Tuesday, June 24, 2008

Education Disguised as Failure

Recently I've been selling (attempting to sell) some of these properties using auctions (technically open-bid sales...). The most recent 2 auctions didn't go as well as I had hoped.

The first was an auction in Portsmouth which was a new area for me, but just over the tracks from Chesapeake, so I felt that I was familiar enough with the area to get the sale made. This was just days after my first 5 figure paycheck sale so I was feeling like I could do no wrong.

Wrong.


After review, I have come to the following conclusions about my errors.
  • Bought it too high. I buy these pretty properties on option to purchase contracts so there is very little risk to me financially other than the $10 that I put up for the option fee (should i put down $11 since my company is 11 Dal Sale? T thinks so...) and anything i put into $marketing$ the property. Because of the low risk, I have felt able to offer more for the property. WRONG. I can offer up to .80 on the dollar (most investor offers are .65 or lower), but on this one I was at .90!...
  • Not enough time to market the property. I generally spend about $600 on mailers to the neighborhood. My biggest paycheck to date came from one of my $1000 postcards and this auction was on short notice. This ties back to the notion that the auction strategy for selling a house creates such a buzz that signs alone can generate enough interest to sell the property. Wrong again. The combination of mail, signs and buyers' list creates the volume of lookers to find a buyer.
  • Not getting the full story from the seller. I am eager. I want to make money. But at the same time I am also in this business to help people. I genuinely feel like I have something of a calling to use this information and skill in real estate to help people out of their financial troubles. I can't help them if I allow them to skirt the truth by taking their patty-cake answers and not asking the tough questions.
I came to this final realization this afternoon when, a month after the auction (failure?), the seller called to say that he was in default on his loan and needed me to come back and do another auction. This time he would take anything above the loan amount of $120k.

It turned out that he was already a month behind on pmts when we talked in May. I JUST DIDN'T ASK THE QUESTION! Now he's in a bad way and is reaching out to me to help. I'm going to do what I can, but with my own relocation on the near horizon, there's only so much I can do...

In one of our phone conversations, Dan Doran told me something that really struck home. He told me to get really good at getting to the heart of the matter with sellers. Get past the monetary reason for selling their home and find the real reason for them to sell in a real estate market like this. "If you don't" he said, "you'll never really to much good for anyone. If you don't dig deep enough you won't have the conviction to really help them, and will just end up wasting their time."

I thought I understood this when he said it. I thought it rang true with me. It still rings true, but I understand the deeper meaning after my conversation with Mr. Seller in Portsmouth. See, if I had asked the hard questions back then and gotten the house sold back in May, he wouldn't be in the bind he's in right now. I could have helped him and not just tried my best but come up short.
I guess you could say I feel educated. But at the seller's expense.

Jerry Maguire: I am out here for you. You don't know what it's like to be ME out here for YOU. It is an up-at-dawn, pride-swallowing siege that I will never fully tell you about, ok?

Just Help me help you.

Help me,
Help You.

Monday, June 9, 2008

Finally. Money in the Bank...

I knew that it would eventually come together. I just never expected this deal to be the one to crack the shell & let me out.

If you checked my last post about Postlets, you likely clicked on my ad for E. Indian River Rd. I heard about that deal from a friend of mine that is a mortgage broker. The timeline is amazingly short and truly what I originally expected wholesale real estate to be like.
  1. Tuesday May 27, got call from my buddy the mortgage guy about a deal that he wanted me to wholesale for him. 2. Went out to property. Took pic's of the outside. Returned to my office (ie. Guest room) and comped the property. It looked like a decent deal, but without interior photos I knew I'd have no chance to get it sold.
  2. Wednesday, May 28, Returned to property, talked to seller, got interior photos, banged head on low hanging light in living room and thought to self, "That hurt! I'd better get paid for this one!" Returned to office (Guest room) and put together Postlet, craigslist ad, flyer for REIA and flyer for buyers' list. Emailed everyone. Slept.
  3. Thursday, May 29, got calls/emails from interested buyers. Craigslist brought 3, REIA brought 1. Sent them all out to the property.
  4. Friday, May 30, sent more buyers to property. Repeat visits from REIA guy and a Craigslist guy.
  5. Sunday, June 1, REIA guy wants to make offer. Sent him to my mortgage buddy.
  6. Monday, June 2..... crickets...
  7. Tuesday, June 3... still quiet... (by the end of the day I just knew that the deal was dead.)
  8. Wednesday, June 4 - the deal is on, closing tomorrow! (at this point I had no idea what I was making, just that I would get paid out at closing.)
  9. Thursday, June 5 THE DEAL ACTUALLY CLOSED! Get check tomorrow!
  10. Friday, June 6 - Picked up first real estate check!! I went to kinko's & color copied the thing and then immediately went to the bank to deposit in my account.
WOOO HOOO!!!!!

It took 11 days to go from lead to check. Stunning since I have been working on:
  • Galt St since February (signed contract on April 7th! and still haven't closed!!),
  • Jeanne St since October 07, (signed contract on April 12, supposed to close any day now,)
  • Norlina Rd since Sept 07, (signed contract with seller March 27th, sold it May 5th, fell out of escrow June 1st, now a dead deal...)
I had come to expect months of waiting for title to clear, buyers to qualify for financing, delays with signatures and working around holidays & mortgage officers' days off...

I guess I'm a real wholesaler now. Quick, easy money right?

Fun, but not easy. Keep rockin! More deals supposed to close this week...

-Taylor