http://www.deangraziosi.com/real-estate-forums/everything-else/98369/dg-...
Learn and Earn!!
YOU CAN do ANYTHING you WANT to do!
Enjoy!
http://www.deangraziosi.com/real-estate-forums/everything-else/98369/dg-...
Learn and Earn!!
YOU CAN do ANYTHING you WANT to do!
Enjoy!
You MUST use the Forms on ALL calls for buyers,investors, sellers, RTO, renters etc.
IF you dont use the FORMs you will NOT get all the info NEEDED to anylize ANYTHING to determine if its a deal or NOT and WASTE everyones TIME.
When YOU call a business, they answer using FORMS to get the info they need.
YOU should do the same.
Best Wishes on Your REI journey!
When you are evaluating a property, the doors and windows can tell you a lot about the home and maybe the settling that is going on or has already happened.
Be sure to operate pocket doors. There are frequently track problems. And repairs can be difficult and expensive because of access problems. Many pocket doors have recessed hardware, so make sure you don’t overlook them.
Doors should stay where they are put. If a door is opened, it should not swing close. If its half opened, it should not swing in either direction. Doors that are not hung straight will often move on their own. This is a minor issue but is indicative of the quality of workmanship.
Part of being a home inspector is, being a detective. Finding out why the floor is wet or where is this water coming from? I get asked these questions all the time.
With all these possible indicators, calling out wet basements should be easy. It isn’t. Let’s look at some of the common situations that can fool you. There are lots of sources of water in basements that may have nothing to do with leakage from the exterior. These include;
• Sweating Pipes. Cold water pipes can cool the warm, moist air around them and develop condensation that drips constantly. Over time, this can look like a leak.
• Leaking appliances such as dishwashers and water heaters.
• Leaking from hot water heating systems.
In the inspection process, I always get the chance to inspect electrical boxes. I always have someone ask. “How does the grounding system work?”
The ground wires are collected at the distribution panel and forwarded to the service box. At the service box, the house ground wires are connected to the service box equipment and enclosure. The whole assembly is connected to the service entrance neutral and to a grounding wire that goes to grounding electrodes (like plumbing pipes.) In some cases, the system ground may be connected to the grounding electrode conductors at the meter, rather than at the service box.
WHERE are 'the links below' Dean spoke about??
See DG site INSTRUCTIONS to help you navigate this site
I have already made a post about this website but I want to make another one because I just had great success with it!
The website is http://www.linksourcemanagement.com/innercircle
The reason this website has a benefit over other POF websites is because they will also provide you with an actual bank statement from an investors account. This is a real person with a real account and they can see the funds in the account.
That just helped me beat out a multiple offer situation.
If anyone has interest using this site feel free but it does cost money. It is $95 a month for unlimited amount of letters you want. You can cancel anytime you want.
Hello DG family I am interested in establishing a cash buyers list. I want to send emails out to the potential buyers that look professional. Does anyone know of a sample letter that would give me a good idea of how I should structure these letters? Thanks for any feed back
Hi everyone. I was hoping someone could help me. I'm following 30 Days to Real estate cash to the letter, but I ran into a snag. I asked my realtor to pull the list of properties bought using cash for the past 90 days and this is the response I got:
I get many students that want to know……”How to determine if a basement had water on the floors or not?”
Predicting basement leakage is a tough game. On one hand you don’t want to be alarmist and point our problems that don’t exist. This makes you very unpopular with sellers, for example. ON the other hand, you often have suspicions but can’t substantiate them. This makes for interesting reporting.
Here is a list of the clues you can watch for :
• Water or dampness on the walls or floor
• Efflorescence on the walls or floor
• Rot, stains, or water marks on doors, walls, windows and basement stair stringers.
• Rust at baseboard nails, carpet tack strips, columns, or appliances
• Odors and mold
• Rot
• Loose floor tiles (tap on the tiles)