World Wide Property Sales
How Do I Overcome Paralysis of Analysis?
by Vena Jones-Cox
I always have question asked of me , such as, I've recently started going to
meetings of my local Property Owner's Association, and I think they're great.
The problem is, there's so much information that I don't know what to pay
attention to! Every month, there's another speaker with another opinion on the
"best" strategy for this or that. I'm overwhelmed, and can't seem to get out and
actually do anything. Please recommend a course of study that will help a new
investor make a nice, simple deal.
Here's my answer. I'll go you one better than that; I'll tell you the absolute
best strategy for buying and selling property...or would that be less than
helpful?
New investors who attend real estate association meetings often come away with
the same "paralysis of analysis" that you describe. There's so much information
available, and so much of it appears to be contradictory (buy
foreclosures...don't bother with foreclosures...buy to hold...buy and sell) that
one wonders how anyone ever figures it all out. And adding to the problem, every
successful investor is willing to defend to the death their strategy as the best
strategy. Although they're trying to be helpful, they often add to the confusion
experienced by newbies trying to make sense of it all. In my experience, new
investors that don't start making offers in the first 2 to 3 months never get
around to doing it at all. The fear of doing deals only fades with the actual
doing of deals; no amount of "book-larnin" will ever give you the confidence you
want. So stop trying to learn everything, and focus on what you need to make the
first offers. Those things are:
1) Some idea of what you want your real estate to do for you. Know this, and
you'll have a good idea of the exit strategy and the type, condition, areas, and
price range of properties you should be looking at. Want quick cash? You'll need
to wholesale properties. Looking at anything other than 1-family junkers is a
waste of time. Eliminate other properties and from your thinking and move on.
2) A working knowledge of how your one exit strategy works. Building on the last
example, once you know that wholesale deals are sold to cash buyers for 60%-70%
of as-is value, you know a) how to calculate an offer and b) that you need to
start finding buyers now.
3) Two or three strategies for finding the types of properties you want.
Whatever your chosen strategy, finding the good deals will consume most of your
time and energy. So try 2-3 methods all at once for a few weeks. Discard those
that fail and amplify those that work, but always use more than one way at a
time.
4) The ability to evaluate the properties you're viewing. In the case of
junkers, you'll need to know how to find the after-repaired value and the cost
of the repairs. Don't worry about figuring out what the property will rent for;
it's not important to your plan. Conversely, if your plan is to buy and hold
multis, you'll need to learn how to calculate the return on investment.
5) A team and a contract that will keep you out of trouble. Why do you need to
know how to do a title search when there are folks who do it for a living? Sure,
it might be good to know later, but it isn't crucial for you to know right now.
And if you have a well-written purchase contract that allows you to get out of a
bad deal before it closes and an experienced mentor that will help you through
your first few deals, how can you lose?
There. Now instead of a billion things to learn, you have 5. Now get out there
and make some deals.
Bio:
Vena Jones-Cox’s real estate business focuses on finding great deals on 1-3
family homes, then lease/optioning them to homeowners or wholesaling them to
investors and renovators. All told, she buys and sells about 50 properties per
year.
Vena is a frequent guest lecturer at real estate investment groups throughout
the country, and particularly enjoys working with new investors. Vena frequently
authors articles on real estate investment and the regulatory environment for
various newsletters and publications, including The Real Deal, her own monthly
newsletter. She has been a guest speaker at the Cato Institute in Washington,
D.C., lecturing on the effects of lead-based paint regulation on small
investors. And in her spare time, Vena hosts a popular weekly call-in radio
program on public radio. Real Life Real Estate Investing can be heard throughout
the Midwest and throughout the world on the Internet (WNKU.org) Wednesdays from
5:00-6:00 PM EDT.
Vena Jones-Cox is a past president of the Real Estate Investor’s Association of
Cincinnati, the Ohio Real Estate Investor’s Association, and the National Real
Estate Investor’s Association. She intends to form the International and,
eventually, Pan-Galactic Real Estate Investors Associations so she can be
president of those, too. Vena Jones-Cox has been featured in publications such
as The Cincinnati Enquirer, Smart Money Magazine, Money Magazine and Reader’s
Digest in articles about successful real estate entrepreneurs.