Let me offer this first bit of advice. You
can use the term landlording in common interaction with others, but in your
own mind begin to reframe the way you see landlording. You control and manage
an income stream. A cash flow. A simple concept with profound meaning.
With all of the knocks landlording takes,
few business or investment opportunities provide the potential freedom and
long-term income that owning income properties will give.
Key #1
The first key to making Income Stream
management rewarding is very fundamental and basic. You absolutely, definitely
must buy well below fair market values. It must be what some would call an
outrageous deal. This type of purchase will provide cash flow almost
immediately. Next, this type of purchase typically will payoff in 5-10 years
on a mortgage. When paid, you have basically creating a small lifetime
annuity. The net income each month will be $250-375 per month.
Key #2
The second key is you must know and
understand proper fixup and repair techniques, because this will keep you from
being frustrated when tenants mishandle your property. Also, you will avoid
burying cash into the deal. Don't bury your cash. If your not the handy type,
don't despair, neither was I. The concepts and methods are learnable by
anyone, male or female. You don't have to do the work if you have either the
time or patience. Just learn the concepts and direct others. I do.
Key #3
Thirdly, you must be able to manage the
revenue coming in to your checkbook. This is done two ways. You must select
the right tenant profile. The right person to pay you. Choosing the right
tenant can eliminate 70% of all misery. The second part is achieved by
handling your cash flow wisely; paying mortgages strategically so you can get
the property free and clear as soon as economically feasible. Last in revenue
management, you must handle the administrative details of the paperwork flow
that accompanies all real estate ownership.
I've met literally hundreds of real estate
investors, and the ones, who seem to ultimately prosper the most and create
the most wealth, are landlords and real estate owners. Buying and selling has
its place, but developing income via income producing assets is the place
where long-term income is creating along with large equities.
Let's get back to reframing the way you view
yourself. You aren't a landlord. You are an income stream manager. You manage
cash flows just like a multitude of other industries. You are in reality not
much different than a banker. Banks control capital and then re-lend or rent
that capital out in the form of loans. You control capital also. You also
re-lend that capital out in the form of shelter. The user pays a fee called
rent. This control of capital and renting it out is the same whether you are a
banker or landlord. It is income stream management.
The big companies that own cable or wireless
phone service are income stream managers just like you. When AT&T buys a cable
company they aren't interested in the entertainment industry. They are buying
an income stream. Income streams are assets that are totally salable and
measurable. Rental income from houses, garages, rooms, or mobile home lot rent
are all measurable income streams.
Your first job is to start changing your
mentality. From landlord to income stream manager. Once you do this you'll
start to respect yourself more and make better decisions.
Article Provided by:
Bryan Wittenmyer
Real Estate Investing Author