Moded Xrumer now rents out real estate for you.
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A good business owner realizes he can't do everything himself and finds a way to get it done in an effective manner without significant personal involvement.
I started off a long time ago with the goal of having 500 rentals. From that # I decided what would be needed to make it so that i don't spend 100 hours a week taking phone calls about toilets and noisy neighbors.
It was the exact same reason I got out of the real estate agent game. I worked with many nice, older people who had been agents for the past 30+ years. They live comfortably, but continue to work 60+hr weeks so they can continue to clear $60k-$70k a year. There aren't too many options to get that down to 40hrs or less (Being a broker is the only one I am aware of). The other option, and it worked nearly every time was getting involved in real estate.
I've had the chance to meet many wonderful, wealthy individuals while being in real estate as an agent. They all had one thing in common - They owned properties. Most of which were rentals.
Now, when you come from a poor background, from a family that's never had more than a few hundred bucks at any given time, you try and pick up tips from someone who has done well. And in virtually every case they followed the same principals - Buy things that have value, don't flock to stuff that's useless.
So, from the math I did, once you've set up as much computer-based management as possible, it takes around a hour per month per unit to do the upkeep stuff, whether it be physical, background check keying (Taking SSNs and using them to check up on tenants). So, 500 units * 1hr/mo = 125jrs/wk or 4 full time employees.
We figure roughly $200 net profit for each unit per month (After leverage) which ends up $100k/mo of free cashflow. Hiring the full management team runs less than $100k a year, or $8k/mo which brings total net cashflow down to $92k. At this point I have no work, just sitting back and collecting income like any good business owner should be doing (Isn't that what you're supposed to be doing with your websites?) the other upside is that on top of the rental income, i'm also collecting an extra 3-4% in annual appreciation on the properties that also grows along side CPI and almost always exceeds it. So, normally, the net equity gain from appreciation is equal roughly to the net monthly cashflow (An extra $100,000 a month in my pocket) bringing it up to a $2.4m annual income.