness

A toast to their happiness

We wish them all the best, but sure are happy to have Travis back in the office working to continue to improve the website for you.

Please join us in congratulating the happy couple. Leave your comments below…

Until next time,

Happy (and profitable) investing!

The team at MyHouseDeals.com

Hello from Washington DC!

Wednesday, March 17th, 2010

Hello fellow investor!

Ok, I’m not in DC anymore. I’m in Houston now. But I WAS there over the weekend! The weather was pretty crummy … cold and drizzling nonstop … but I still managed to have a GREAT time.

I traveled there to attend an online marketing seminar. Picked up some cool tips and tricks that we can use to get more motivated sellers from Google. And that’s good for you since we turn right around and put them on MyHouseDeals.com.

While the seminar took up most of my time, I did manage to sneak out for a little fun. Went to a restaurant and coffee house in Dupont Circle. I hadn’t heard of it, but apparently, it’s a trendy area. Lots of fancy restaurants and bars with plenty of yuppies roaming the streets.

The whole reason for escaping the seminar was to meet up with my friend Abe. I know him from my days at IBM in Austin, TX back in 2001. He lives in DC now with his wife and baby. We had a great time. As the saying goes, I’d rather spend time with one old friend than ten new ones!

I did manage to snap 3 pics along the way, and I’ve posted them below. Enjoy!…

Pic 1

Me with Yanik Silver, the host of the seminar. He did a great job. Lots of content and the turnout seemed to be a healthy 500+ people, but I didn't count.

Pic 3

The "Free Government Money" guy happened to be an attendee! The guy is a total nut. I backed away before he bit my ear off! Just kidding. He's pretty cool. You may recognize him from these books... www.booksbylesko.com.

Pic 2

A pic of beautiful Adriana at the coffee house. Abe happens to be hogging up much of the picture. LOL. Abe and I were joking that he doesn't get any attention anymore. It's all about Adriana! (Isn't she cute?) But he's completely fine with the focus being on her.

Well, that’s all for now. Until next time, happy (and profitable) investing!

Doug Smith
Real Estate Investor
Founder of MyHouseDeals.com

6 Tips for Becoming the Cash Flow King of Your Market

Wednesday, March 10th, 2010
6 Tips for Becoming the Cash Flow King of Your Market
Billy Johns has been involved in real estate investing for over 21 years.  He and his business partner buy over 150 houses per year and they collect rent on 100 units and 75 mortgages each month.  Billy has also originated over 1000 mortgages and bought and sold over 500 mortgages during his career.  In addition, Billy has developed land, built new houses, modular homes, commercial strip centers, mobile homes and land packages and has owned 5 mobile home parks.  Billy has a passion for getting the deal done and truly is the king of negotiation.
I interviewed Billy for The Vault a while back, and he shared some great information with me.  Here are some of the highlights from that interview in the form of 6 useful tips for landlords…
1. Visit the Real Estate Investing Clubs in your area – I recommend going to real estate investing clubs.  Most real estate clubs give you a tremendous push of knowledge since they are bringing in speakers and materials and you have a lot of different people there.  Some are landlords, some are private investors, some are passive investors, some do just commercial, and some do just condos.  You have a wide range of people there that you can gather knowledge from and I highly recommend that.
2. Be thorough. Run a background check – The best way to screen potential tenants is to do a background check.  In our area, we can get it all from one service; we can see what their credit is and their background, see if they had any felonies or anything like that.  However, in some rural areas you can’t get all this information in one place, so in that case I would recommend going to the local law enforcement.  Usually they’ll run a check on that person for you.
3. Never negotiate the deposit – Make sure your tenants pay their full security deposit up front.  If you’re going to give them any discount, give them a discount on the rent.  There’s not a place in this country that I know of that you can evict someone on non-payment of deposit, but you can evict a tenant just about everywhere on non-payment of rent.  So if I gave you an extra 30 days to pay half your rent instead of half your deposit and you didn’t pay it, I can evict you.  If you pay me the rent in those 30 days but the deposit is still due, I can’t evict you and I’m still missing money.
4. Plan rent increases carefully – Whether or not you want to increase rent each year or leave it the same is really going to depend on your market.  There’s no right or wrong answer or magical answer to that.  If you are going to raise the rent, you should try to increase it a little each year instead of waiting and making a huge increase a few years down the road.  It’s harder for your tenants to swallow, and you will probably lose good tenants because of the sticker shock.  It’s not that they can’t afford it, but it will make them start looking for a different place to live.  You don’t want to lose a great tenant just because you timed your rent increase wrong.
5. Protect your assets – An individual land trust per property is the best entity to hold rental properties in.  In regards to a beneficiary, you’ll have to get into tax structure and stuff like that.  However, we always like beneficiaries of our individual land trusts to be an LLC.
6. Be passionate! – The first step to having your own rental property empire is to go buy your first house!  Of course, you should also enjoy what you’re doing and have a passion for it.  If you don’t enjoy real estate with a passion, you won’t make it to owning 100 properties, I can assure you.  Start out buying them one at a time, stick to your criteria for each property, and make smart decisions.  Also, if you’re going to grow large, it really helps to have someone to work with.  You can always bounce stuff off of each other.  As the old saying goes, two heads are better than one!
Billy covered a lot more great information in his interview that’s part of a much large package called the Vault.  The Vault contains in-depth interviews with expert investors from across the nation and covers topics ranging from wholesaling to subject 2 investing to private money and more.
Until next time,
Doug
Billy Johns is a real estate investor from Jacksonville, FLA

Billy Johns is a real estate investor from Jacksonville, FL

Billy Johns has been involved in real estate investing for over 21 years.  He and his business partner buy over 150 houses per year and they collect rent on 100 units and 75 mortgages each month.  Billy has also originated over 1,000 mortgages and bought and sold over 500 mortgages during his career.  In addition, Billy has developed land, built new houses, modular homes, commercial strip centers, mobile homes and land packages and has owned 5 mobile home parks.  Billy has a passion for getting the deal done and truly is the king of negotiation.

I interviewed Billy for The Vault, and he shared some great information with me.  Here are some of the highlights from that interview in the form of 6 useful tips for landlords…

1. Visit the Real Estate Investing Clubs in your area – I recommend going to real estate investing clubs.  Most real estate clubs give you a tremendous push of knowledge since they are bringing in speakers and materials and you have a lot of different people there.  Some are landlords, some are private investors, some are passive investors, some do just commercial, and some do just condos.  You have a wide range of people there that you can gather knowledge from and I highly recommend that.

2. Be thorough. Run a background check – The best way to screen potential tenants is to do a background check.  In our area, we can get it all from one service; we can see what their credit is and their background, see if they had any felonies or anything like that.  However, in some rural areas you can’t get all this information in one place, so in that case I would recommend going to the local law enforcement.  Usually they’ll run a check on that person for you.

3. Never negotiate the deposit – Make sure your tenants pay their full security deposit up front.  If you’re going to give them any discount, give them a discount on the rent.  There’s not a place in this country that I know of that you can evict someone on non-payment of deposit, but you can evict a tenant just about everywhere on non-payment of rent.  So if I gave you an extra 30 days to pay half your rent instead of half your deposit and you didn’t pay it, I can evict you.  If you pay me the rent in those 30 days but the deposit is still due, I can’t evict you and I’m still missing money.

4. Plan rent increases carefully – Whether or not you want to increase rent each year or leave it the same is really going to depend on your market.  There’s no right or wrong answer or magical answer to that.  If you are going to raise the rent, you should try to increase it a little each year instead of waiting and making a huge increase a few years down the road.  It’s harder for your tenants to swallow, and you will probably lose good tenants because of the sticker shock.  It’s not that they can’t afford it, but it will make them start looking for a different place to live.  You don’t want to lose a great tenant just because you timed your rent increase wrong.

5. Protect your assets – An individual land trust per property is the best entity to hold rental properties in.  In regards to a beneficiary, you’ll have to get into tax structure and stuff like that.  However, we always like beneficiaries of our individual land trusts to be an LLC.

6. Be passionate! – The first step to having your own rental property empire is to go buy your first house!  Of course, you should also enjoy what you’re doing and have a passion for it.  If you don’t enjoy real estate with a passion, you won’t make it to owning 100 properties, I can assure you.  Start out buying them one at a time, stick to your criteria for each property, and make smart decisions.  Also, if you’re going to grow large, it really helps to have someone to work with.  You can always bounce stuff off of each other.  As the old saying goes, two heads are better than one!

Until next time,

Doug

Timely Advice from Buffett for Turbulent Times

Wednesday, March 3rd, 2010

When it comes to investing advice, there is not a more trusted source than Warren Buffet. Click the picture below to get the latest investing tips from the world’s richest man. He talks about buying stocks and businesses, but his advice applies perfectly to real estate investing…

Warren_Buffett

Buffet’s Tips for New Investors

Until next time!

Doug

Pics from Thursday’s Live Event in Houston!

Monday, March 1st, 2010

We had a fantastic turnout for the live event in Houston last night, and I want to thank everyone for attending!

Folks got there early to enjoy the trade show and network with fellow investors. Jim Goodchild spoke on “The near-term and long-term outlook for the Houston and National housing markets” and Brant Phillips revealed his “Lazy Man’s Real Estate Investing System.” Then it was on to more networking with our “speed networking” session!

The feedback was extraordinary! Almost everyone rated the event 5 out of a possible 5 on their evaluation forms. Here’s what some of you had to say:

“These guys are great – very knowledgeable.” — Jaymie

“Doug – You da best” — Dean

“Do it again! It’s motivating to see actual doers in my market” — Antonio

“I had a chance to talk to people who could help in many ways.” — Richard

“Speed Networking was great!” — Ricardo

“So much useful information that I can utilize in my investing!” — Michael

“Educational, informative, and entertaining.” — Terry

We took some pics, and I’m sharing them below. Enjoy! … Can you spot yourself in the crowd?

Click to see pictures from the event

Click to see pictures from the event

Again, thanks to everyone who attended, and thanks for all the love. I had just as much fun as you did. Many of you asked me when the next one will be. We’re already planning to have another event like this soon, so stay tuned for the announcement. As long as you guys keep coming, we’ll keep having them!

Until next time, happy (and profitable) investing!

Doug Smith and the team at MyHouseDeals.com