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Real Estate Investment Clubs?
By Steven Gillman
Your local real estate investment clubs
or associations will educate you. It won't be book education,
but useful knowledge about your local real estate market.
The people there are investors, many who have gotten wealthy
investing right in your town. This means you'll get meaningful
and specific advice on what is working in your area, where
to go for an inspector or property manager, and many other
tips and based on real experience.
There are also the actual money-making
opportunities that you'll find. People there may need a partner
with money, or a partner with time to find deals. Some have
properties for sale and want to save the sales commission
by selling to one of the members. Also, if you have a business
that's in any way related to real estate, you can make valuable
contacts. Handyman or landscapers can often find business
at our local real estate investment club meetings.
Real Estate Investment Clubs - An
Example
The local association that my wife
and I belong to is AZREIA, or "The Arizona Real Estate Investors
Association." I'll tell you a little about it. If you don't
have a similar organization in your own town, this may give
you ideas for what to include if you start one.
The association sponsors many educational
events and seminars for reasonable fees, but the regular meetings
are once each month, and included in the membership fee. It
cost $195 per year for the two of us to join. As I write this,
I am looking forward to tomorrow's meeting, which will include
a winner of the TV show "The Apprentice," Kendra Todd, telling
us how she made her first million in real estate.
Speakers are great, but I also like
the regular events. Every meeting starts with "Open Networking,"
for thirty minutes or so. It's an opportunity to meet people,
learn a little, and take down names and numbers. We each have
a name tag that also tells everyone what our primary interests
are, ranging from rental properties to fixer-uppers to wholesaling.
The monthly meeting then officially
starts with "Structured Networking." This involves filling
out 3 x 5 cards with your name, occupation, real estate experience,
and investments you are interested in. This information is
systematically traded with randomly chosen others. It's surprising
how often profitable connections are made during this process.
The best part of the meeting is the
"I have / I want" event. Members (or even visitors) can stand
up and announce what they have and what they want. The host
writes their phone number on the overhead projector. It is
sometimes something as mundane as a microwave an investor
needs to get rid of, that someone doing a fixer-upper might
need. Often, it is someone who has money but needs help finding
good investments. I once announced that I was looking for
a mobile home park to buy, and I received three calls within
a week.
The meetings are not formal affairs.
The millionaires in the room are as likely to have on jeans
as a suit. Everyone shares a common purpose - to make money
investing in real estate. In fact, even if you have no money
to invest, yuo can do just fine. Just go find a great deal,
and if the numbers truly work, you can probably find the money
at these meetings. It is just one more great thing about real
estate investment clubs.
Steve Gillman has invested in real
estate for years. To learn more, get a free real estate investing
course, and see a photo of a beautiful house he and his wife
bought for $17,500, visit http://www.HousesUnderFiftyThousand.com
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