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Casual Articles - Flipping Houses Ethics: What's Your Name Worth?
How to Prepare for A Performance Appraisal her hand, if you sign your name with honor, experience has taught me time and time again that you will be much more successful. In fact, as a result of honoring my contracts, I’ve actually had my offers accepted over other, higher offers simply because my name has reputable value. Sellers know that I will do what I say I will do.Performance appraisal should be treated as an ongoing developmental process rather than a formal once-a-year review. It should be closely monitored by both employee and reviewer to ensure that targets are being achieved. By preparing yourself diligently and demonstrating a willingness to co-operate with your reviewer to develop your role, you will create a positive impression.To enable you to assess your own performance as objectively as possible, try to view it from your manager's perspective. Make sure you are conversant with the company's assessment policies and procedures. Study the performance appraisal documentation carefully. Go through it step by step, anticipating comments and preparing your responses.Analyse your agreed performance targets. To what extent did you achieve them?Consider your job description, your role within the organization, your duties and responsibilities.Assess your Building a good name hasn’t always been easy. There have been times when settling on a deal seemed like it was going to blow up in my face. But every time I was able to find a way to honor my word and put the deals together, even though they weren’t great deals for me. I broke even on one, and made about $500 on the other. But the bottom line is that I settled them. I didn’t wait for something to happen. I got out and hit the streets. I was aggressive in finding a way to make things happen the way they should. Yes, I’ve encountered several situations where I couldn’t find a wholesale buyer for a particular deal. Though my intention when I first started flipping houses was to exclusively do wholesale deals, I was forced by my word to honor these contracts and settle on the homes myself. In fact, this is how I started rehabbing houses in the first place. Believe me, anyone and everyone who focuses on wholesale real esta How to Increase Your Competence True competence is an accurate reputation that is based on your intelligence, your expertise and your knowledge. People create perceived confidence in themselves by using certain tactics, like dressing in the appropriate uniform: a white lab coat or a suit and tie. Perceived competence is tricky. Hence, you have to be careful in how you explain your competence. If you launch into a laundry list of your accomplishments or of your education and titles, you might be perceived as a braggart. Take advantage of less direct or less self-proclaiming ways to show your prospects your competence. For example, you can hang your degrees on the wall, have someone else give a brief bio in her/his book's introduction or have someone else offer her/his recommendation. We consider others to be competent when we see them continually learning and advancing their training and education, being succ “A good name is more desirable then great riches…” Proverbs 22:1 Since starting my own career flipping houses in 1998, I’ve seen a disturbing trend develop and continue to gain momentum with regard to ethics in real estate investing. In my view operating your real estate investing business with integrity is a non-negotiable item. I’ve written entire chapters about it in my own flipping homes continuing education materials, so my students know exactly how I feel about this. But I believe it’s high time to write a series of articles on the topic and address some of the ethical issues I see my fellow real estate investors allowing themselves to give in to. And the first issue I’d like to address is the value of your word. Here’s a common scenario I hear: Meet Joe. “Joe” is a wholesale real estate investor – that is, his business is to find houses at a wholesale (below market) price, get them under contract to purchase, and then assign his interest as buyer to another real estate investor who will close in his place. Joe will collect a fee in exchange for selling his equitable interest in the contract, and the investor who closes on the purchase will have a great deal to keep or fix and flip. Joe is flipping houses on the wholesale market, which is NOT unethical. This is the same way most industries work – wholesale and retail. And Joe is not actually selling a house, but is selling his INTEREST in the contract – but that’s a discussion for another time. So investor Joe finds a motivated seller with a property he thinks might be a sweet wholesale deal…but he’s not really sure. So he makes an offer. Seller counter-offers. Bingo, Joe may have something here. Now as I’ve written in previous articles, this is the point where Joe should stop and really do his due diligence on this property. Moving beyond merely smelling a deal, Joe should stop and really analyze the numbers, the market and even his prospective investor-buyers to see if he really feels confident about this before moving to finalize things with the seller. But this seems like a little too much work right now for investor Joe – and this is where things start to go downhill. Joe decides to go ahead and ink the deal, thinking to himself, “Hey, no problem. If this deal turns out to be a stinker, I’ll just use my weasel clause to back out – no harm, no foul.” No harm, Joe? Really? The Unethical Safety Net You see, Joe has a line in his contract that says, “This contract is contingent upon approval of Buyer’s partner.” Who is Joe’s partner? It’s probably his cat, Fluffy. Or maybe his wife, who isn’t all that happy about Joe’s crazy house flipping business anyway and would probably dispute all of Joe’s contracts if he’d let her. Here’s what’s really going on. Joe understands that later on if he realizes things aren’t nearly as rosy as he first suspected, he can just say, “Hey, my partner (i.e. Fluffy) decided this deal isn’t a good fit for us after all. Sorry about that, but I’m outta here.” I ask you – does this seem fair to the seller? Does it seem ethical? The seller, who had doubtless already made definite plans surrounding the sale of his property, is left with shattered hopes at the very least – and sometimes a lot worse. But this is exactly the type of approach I hear time and time again proposed as a “safe way” of flipping houses by many real estate investors nationwide. In fact many of my own colleagues who are teaching house flipping and real estate investing are also teaching people it’s OK to do business this way. Let me stand apart from the crowd and state in no uncertain terms that I do not approve of this – nor do I teach my students to – and nor should you. Are All Contingencies “Weasel Clauses”? Almost all contracts have contingency clauses – valid conditions that must be met in order for the agreement to proceed. And the legitimate, appropriate use of contract contingencies I take no issue with. It’s the frequent and free use of these contingencies as a replacement for doing your homework that I find disturbing. As a professional real estate investor, you should always be 100% honest with all parties in a transaction. When you sign your name to a contract, do it with honor. You should make every offer with the full intent of settling the deal one way or another. If not, don’t ink the deal. If certain circumstances need to fall into place before you can settle on a deal, present the offer, but clearly disclose those circumstances upfront. Above all, be honest with the seller about your position and your means. Doing business this way has NEVER caused me to lose a deal. And even if it had, there are been plenty of other profitable opportunities for me. Even if you set the ethics of it aside and look at it from a purely selfish perspective, people tend to remember someone backs out of a deal – and word gets around. A bad reputation will inevitably catch up with you (yes, even in a large city). On the other hand, if you sign your name with honor, experience has taught me time and time again that you will be much more successful. In fact, as a result of honoring my contracts, I’ve actually had my offers accepted over other, higher offers simply because my name has reputable value. Sellers know that I will do what I say I will do. Building a good name hasn’t always been easy. There have been times when settling on a deal seemed like it was going to blow up in my face. But every time I was able to find a way to honor my word and put the deals together, even though they weren’t great deals for me. I broke even on one, and made about $500 on the other. But the bottom line is that I settled them. I didn’t wait for something to happen. I got out and hit the streets. I was aggressive in finding a way to make things happen the way they should. Yes, I’ve encountered several situations where I couldn’t find a wholesale buyer for a particular deal. Though my intention when I first started flipping houses was to exclusively do wholesale deals, I was forced by my word to honor these contracts and settle on the homes myself. In fact, this is how I started rehabbing houses in the first place. Believe me, anyone and everyone who focuses on wholesale real estat Bankruptcy Petition Drafting Tip 14 ipping houses on the wholesale market, which is NOT unethical. This is the same way most industries work – wholesale and retail. And Joe is not actually selling a house, but is selling his INTEREST in the contract – but that’s a discussion for another time.There are TWO things you should find out from the attorney (or ask the debtor in the client intake interview) before you start drafting a bankruptcy petition. These two questions are:1. Have you completed the credit counseling requirement? 2. Have you ever filed bankruptcy? If so – when?As a virtual bankruptcy assistant working for bankruptcy attorneys, we have encountered several problems when not asking these questions before drafting the petition. After the attorney has the client fill out the Client Intake Forms and sends them to us, we assume the attorney has already qualified these debtors. But as amazing as it sounds – we have spent many hours inputting information into the bankruptcy petition only to find out the client has not completed the credit counseling requirement.At this stage we have no choice but to immediately stop drafting the bankruptcy petition and notify the attorney at o So investor Joe finds a motivated seller with a property he thinks might be a sweet wholesale deal…but he’s not really sure. So he makes an offer. Seller counter-offers. Bingo, Joe may have something here. Now as I’ve written in previous articles, this is the point where Joe should stop and really do his due diligence on this property. Moving beyond merely smelling a deal, Joe should stop and really analyze the numbers, the market and even his prospective investor-buyers to see if he really feels confident about this before moving to finalize things with the seller. But this seems like a little too much work right now for investor Joe – and this is where things start to go downhill. Joe decides to go ahead and ink the deal, thinking to himself, “Hey, no problem. If this deal turns out to be a stinker, I’ll just use my weasel clause to back out – no harm, no foul.” No harm, Joe? Really? The Unethical Safety Net You see, Joe has a line in his contract that says, “This contract is contingent upon approval of Buyer’s partner.” Who is Joe’s partner? It’s probably his cat, Fluffy. Or maybe his wife, who isn’t all that happy about Joe’s crazy house flipping business anyway and would probably dispute all of Joe’s contracts if he’d let her. Here’s what’s really going on. Joe understands that later on if he realizes things aren’t nearly as rosy as he first suspected, he can just say, “Hey, my partner (i.e. Fluffy) decided this deal isn’t a good fit for us after all. Sorry about that, but I’m outta here.” I ask you – does this seem fair to the seller? Does it seem ethical? The seller, who had doubtless already made definite plans surrounding the sale of his property, is left with shattered hopes at the very least – and sometimes a lot worse. But this is exactly the type of approach I hear time and time again proposed as a “safe way” of flipping houses by many real estate investors nationwide. In fact many of my own colleagues who are teaching house flipping and real estate investing are also teaching people it’s OK to do business this way. Let me stand apart from the crowd and state in no uncertain terms that I do not approve of this – nor do I teach my students to – and nor should you. Are All Contingencies “Weasel Clauses”? Almost all contracts have contingency clauses – valid conditions that must be met in order for the agreement to proceed. And the legitimate, appropriate use of contract contingencies I take no issue with. It’s the frequent and free use of these contingencies as a replacement for doing your homework that I find disturbing. As a professional real estate investor, you should always be 100% honest with all parties in a transaction. When you sign your name to a contract, do it with honor. You should make every offer with the full intent of settling the deal one way or another. If not, don’t ink the deal. If certain circumstances need to fall into place before you can settle on a deal, present the offer, but clearly disclose those circumstances upfront. Above all, be honest with the seller about your position and your means. Doing business this way has NEVER caused me to lose a deal. And even if it had, there are been plenty of other profitable opportunities for me. Even if you set the ethics of it aside and look at it from a purely selfish perspective, people tend to remember someone backs out of a deal – and word gets around. A bad reputation will inevitably catch up with you (yes, even in a large city). On the other hand, if you sign your name with honor, experience has taught me time and time again that you will be much more successful. In fact, as a result of honoring my contracts, I’ve actually had my offers accepted over other, higher offers simply because my name has reputable value. Sellers know that I will do what I say I will do. Building a good name hasn’t always been easy. There have been times when settling on a deal seemed like it was going to blow up in my face. But every time I was able to find a way to honor my word and put the deals together, even though they weren’t great deals for me. I broke even on one, and made about $500 on the other. But the bottom line is that I settled them. I didn’t wait for something to happen. I got out and hit the streets. I was aggressive in finding a way to make things happen the way they should. Yes, I’ve encountered several situations where I couldn’t find a wholesale buyer for a particular deal. Though my intention when I first started flipping houses was to exclusively do wholesale deals, I was forced by my word to honor these contracts and settle on the homes myself. In fact, this is how I started rehabbing houses in the first place. Believe me, anyone and everyone who focuses on wholesale real esta Britney Spears, General Hospital, and Ben Matlock: Understanding Psychographic Marketing ntract is contingent upon approval of Buyer’s partner.”From start-up to exit strategy, companies follow a predictable development path.They don't call "General Hospital" and "Days of Our Lives" soap operas for nothing. Back in the day they were watched by housewives while they did the laundry.Remember the 2006 Super Bowl commercial for Pizza Hut, with a dumbstruck teenager, who could hardly believe his luck, when Britney Spears showed up.And those Matlock reruns with their endless commercials for motorized wheelchairs and Medicare supplemental insurance, etc.All successful marketers understand that you've got to get your message where the people for whom it was intended are most likely to already be. The excellent marketers are masters of the art and science of psychographic marketing.Psychographic segmentation divides the market into groups based on social class, life style, and personality characteristics.Research demonstrates that th Who is Joe’s partner? It’s probably his cat, Fluffy. Or maybe his wife, who isn’t all that happy about Joe’s crazy house flipping business anyway and would probably dispute all of Joe’s contracts if he’d let her. Here’s what’s really going on. Joe understands that later on if he realizes things aren’t nearly as rosy as he first suspected, he can just say, “Hey, my partner (i.e. Fluffy) decided this deal isn’t a good fit for us after all. Sorry about that, but I’m outta here.” I ask you – does this seem fair to the seller? Does it seem ethical? The seller, who had doubtless already made definite plans surrounding the sale of his property, is left with shattered hopes at the very least – and sometimes a lot worse. But this is exactly the type of approach I hear time and time again proposed as a “safe way” of flipping houses by many real estate investors nationwide. In fact many of my own colleagues who are teaching house flipping and real estate investing are also teaching people it’s OK to do business this way. Let me stand apart from the crowd and state in no uncertain terms that I do not approve of this – nor do I teach my students to – and nor should you. Are All Contingencies “Weasel Clauses”? Almost all contracts have contingency clauses – valid conditions that must be met in order for the agreement to proceed. And the legitimate, appropriate use of contract contingencies I take no issue with. It’s the frequent and free use of these contingencies as a replacement for doing your homework that I find disturbing. As a professional real estate investor, you should always be 100% honest with all parties in a transaction. When you sign your name to a contract, do it with honor. You should make every offer with the full intent of settling the deal one way or another. If not, don’t ink the deal. If certain circumstances need to fall into place before you can settle on a deal, present the offer, but clearly disclose those circumstances upfront. Above all, be honest with the seller about your position and your means. Doing business this way has NEVER caused me to lose a deal. And even if it had, there are been plenty of other profitable opportunities for me. Even if you set the ethics of it aside and look at it from a purely selfish perspective, people tend to remember someone backs out of a deal – and word gets around. A bad reputation will inevitably catch up with you (yes, even in a large city). On the other hand, if you sign your name with honor, experience has taught me time and time again that you will be much more successful. In fact, as a result of honoring my contracts, I’ve actually had my offers accepted over other, higher offers simply because my name has reputable value. Sellers know that I will do what I say I will do. Building a good name hasn’t always been easy. There have been times when settling on a deal seemed like it was going to blow up in my face. But every time I was able to find a way to honor my word and put the deals together, even though they weren’t great deals for me. I broke even on one, and made about $500 on the other. But the bottom line is that I settled them. I didn’t wait for something to happen. I got out and hit the streets. I was aggressive in finding a way to make things happen the way they should. Yes, I’ve encountered several situations where I couldn’t find a wholesale buyer for a particular deal. Though my intention when I first started flipping houses was to exclusively do wholesale deals, I was forced by my word to honor these contracts and settle on the homes myself. In fact, this is how I started rehabbing houses in the first place. Believe me, anyone and everyone who focuses on wholesale real esta It Still Makes Sense to Buy a Home in Mission Viejo Versus Renting encies “Weasel Clauses”?If you are renting and can afford to buy, but have decided to put off buying a home due to all of the chatter about a housing bubble... you may be sorry. Is there a 'real estate bubble'? The simple answer is 'No'. Even if interest rates due move up a little bit higher, it won't be enough to cause a slide in Real Estate prices here in Mission Viejo. The key to a healthy real estate market is the jobs market... and in south Orange County, has some of the lowest un-employment in the Nation, with a good forecast for job growth for years to come.Even though the payment on a home may be slightly higher due to increased interest rates, it generally won't stop someone from buying the home of their dreams... but if they feel their job is in jeopardy, it usually will stop most people in their tracks from purchasing a home.A major mortgage industry group recently release it’s three year economic forecast, projecting robu Almost all contracts have contingency clauses – valid conditions that must be met in order for the agreement to proceed. And the legitimate, appropriate use of contract contingencies I take no issue with. It’s the frequent and free use of these contingencies as a replacement for doing your homework that I find disturbing. As a professional real estate investor, you should always be 100% honest with all parties in a transaction. When you sign your name to a contract, do it with honor. You should make every offer with the full intent of settling the deal one way or another. If not, don’t ink the deal. If certain circumstances need to fall into place before you can settle on a deal, present the offer, but clearly disclose those circumstances upfront. Above all, be honest with the seller about your position and your means. Doing business this way has NEVER caused me to lose a deal. And even if it had, there are been plenty of other profitable opportunities for me. Even if you set the ethics of it aside and look at it from a purely selfish perspective, people tend to remember someone backs out of a deal – and word gets around. A bad reputation will inevitably catch up with you (yes, even in a large city). On the other hand, if you sign your name with honor, experience has taught me time and time again that you will be much more successful. In fact, as a result of honoring my contracts, I’ve actually had my offers accepted over other, higher offers simply because my name has reputable value. Sellers know that I will do what I say I will do. Building a good name hasn’t always been easy. There have been times when settling on a deal seemed like it was going to blow up in my face. But every time I was able to find a way to honor my word and put the deals together, even though they weren’t great deals for me. I broke even on one, and made about $500 on the other. But the bottom line is that I settled them. I didn’t wait for something to happen. I got out and hit the streets. I was aggressive in finding a way to make things happen the way they should. Yes, I’ve encountered several situations where I couldn’t find a wholesale buyer for a particular deal. Though my intention when I first started flipping houses was to exclusively do wholesale deals, I was forced by my word to honor these contracts and settle on the homes myself. In fact, this is how I started rehabbing houses in the first place. Believe me, anyone and everyone who focuses on wholesale real esta Having Your Newsletter Printed Online her hand, if you sign your name with honor, experience has taught me time and time again that you will be much more successful. In fact, as a result of honoring my contracts, I’ve actually had my offers accepted over other, higher offers simply because my name has reputable value. Sellers know that I will do what I say I will do.Newsletters are a means of communication between a company and its employees, clients, patrons and customers. These are periodically printed updates about products, events and other news about your company. This is a good means of increasing your market exposure. By regularly reminding your market of your presence, you give an impression of consistency and stability.Regular communication builds consumer-producer intimacy. It helps build trust and improves customer relations. By regularly promoting your products, the improvements and updating customers of your services, you give them a sense of reliability. This makes your market more aware of your brand. This is called brand awareness. Brand awareness is a good form of publicity because it attracts more attention and increases the number of your potential clients.Certain things should be taken into consideration when designing a newsletter. Since this will be Building a good name hasn’t always been easy. There have been times when settling on a deal seemed like it was going to blow up in my face. But every time I was able to find a way to honor my word and put the deals together, even though they weren’t great deals for me. I broke even on one, and made about $500 on the other. But the bottom line is that I settled them. I didn’t wait for something to happen. I got out and hit the streets. I was aggressive in finding a way to make things happen the way they should. Yes, I’ve encountered several situations where I couldn’t find a wholesale buyer for a particular deal. Though my intention when I first started flipping houses was to exclusively do wholesale deals, I was forced by my word to honor these contracts and settle on the homes myself. In fact, this is how I started rehabbing houses in the first place. Believe me, anyone and everyone who focuses on wholesale real estate flipping will find him/herself in the same position. When you come to that point, if you’re signing your name with honor, you will find a way to settle the deal with integrity, and either fix and flip the house or hold it until you can find a wholesale buyer (yes, possibly even at a loss). The bottom line… As an ethical real estate investor, you should sign your name to each and every contract with honor. Anybody can go make an offer, but your name is your name and it has value. If you sign contracts without producing, then in time your name will have little worth. Contingency clauses have their place, but you shouldn’t be using them as a safety net to sign up deals you feel unsure of. You should sign your name with integrity and always do everything within your power to keep your word. In the long run your reputation as a person of integrity will bring you much more profit and prosperity than any short term gain you may experience by being a weasel.
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