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Having written a
course on wholesaling, I get a ton of e-mails from people
who ask me questions about making offers and what they might
be doing wrong. Many of the e-mails that I receive read
something like this:
Dear Steve,
I recently looked at 20 homes for sale in my area. After
inspecting the homes, I decided to make 2 offers, but in
each case the seller's Realtor just laughed at me. I mean,
they really laughed hard! I'm not getting any offers
accepted and I'm becoming very discouraged. I don't think
that we have deals like you do where I live. Can you help
me? It just seems like most homes in my area sell for the
full asking price or more.
-Discouraged Newbie
Discouraged
Newbie is making one or possibly two mistakes common to new
investors. They aren't targeting motivated sellers and/or
they aren't making enough offers.
Targeting
Motivated Sellers
Where I live,
most homes sell for their full asking price and above as
well. The only difference between me and Discouraged Newbie
is that I concentrate on the sellers who are motivated to
sell at something less than full price. Typically, these are
banks or individuals who have a VACANT property which needs
work. I stress the word "vacant" for two reasons: 1) vacant
properties are nothing but trouble for the owners and 2) 99%
of the properties I have bought over the past three and a
half years have been vacant.
Handling
Rejection
Even though I
focus on motivated sellers, most of them aren't motivated
enough to accept my offer. If I make 30 offers, with 27-29
of them, chances are that the seller is going to say "No,"
or someone else is going to offer more. I strike out much
more often than having a seller say, "Yes," to my offer. But
I'm not concerned about all of the, "No's." I accept them as
part of the process and forge ahead, knowing that if I make
enough offers someone is eventually going to say "Yes,"
particularly if my offers are targeted toward sellers who
have some degree of motivation.
Making Lots of
Offers to Keep Your Funnel Full
In this business
you cannot make money without inventory. It is extremely
important that you always keep your pipeline full, and the
way to do that is to constantly make offers. Many people
come and tell me that they look at homes all the time but
never buy anything. They say they find motivated sellers but
none of their deals ever goes through. My next question to
them is, "How many times have you put an offer on paper?"
They are usually able to counter their answer on one hand.
In order to buy
properties, you must make offers. Sounds simple, right? Yet
it's surprising how many new investors have trouble
overcoming this hurdle. Personally, I average 40+ offers per
month, sometimes many more. Over the course of one weekend,
I made about 40 and bought 9 houses on Monday. To this day,
this stands as one of my most productive offering sprees,
netting about 1 out of every 4 properties (each was sold
separately, by the way, not as part of a package). And you
know what? I never would have bought all of those homes if I
hadn't made those 40 offers. Just like I would rarely, if
ever, buy anything if I only made one or two offers a month.
When I look at 20
homes I make 20 offers, not just 2. In fact, sometimes I
make 30 offers when I look at 20 homes. I make offers even
on the homes I couldn't get out to see. If I'm targeting the
right properties (i.e., those with sellers who may be
motivated), odds are that there will be several sellers out
of 20 with enough motivation to seriously consider my offer.
What I don't try to do is select who those 2 or 3 sellers
might be. The chances of me picking the right ones are very
slim. And why should I? My low offers will fish out the
sellers motivated enough to respond and thereby tell me
where I should invest my time. Too many wholesalers try to
pick the motivated sellers from a group by themselves when
making offers is the easiest way to find out.
I make offers on
every single home that interests me where I think the seller
might be motivated. Some I inspect; some I don't. Some are
priced ridiculously high; others are priced ridiculously
low. Some are in great areas; some are in bad areas.
Regardless of location, condition or price, there is a
number that works for every home and that is what I offer.
On occasions, I've asked sellers to pay ME to take their
homes because no other number worked for me. Sure, most of
these offers are rejected just like most of my other offers.
Even on the weekend that I bought 9 homes, most (31 of 40)
of my offers were rejected. In general, though, some of my
offers are accepted, and those are the only ones that count.
I hope that this
will inspire some of you to get out there and start making
more offers. If you make it your goal to make an offer a
day, then you will start to buy properties. If your offers
are at the right price, then you will sell properties and
make money. You don't need to make offers as I do, but you
do have to make some if you want to buy houses. Do your
homework, get your questions answered, and overcome your
fears. Then make it your goal to average an offer a day
because, as we all know, "An offer a day keeps the bill
collectors away!"
Article
Provided by:
Steve Cook
Author, Investor
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