The Salesman Who Doesn't Believe in His Product
by Bryan Wittenmyer
Many years ago I worked for one of those large national real estate brokerage
firms selling real estate. This was not my introduction to the real estate
business, since I had been investing in buildings and property since 1984. My
trainer was an older but highly successful real estate agent. One of the things
he shared with me and the other trainee was the fact he had consistently earned
over $10,000 per month for the past ten years. He drove a Corvette, was
divorced, and owned one property--his residence. If my math is correct, he
grossed somewhere in the area of $1,200,000 in ten years. That is right,
somewhere in the area of one to one and a half million dollars had gone through
his business hands in those working years.
While this individual was a talented agent who had built a nice customer
following, I had to ask myself--Why hadn't he ever invested in the great product
of real estate? It certainly could not have been an income problem. Even if that
excuse were used, we all know 90-100% of a deal can be leveraged. I didn't know
for sure, but this skilled agent gave me the impression he didn't have much
money. He had income, but very little capital. It could have been that his
divorce cleaned him out, financially speaking. Divorce is a major estate and
wealth destroyer. (It is worth noting, the author of the book, The Millionaire's
Mind, shows most millionaires have been married only once.)
With all of the benefits that accrue to real estate ownership, I am surprised by
folks involved in the buying and selling of property on a daily basis who own no
real estate. It is an enigma. Let's count some of the benefits:
1. Discounts andinstant equity earned when buying
2. Principle pay down on mortgage, monthly
3. Appreciation--unknown upside potential
4. Rehab and fix-up profits in terms of new equities
5. Forced savings plan (can't sell or tap equity as easy as more liquid
investments)
6. Special capital gains and write-off advantages
7. Ability to pyramid gains with 1031 tax free exchanges
8. INCOME: RENTS
9. Ability to grow net worth with no tax unless you sell
10. Easy to purchase with leverage
I recently got an email from a company selling some real estate course. The main
selling feature seemed to be his rant against being a landlord. It was almost
like landlords are dumb because there are much smarter ways to make money.
Again, this seems odd to me. Real estate is one of the greatest investments in
the world. Why wouldn't I want to actually OWN it?
Buying and selling definitely has its place. But owning real estate is where you
grow equity for the future. Contrary to all of the myths out there--owning real
estate is where large estates are created. I am not ashamed to own property.
Ownership, i.e., rental income is where freedom comes into being. It won't
happen overnight, but give it 5-10 years with hard work, and you will launch
yourself into a newfound freedom. I know it's hard for impetuous North Americans
to think long term.
Back when I was fresh out of high school, I helped a friend and his family move.
They had been renters all of their life. In fact, I estimate they had been
renting for at least 25-years when I helped them move from one rental house to
the next. The thing I remember is the totality of their life was in that moving
truck that day. You see they didn't own any property; other than some worn out
furniture and clothing--they had no equity. The sad thing was being long-term
renters guaranteed them a life of virtual poverty. The bottom line: When you
don't OWN real estate, it is extremely difficult to accumulate any net worth.
I will conclude with this. Years ago at our family business, there was a
salesman who worked for one of our suppliers. He serviced our account (sold us
Gibson appliances wholesale). He was one of the most honorable and decent guys
you could ever meet. He was about 60-years old--about the same age as the real
estate salesman mentioned above. He dressed very modestly, drove an average
(boring) car. He looked like a regular, middle-class guy. His regular life was
being a farmer. He did the sales job just for some spending money and to keep
busy. As I got to know him, he disclosed that he owned 48 acres of farmland in a
very up and coming area about 30 minutes from our business. THE POINT: The guy
is a multi-millionaire--about 2 million. WHY? BECAUSE HE OWNED REAL ESTATE OVER
A LONG TERM OF TIME! Real estate salesman who looks rich and who doesn't own his
product, or a "poor" farmer? I'll take the farmer.
Bio:
Bryan Wittenmyer has been investing in real estate for the past 15 years. He's
not the new kid on the block. In the past five years he has written extensively
in the real estate field. His articles have appeared in Creative Real Estate
Magazine and the Real Estate Entrepreneur. Bryan served on the board of
directors of the Real Estate Investment Association of Berk's County for 3
years.
Although Bryan hasn't attended formal university studies, he keeps himself
educated reading a plethora of books, newsletter, journals, and listening to
hundreds of audio tape lectures. He jokingly considers himself to be an
information junkie. You can also benefit from his years of practical business
experience, having managed several income stream businesses, ranging from
automobile debt instruments to appliance paper. He also has bought numerous real
estate debt instruments - he knows the income stream business.