Starting your Real Estate Investing Career the Right Way
by Steve Cook
I am often asked by people "How do you get started in real estate investing?" My
answer to this question is becoming clearer to me the more I give an answer.
However, before I tell you my answer, let me share some observations that I have
made over the course of my investing career. The Lord has truly blessed me in my
real estate investing endeavors and, as a result, I have had the opportunity to
meet other successful investors throughout the country. First, let me clarify
what I consider successful. Success is not measured in the amount of money that
one possesses, but on the lifestyle that one lives. There are those who are
authentically successful and there are those who fake it. When I refer to
successful people, I'm talking about the authentic ones - the people who have
"arrived." To be honest, I feel sorry for those that feel the need to fake
success.
My successful friends all love to talk about their war stories -"What life used
to be like." After attentively listening to them, I have observed a common theme
they all share. Most not even realizing it themselves. Do you think the common
thread is education? While I can't stress the importance of real estate
education enough, that's not it. (There are many educated investors, but few
successful investors. Real estate education is relatively cheap and easy to
find. In fact, there are some people out there who are so educated about the
techniques, they skip investing and decide to write courses and teach classes
about the subject. But it has been said that if you want to be successful, you
need to learn from someone more successful than yourself.) The key to being
successful as a real estate investor is planning. Successful investors always
have a game plan. Educated investors only know how to do deals. They don't know
why they are doing deals or where they are going. They just aimlessly pursue
opportunities.
I aimlessly invested for two years before I put a plan into place. I did 100
deals in my first two years and was basically starting from scratch when I
stopped. After evaluating what I had done in two years, I came up with a plan on
how I was going to get to where I wanted to be. My life has changed tremendously
since coming up with my plan! It is not because I have done more deals, but
because I have done less. Often the mindset of the investor is, "If I could only
do more deals, I'd get ahead." Do you remember when you were an employee? Did
you ever think, "If only there were more hours in a day, then I could work
another 10 hours and make more money." Some of you reading this article may
still be in this frame of mind. The answer to these thoughts is planning. You
have to take responsibility for your life, your finances, your spending, and
your actions. There are important actions that successful investors can make
plans for, such as:
They Control Their Debt
You need to control your debt (i.e. pay it off). If you have it, debt will be
your master. It will cause you to lose sleep at night, force you to hold on to
your job, and keep you doing things that you don't want to do. All of my
successful friends stopped accumulating debt. They no longer buy cars and other
consumer items, eat out or spent anything unless they have the cash to do it.
Many of them even scaled back their lifestyles. I personally moved into an
apartment, which is a common theme among many of my friends. They were willing
to give up the "glamorous lifestyle" for a little while in order to live a
lifestyle that would allow them to live out their dreams. They came up with a
plan to pay off their debt and vowed not to accumulate any more.
They Know What They Want Out of Life
Not everyone really knows what he or she wants out of life. In fact, most people
do not. When I talk to others about their goals, most will say something along
the lines of, "I want to make $250,000 per year" or "I want to have $5 million
in the bank." When I ask them why, they can't answer the question. They normally
respond, "Because I want it." Then that dream dies the moment they want
something else. Often people think that making or having a lot of money will
cure everything and give them the life that they want. This is a lie that
society wants us to believe. If you don't know what you are doing, money will
make you miserable. However, money and a plan can set you free.
They are Able to Focus
In order to be successful at anything, you need to become good at it. The
mindset of a real estate investor is to be successful quickly. No one sits down
and makes up a plan to be financially free in 40 years! It's more like two to
three years, though some people will actually give five to ten years a shot, but
that is rare. The good news is that two to three years can change your life if
you have a plan and direction. Without these tools, these years could ruin your
life. Investors who focus normally find a niche in real estate investing and go
after it. They are not pursuing all different types of investing. (People who
sell "the full toolbox" of courses may be angry at me for saying this because
they will sell less if you believe that you only need one method of investing.
But I just tell it how I see it.)
Some of these concepts and steps seem so simple and, in actuality, they really
are. However, most people who I talk to believe they are already doing this. But
the likelihood is that their "plan" is really not a plan. They don't know where
they are going, how they are going to get there, what method they are going to
use to get there, how long it is going to take to get there, or what to do along
the way if they get lost. Usually they just run in circles until they get tired
and then bow out along with many of the others who have bowed out of the real
estate investing game over the years. Very few make it, because very few plan.
Successful people don't achieve their dreams by accident. You shouldn't either.
Bio:
Since 1998 Steve Cook has flipped many hundreds of houses as an active
Baltimore-area real estate investor. Steve's unique specialty is the "flipping
homes 1-2 punch", a proven system of real estate investing that powerfully
combines wholesaling and rehabbing houses. Steve Cook is dedicated to helping
others succeed through understanding and aggressively applying his time-tested,
step-by-step approach to flipping real estate.