Investors Tool Box
I am always being asked. "Doc what advice can you give me that will help me with investing. What tricks of the trade or inside tidbits can you share with me?? The best answer is you need to develop a "toolbox".
OK...Hey Doc..what do you mean "Tool Box". Okay...let me explain it ad tell you the 3 important areas that make it up.
1) Grey matter tools: This is the in your head part of the tool box. It is the manner in which you think about investing, the guidelines you use to select investments as well as ALL the information you call on every time the prospect of an investment even shows its self. It is the investment filter you have developed for yourself.
It is about gathering all the info you can in order to be able to think about investing and where it can lead you.
IMPORTANT FACT: Any bookstore you go into has a billion books on Real estate investing. Buy them all...ok not all but you should have a EXTENSIVE collection of them. Why you ask??? Simply put...if you have a understanding of the information and tactics that are being read by other investors...you will actually understand the factors that they are using to buy/sell/screen potential investments. Knowing what information someone is useing to make a decision gives you and advantage.
2)Your on-line tool box: Most investors use the web daily. Its a great information source, but most investors also have tunnel vision when they are on the web. we get stuck using a few websites that we think are the best at that will cover all our needs. WRONG answer. This causes a type of blindness I call "INFO INPUT SHUT DOWN".
Ok so how do you avoid Info input shut down? You have to open your tool box up to get some fresh tools.
All you do is create an another email and use it to collect eamil updates from various websites. these are going to be websits that will add you to an emailing list and send you any updates/newsletters they send out.
Once you join an email list..no matter what stay with it for at least 6 months. (Not all great investment tidbits are sent out at first.) Email lists to get on are for: investment clubs, investment blogs, investment reference sites, etc, etc.
I avoid most of the "pop up" mailing lists for the simple fact that if the info they offer is any good?someone else is going to share it and it will cause enough of a buzz that you will hear about it. If that the case then go ahead and join it.
My favorite online tools/sites are the ones that cost me very little to use/buy or better yet are free to me. I love to find good resource sites. ( I admit freely I normally link them to my own) A good web tool is a great thing to find. Im not refering to another mortgage calculator...I mena that online tool your just dying to try out. When you find them...bookmark them.
3) Actual physical tools: these are the tools you can actually touch and use when you?re making offers, inspecting property, or doing any one of the other hundreds of things that a good investor does before making an investment commitment. Most of these tools fit in a small briefcase or shoulder bag. These tools can be anything from flashlights, small inspection tools, to calculators etc. So in a nut shell that is all there is to a tool box.
Thats about it. so go build your toolbox. pdate it often. Use it daily...and happy investing. - 23200
OK...Hey Doc..what do you mean "Tool Box". Okay...let me explain it ad tell you the 3 important areas that make it up.
1) Grey matter tools: This is the in your head part of the tool box. It is the manner in which you think about investing, the guidelines you use to select investments as well as ALL the information you call on every time the prospect of an investment even shows its self. It is the investment filter you have developed for yourself.
It is about gathering all the info you can in order to be able to think about investing and where it can lead you.
IMPORTANT FACT: Any bookstore you go into has a billion books on Real estate investing. Buy them all...ok not all but you should have a EXTENSIVE collection of them. Why you ask??? Simply put...if you have a understanding of the information and tactics that are being read by other investors...you will actually understand the factors that they are using to buy/sell/screen potential investments. Knowing what information someone is useing to make a decision gives you and advantage.
2)Your on-line tool box: Most investors use the web daily. Its a great information source, but most investors also have tunnel vision when they are on the web. we get stuck using a few websites that we think are the best at that will cover all our needs. WRONG answer. This causes a type of blindness I call "INFO INPUT SHUT DOWN".
Ok so how do you avoid Info input shut down? You have to open your tool box up to get some fresh tools.
All you do is create an another email and use it to collect eamil updates from various websites. these are going to be websits that will add you to an emailing list and send you any updates/newsletters they send out.
Once you join an email list..no matter what stay with it for at least 6 months. (Not all great investment tidbits are sent out at first.) Email lists to get on are for: investment clubs, investment blogs, investment reference sites, etc, etc.
I avoid most of the "pop up" mailing lists for the simple fact that if the info they offer is any good?someone else is going to share it and it will cause enough of a buzz that you will hear about it. If that the case then go ahead and join it.
My favorite online tools/sites are the ones that cost me very little to use/buy or better yet are free to me. I love to find good resource sites. ( I admit freely I normally link them to my own) A good web tool is a great thing to find. Im not refering to another mortgage calculator...I mena that online tool your just dying to try out. When you find them...bookmark them.
3) Actual physical tools: these are the tools you can actually touch and use when you?re making offers, inspecting property, or doing any one of the other hundreds of things that a good investor does before making an investment commitment. Most of these tools fit in a small briefcase or shoulder bag. These tools can be anything from flashlights, small inspection tools, to calculators etc. So in a nut shell that is all there is to a tool box.
Thats about it. so go build your toolbox. pdate it often. Use it daily...and happy investing. - 23200
About the Author:
Doc Schmyz has done real estate deals all over the US and Mexico. His website shares Real estate investing information for all over the US. Find Real estate investing information by state


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