a rental property is not going to solve all your problems it’s probably just going to create more problems I moved to
South America for 3 months and my savings rate shot up to 80% and I was
like whoa there’s so many different ways that you can make money through real
estate and I really believe that real estate investing is fantastic because we’re not Reinventing the
wheel welcome to the hybrid real estate professional podcast today’s episode is a special one because we’re sitting down
with someone who has truly mastered the art of real estate investing on her own terms Sarah Weaver Sarah has built a
real estate portfolio that allows her to live and travel anywhere in the world all while continuing to scale her business using the medium-term rental
strategy in this conversation we’re diving into how she built a location independent real estate business the
strategy behind her High cash flow midterm rentals and tips and tricks for identifying win-win Partnerships to
accelerate your real estate investing Journey let’s get into
it all right welcome to the hybrid real estate professional podcast today I have a very special guest Miss Sarah Weaver
Sarah I’ve been following you for several years but this is the first time I had the opportunity to sit across the screen from you I’m really grateful to
have you on the show and although I’m familiar with your story i’ would love for you to just give a quick intro to my audience in your own words oh well thank
you Erin no it’s nice to be here I am a real estate investor I started investing in
2017 um at the time I was working remote as a digital nomad kind of before
digital Nomad became a true thing you know with the pandemic and so many people moving to remote for me travel
was always my number one I looked at my 20s as an opportunity to work really
hard accumulate a lot of skills but really just tick off a lot of those life
experiences that I wanted to have before um it’s funny Aon we were talking before we aired about being 35 and this just
being like a different chapter and so I saw my life in chapter um and one of those things that I happen
to do was pick up some rental properties so I invested in the midwest which I know we’ll talk about um at length and
those rental properties really changed my life I started talking about investing posting about investing which
is you know how you came to follow me wrote a book about investing and now I turn around and I help people um like
you who have a W2 job but want to invest in real estate that’s really what my time is dedicated to doing is helping
people inv in real estate I love that yeah our timelines are pretty similar too we’re both the same age uh I bought my first property in
2017 and um similarly invest in a few different markets but and when you bought that property did you know it was
First Property Experiences
a rental or like were you house hacking because mine like I went in knowing this
is a real estate investment property like I definitely knew I wanted to build a portfolio but it’s funny Erin I didn’t
know at the time what I know now and so I just thought oh if I just buy one
every other year for 10 years I’ll own five properties and that’s good I
guess yeah that would that does work right and I think there’s something to be said for like that plan can work if
you’re going to have a a W2 consistently for you know multiple decades and yeah you know diversify and have that be part
of your portfolio that strategy absolutely works But to answer your question no we did not know the first primary we bought it was before my wife
and I got married we got married the the year after that and we bought our first rental intentional rental property in
2019 but that first house we bought in 2017 is a funny little story about it we
got four different uses out of it we bought it and we lived in it for three years we used the cash out refi to you
uh pull Equity out and buy two more rental properties with it then we moved out of the house and kept it as a rental
and then we eventually sold it before we hit the 5year capital gains exclusion
deadline for the IRS so we were able to sell it I think it was $165,000 gain uh taxfree
so this is like our kind of beta property right where we learned we learned all these new tricks as we went
but I would be lying if I said that was entirely intentional we just followed the signals as they appeared yeah I
Scaling Up
think that the ability to Pivot is really important as a real estate investor and entrepreneur and yeah I
think a lot of investors or I should say want to be investors get so paralyzed
because they think they need to know everything like I can’t tell you how many new investors who haven’t invested
yet are like yeah but what about a 1031 exchange or how do I buy the fourth one won’t I run out of funds and I’m like
Steve just buy your first one like let’s get your first one done and then let’s talk about all the things that happen
after that or how many llc’s should I form oh my gosh that question yeah you I
can’t even like I made a joke about it and I feel bad I got asked that question on stage and I made a joke and probably
about 30% of the room got the joke because they know that question gets asked all the time but the poor woman
who asked it I really offended her and so later I had to go find her like after the the conference you know in the
hallway and be like hey I did not mean to like you know rid I was not ridiculing you it was just a joke um but
for those of you that don’t know the joke so many investors are like how should I open an LLC do I buy it in an
LLC everyone is like obsessed with this LLC question and the funny part is is
that if you go ask your attorney they’re going to have a different answer if you go ask another attorney they’re going to have a different answer and then your
CPA has a totally different answer and then a tenured investor has a different answer so good luck figuring out the
right answer for you I am not an attorney I will not advise on that anymore well and just to like put a bow
on this point right I think sometimes people mask uh these types of tasks it’s
it’s procrastination from doing the actual work of going out and finding a deal right find find something that’s
worth protecting and and then you can answer those questions exactly I call it uh procrastination through
education so how many people do we know I mean we met in a mastermind how many people do we know that join all these
masterminds uh to get all their questions answered but really they’re just procrastinating and they’re scared
and I think it’s important that we talk about that fear so it it is scary like
if your family is relying on you to you know head your household and control
your finances and you make a bad investment that can be scary and so I think we’re here to educate people on
how to buy a rental property that isn’t going to ruin your life so there’s a lot of threads I want to pull on in this
conversation but I like where this is going so let’s talk about 2017 maybe let’s say the year or two leading up to
that um like what was going on in your head in your lifestyle in your professional life that led you to that
first property and then some of the fears that you just talked about where hey I’m I have a big chunk of money I
don’t want to screw this up but I know that you know I’ve done enough research to know that real estate is where I want to invest like how did you personally
get through some of those barriers in that very very first deal yeah I was probably at a very different place than
a lot of your listeners I was making very little money um and I was spending
very little money and so the cool thing is is that I didn’t know what this was called at the time but my savings rate
was so high and I’ll give numbers so I was making 47,000 a year which I I
realize now it is common like when you’re in your early 20s however I ran around in a really high achieving group
of friends so I know that they were making 80 100 and I was like wow that’s so much money and now I confidently can
say I’m making more than that and it it’s definitely it’s it’s all perspective because my expenses have
also gone up and so at the time my savings rate was 40% wow and and then I
moved to South America in 2016 for 3 months and my savings rate shot up to
80% and I was like whoa I’m on to something and I think for me at the time
before I bought my first rental property I looked at money as definitely had
abundance mindset around money and so I think that that’s something I want to mention because I think that that
carried me to where I am today is I don’t live very many areas of my life in a scarcity mindset so I looked at my
first rental property as can I flip it can I live in it which is going to be
you know either I’m going to rent for free or not pay rent so live for free or at least have my rent lowered which at
the time already my rent clearly was very low um can I do a cash out refi so
can I buy something increase the value through renovation pull money out can I
do a heck like I I call that treating your property like an ATM and so there’s
so many different ways that you can make money through real estate and I first
educated myself on that so I don’t want to PO poo on education that was not what I meant by you know procrastination
through education I definitely educated myself on all of the different exit strategies um so I I truly had very
little fear it also helped that the house that I bought was
$217,000 and my Piti was $429 I still remember and I could rent out
each room to roommates for 700 so I was like sweet if I get two roommates that’s
covered and I pay a third of utilities and I knew at the time at least like
then I have principal pay down prices will appreciate I bought in a really nice neighborhood um and then I forced
appreciation by doing renovations and so I did a lot of Blood Sweat and Tears in that first house um which again is
probably something that your listeners are like yeah I’m not doing that like I have a high paying job I’m not like you
know laying vinyl plank flooring and killing my back but at the time at 27 that felt like a really good investment
of my time um and so fast forward that same house my monthly payment has shot
up to just shy of 1,600 uh because of you know taxes increasing and and insurance
increasing um but my rent I now rent it for 3,100
and then it has appreciated like over $100,000 and I actually conservatively
have not pulled anything out of it so I didn’t do a cash out refi I haven’t done a HELOC so I have all that appreciation
sitting in there so with all that being said I wasn’t scared when did I become
fearful probably property number three and property number four that’s when fear really started to sit in why do you
think that is think that you have I mean at that point I owned I mean I bought a
couple multifamilies so then it’s like oh I own four air conditions of all air
conditions crap out this summer or I own four furnaces so that dollar amount got
higher um and then also instead of having $429 as a mortgage a principal interest
tax and insurance I need to pay I now have three of those and so I’m up to let’s say 6K um and so that that was a
little bit more stressful um also I I got riskier so I bought in a city I had
never been to I did a longdistance renovation which means I had to hire a contractor I had never met and I used
hard money and private money with the plans of doing what’s called the Burr strategy so I renovated it wanted to
rent it out refinance and be able to pull that money out so that’s a that’s risky is your renovation going to cost
more than you think is your house going to appraise lower than you anticipated um I definitely was approaching a much
riskier strategy so there’s so many things there that are wonderful for especially the listeners of this show to
to hear the first is I think that you had a business owners’s mentality long before you bought your
first property and so when you talk about how you you weren’t as afraid heading into that you were very well
your foundations were very solid you had a high savings rate in your personal life so you had kind of control over your personal finances and then you also
premeditated these several different potential exit strategies you had a really really rock solid plan and even
though you were doing a lot of the work yourself you know which may not be achievable if someone had I’m not doing
that now let’s let’s fast forward I’m doing a full-on renovation currently I’m not swinging a hammer you guys like
that’s things have changed yeah no but I mean I think there’s something to be said for for kind of learning some of
those motions on your own in the beginning and then when you go to delegate them in the future or even like
you said hire people from afar cuzz that’s the other thing you know out ofate investors is that’s the main you
know audience that I typically serve the getting over the discomfort of being so far away from your Investments not only
your Investments but your teammates right it’s that that feeling of like the lack of oversight or not knowing what’s
going on like that’s the real fear that I encounter with most of the people I talk to yes but what I just wanted to
point out about your first s right is that you you had a plan yeah a very very solid plan on very solid footing and I
think when people talk about the fear that they get around their first deal you can arm
yourself not just with courses and education and all that but with an actual like solid business plan and that
Dr risks at least in your own head and then also when you’re talking it out with people that you trust in your network that’s one of the best ways to
drisk and then the other thing is that you’re talking about as you continue to scale most people think about the upside
of scaling without thinking about the downside they’re like oh I can add additional cash flow but they’re not
thinking like what you said where it’s like oh I have this much Mortgage Debt I put out a post a few years ago we hit
our you know eight property was like I’m a debt millionaire now I have over a million dollars in debt now and I’m not
saying that to brag I’m saying that for Consciousness to be aware and also to
show that that’s not bad debt it’s backed by pretty solid loan to value and
then also by cash flow but it is something to be aware of and I think it’s so funny that you said sorry last thing I’ll say is that I work with a
financial adviser who helps me with my stocks and all my non-real estate and he doesn’t come from a real EST background
but when I onboarded with him and I told him I had eight properties the first thing he said to me was that’s a lot of
appliances Aaron and uh so when you said the AC comment I just couldn’t help but think of that yeah so for your audience
I didn’t mention that I have been fully nomadic for the last six years and so I joke that that’s just like a fancy way
of saying homeless and I regrettably have said this multiple times but actually own more units than shoes
because I quite literally like live out of a carry on case um and and as a girl
that does care about what she looks like that that’s not necessarily A brag like I do hope to own more shoes um but
what’s funny is that I own you know what 12 couches I think I own like 15
mattresses now because I own half my portfolio is furnish rentals and I am
finally buying my own primary so a house that I plan to live in and you guys
buying a cou was like a huge for deal I think I was more emotional about buying this damn
couch than I was about anything else that I’ve bought in the last eight years um because one I’m GNA have to sit on it
right so I want to like it but also it feels the permanence of owning a couch
feels so real and it’s laughable because I own you know 11 furnish rentals I own
20 rentals overall now um and I own a lot of things but this feels so
different it really does one interesting thing that you’re kind of explaining is that you had this abundance mindset
around money but you had this minimalist mindset around how you built your own life right you built it to be light and
agile and able to relocate quickly and I say this almost a little bit out of Envy because I’m the opposite I’ve I’ve
accumulated stuff everywhere I go I have more stuff not less and I always wondered what it would be like to have a
light footprint but it allows you to do things like what you’re talking about which is be location independent which I
know is a goal of a lot of the people that you know I talked to and that that listen to this show but I think that was
a conscious choice that you made and you you built your life and your portfolio to support that which is I think some
people call it like lifestyle investing right you you’re building a portfolio to support the life that you want to live
Midterm Rental Strategy
versus trying to just kind of wedge it into your existing life um without you know understanding what it enables which
I think leads to the one of the other topics that you literally wrote a book on which is um the midterm rental
strategy and was telling you before we hit record as I’ve run this show for almost 18 months and I have yet to bring
someone on to talk about midterm rentals but it’s one of the you know most popular kind of trendy ways to get some
extra squeeze out of a a standard single family home so at a super high level
maybe you can explain not only what the strategy is but then how you kind of evolved from the long-term rental into
this midterm rental absolutely so that first property that I mentioned um I did
furnish it because I lived in and so I had the experience of Furnishing something with the Avatar
guest or tenant in mind so that first house I decorated it in a way that it would attract the type of Roommates that
I wanted who would eventually become my tenants when I moved out and so I had that experience and then also I
mentioned that I went abroad in 2016 one of the things that happened on that trip
that I didn’t realize at the time would be influential but I met a lot of travel nurses on that back packing trip so I
was at a hostel in the north of Columbia and there were a bunch of girls that were all travel nurses and so for those
of you not familiar they they get usually a 13-week contract at a hospital
somewhere else in the US that they don’t live and they go there and they work that contract and to put numbers to it
they may the staff nurse at that hospital might make $35 an hour but
they’re going to make somewhere close to like $115 an hour and and so what happens at
the time is a lot of these travel nurses they take maybe two three or four 13we
contracts back to back and then they’d Go backpack South America backpack Europe take some time off and so I
remember meeting them and thinking like wow that’s so cool so later when I was a
real estate investor I knew that I wanted to own an Airbnb because I I was an Airbnb guest like all over the world
I thought how cool will it be to own an Airbnb however I knew enough Real Estate
Investors that manage their own airbnbs their short-term rentals and these two
night three night stays you know needy guess guest questions that was not going
to work with my lifestyle sometimes I’m on a 12-hour flight or I go off grid and
I hike kilamanjaro like it was not going to work for me to run a true short-term
rental and that’s when I went back and I remembered these travel nurses and I was like they told me that they stay in
airbnbs and so that became my ideal Avatar when I bought my third property
which is a 4 unit in Omaha Nebraska I knew that I wanted to turn at least two
of the four units into a furnish rental fast forward today and I own 11 midterm
rentals and about 90% of my guests are travel nurses wow you know what’s so cool is that now that I’m thinking about
so you did the house hack which essentially taught you to think about what people might want if they move into
a furnished home and then you thought of it really from also your perspective of like if I’m sharing space with people
how do I want this place to feel and then the second thing is like you were traveling and you met travel nurses who
they work really really hard for these Sprints 13 weeks maybe multiple contracts in a row and then they like to
blow off steam and they also like to have a light footprint yes so I think your ability to relate to both of those
situations probably set you up very very well to then you know explore that strategy not that you have to have that
all that parallel experience but it sounds like it was another example of like organically evolving into a
strategy just based on what you were observing is that accurate yes that and just I approached my real estate as a
business so one of the things I want to add Is Not only was I making you know under 50,000 I don’t come from money so
I really had no backup plan I’m single so like this had to work and so if any
of you listening are like yeah I want to invest in real estate but like it has to
work I’m like trust me I feel the same way like this had to work and so I went
about each and every investment that I’ve made with what strategy is going to work for one and then two
maximize my outcome so I want to know how can I you know get the most money out of this property and that’s where
mid-term rentals came in so to put some numbers to it uh one bedroom one bath in
Omaha might rent longterm for $750 but as a midterm rental I can get
anywhere between $18 and 2,200 and so yes there’s an initial cost
of Furnishing it and yes there’s now the cost of Maintenance and utilities that
may not go along with a long-term rental but overall I’m getting way more of a
return on my money using the midterm rental strategy without the headache and
the time commitment that a short-term rental might bring yeah that’s amazing so I know it’s very Market specific but
what you just kind of said with those numbers is that you can get more than twice the amount of revenue from a
midterm rental as you can with long-term rental at least in Omaha is that pretty standard for it to be 2X or more or are
there some markets where it’s you know 30 40% more like what is there a standard there there’s not a standard
I’m so sorry for those of you that love rules like there really is not a rule to this um and let me be very clear the
midterm rental strategy doesn’t always work so one example is my very first house the single family that I told you
I’m renting for 3,100 as a long-term rental I’m not paying gas electric water
internet or lawn care or snow removal on that property as a longterm so you need
to add all of those expenses if I were to furnish and then you need to add in
that you’re going to have higher vacancy for a midterm rental there might be times in between guests where the
property sitting vacant and you guys if your property’s vacant you’re not making any money and so in that case there
wasn’t enough of a margin between a longterm and a midterm once I also added
the cost of Furnishing a four bedroom not only the money like the monetary
cost but my single family home happened to become vacant
at a time that it was just going to be really inconvenient for me to furnish uh
which brings me to another point you need to recognize before you launch a midterm rental that you need to design
it you need to curate all the furniture you have to uh manage the delivery schedule of all the furniture you likely
need to fly out to the property you’re going to break your back putting things together or you can hire someone to do
that um which is going to have a cost associated with it it is a a good plug
that I do own a company where we offer that service but I think that it’s really important that people realize the
cost associated with changing your longterm to a midterm I would say six
times out of 10 it’s worth it but about four times it’s not worth it and so make sure you analyze the deals I love the
midterm rental strategy I wrote a book about the midterm rental strategy and I’m telling you it’s not always the
right strategy for every property that’s a really good point because I think a lot of people hear oh great I
can just increase my cash flow if I just flip this switch and all of a sudden start advertising on Furnish finder and
I’ll make you know 2x money that’s definitely not the case you have to back out a bunch of expenses that you wouldn’t have had to pay as a long-term
rental owner and then you know the Furnishing and then all the potential you know additional operational
complexities but so I think the majority of the listeners most likely have
full-time jobs and the idea of flying to a remote market and setting things up and coordinating delivery schedules and
getting things online is probably Out Of Reach so the second option right where you hire a firm to do that is that a
pretty common service in most major markets like whether it’s your company or other companies and if so like what
could someone expect to pay for that type of service yeah I think that um the fees are really going to depend on like
what they offer so for example my company Arya Design Services we offer where we’ll analyze your property for
you so before you even make the investment into furniture and making the switch is we’ll tell you what it would
rent as a long-term midterm or short-term rental so that you can make an educated decision it would be in my
best interest to always tell my clients to turn it into you know a a furnish rental uh but I also um am a person of
morals and I’m an investor first so like I always am looking at everything as an investment and so I would say about 50%
of the time we tell people like do it as a long Ral um that’s why I gave you know 60% of the time it it does make sense to
turn into a midterm and about 40% it doesn’t so we probably tell every you know one out of two people that it
doesn’t work so we first we analyze it then we will curate your design and
choose everything that goes into the property and again we are investors before we’re interior designers I do
have a designer on my team and she’s in charge of choosing everything and what’s fun now is we’ve done enough that we
have probably both touched every item so like I know that these inexpensive spoons are actually good quality whereas
like this inexpensive nightstand like dissolves after like anyone puts a glass on it right like Ikea dressers just like
disip dissipate over time so I think that it’s important to hire someone who knows what what the cost of every item
is and then also where to spend money so we look at your competition so like in certain areas is
you need to go all out on this type of design whereas in other areas as long as
Budget-Friendly Design Tips
it looks good and clean and like a good design you could go pretty budget friendly so for example we’ve done about
eight units in Detroit Michigan for a client and his budget is very small and
his units look great and they’re fully occupied cuz he beats out his competition um so so I think that when
you’re hiring someone at that level you’re going to get all of this or you can hire your property manager might
even offer to put the furniture together but you’re going to be picking all everything and just the Cure rating of
furniture takes about 80 hours and we’re experienced and if you’ve never done
this before you might find yourself at like 11:00 p.m. like debating on what lamp to get let me tell you that is not
a good use of your time you guys like don’t do it um and then also i’ I found this that
sometimes they’re like oh like I love design so like this is going to be fun and it’s like yeah you love design when
your budget’s really big but when the budget is really small it’s not actually that all that fun to like choose every
piece of furniture um and so that was a very long way of explaining that the cost is going to really depend on the
True Cost of DIY Furnishing
level of services but we start at consultations you know as low as $1,000
we we’ll consult on your property um all the way up to on a three bed two bath it
might cost 8 8,000 for us to curate the whole design that includes us flying out
there putting everything together but doesn’t include the cost of the furniture yeah well so much good stuff
Balancing Time and Design
there there’s I think you hit on one thing which is that a lot of people love the idea of Designing their midterm
rental but then when in actuality when they’ve got their job or they have their other properties in their portfolio or
they’ve got their kids that they got take wherever they’re going to go in actuality when you’re trying to put it into practice that idea the excitement
about the idea Fades quickly and then it turns into a pain and it turns into oh crap I bought this property now I need
to put it into service and three weeks have gone by because I got busy with my life so when you’re the cost of time yes
exactly and so that’s um no that’s a great point we don’t have any midterms in our portfolio my parents run one and
it is by far the most profitable house that they have in their portfolio and um
but they learned a lot of that the hard way like they did all the Furnishing themselves and I saw don’t think that 80 hours is an exaggeration at all they put
a ton of time into Furnishing and and getting the right features in each room figuring out all the you know the locks
and how the common areas were going to work it’s a lot of thought and energy that you have to put into it and even
it’s different than a short-term rental where typically it’s one person or one family that’s using the space not a
bunch of people sharing the same house uh which has its own kind of unique challenges but thank you for I I
recently heard a Chris Saka talk on Tim Ferris is podcast he and his wife were about to do a new build he’s a angel
investor he was on Shark Tank if you don’t know who he is he’s he’s just an incredible serial entrepreneur and he
and his wife were about to do a new build and they were like two weeks into the process and they looked at each
other and they’re like what are we doing we are about to commit like two years of
Our Lives to making 1,000 decisions and I can tell you I am C currently in the
process of renovating a house and I don’t know if you know this but for those of you that haven’t done this like
the sure you pick the countertop right so you need to pick what material it’s going to be but then there’s a type of
edging like now I know seven different types of edging on quartz countertops I
don’t need to know that information like I am so bogged down by these tiny little
decisions and so I encourage all of you before you commit to doing things on
your own like really think about the cost of time because my time has been so
sucked up by every little decision that I’m making on this it’s a pretty big renovation um and I I don’t over
recommend it for everyone and keep in mind that I own my own business so I don’t have to go to work or you know
report to a boss but I do have a lot of things pulling on my time yeah and I think it’s always in any context for any
person on this planet it’s a good idea to ask yourself what is the highest and best use of my time right now based on
the goals that I have and the lifestyle I want to build if you ask that con question in any context I think it’s a
good use of time to to you know at least understand where your priorities are and if what you’re doing actually serves
those priorities or not AB a great example of that that’s why I love the midterm rental strategy for small
multifamilies so for this four unit building I was already paying water for
the whole building I was already paying lawn care and snow removal and so the
additional cost was only the the electric and gas and internet on a tiny
little one bedroom so that cost increase was so small compared to the single
family that I used it as an example earlier whereas I didn’t have any cost and I was adding a lot of cost and so I
I definitely want people to really consider what’s also the best use of that property that you’re going to buy
um because I want everyone here whether you have a really demanding W2 or no W2
or whatever your life situation is I want every investment that you make to be a good use of your time and to tie
that back to what even the first property you bought which wasn’t a midterm rental but you had a plan you treated like a business owner you had a
business plan you had thought about what the potential exit strategies might be and you had a plan financially to make
it make sense for you in your in the context of your life at that time and I think that’s where a lot of people you
can alleviate the anxiety and the fear is if you just have a plan uh as simple
as it may sound but today’s episode is brought to you by the remote real estate Academy the community I launched last
year where I personally coach investors and Empower them to buy rental properties anywhere in the United States
my business partner Nathan and I have a collective 15 years experience with over 20 cash flowing out of-state rental
properties we provide a step-by-step Playbook on how you can build your own portfolio and start accessing the
life-changing benefits of real estate investing starting today go go to remote realestate academy.com for more info or
better yet shoot me an email at Aaron aam.com with subject line r r a and I’ll
throw in a special bonus for podcast listeners who join the academy now let’s get to the show I think fear comes from
uncertainty um and so if you’re not sure like how this rental property is going to work then of course you’re going to
be fearful and so I encourage everyone listening you don’t need to pay a bunch
of money to join a mastermind unless it’s m I would love to have you um you don’t have to pay a bunch of money and
don’t get so stuck in the weeds and so like I recommend like find a mentor and
just take one step at a time um and then most importantly just don’t buy a bad investment so make sure that it has
multiple extra strategies you really thought through it and the first one doesn’t have to be a huge home run is
what a lot of people say but I kindly disagree I actually think that your first one needs to be a great deal
because otherwise that’s where we get a lot of people who say like I tried real estate investing and it wasn’t for me
and it’s usually because that first one was a d dud o I love the contrarian Viewpoint um on the first deal I do
think it’s you need it to not suck for sure and um but there is something I
always talk about this dial right of people who spend they’re they’re professional preparers they take the
course they listen to the podcast they read the books but they struggle to take action whatever action looks like
sometimes ction is just picking a market or like going to the next step in the journey But ultimately you have to start
submitting offers at some point you have to start being comfortable and those offers will eventually lead to a deal if you’ve followed the sequence correctly
but I think a lot of people they just like are comfortable in that preparation phase because it feel it’s soothing of
like oh I’m arming myself with information and I’m building the case but if you never tip the dial to the
action lever then nothing’s ever going to happen right and so there is a point at which you have to let’s apply that to
other parts of people’s lives like let’s think of any of our single friends so we’re we’re both 35 and so we have
friends that are like yeah I want to get married we’re like okay are you going on any dates well you know I thought about
it like I thought about or I’ve downloaded hinge and deleted hinge and downloaded hinge it’s like okay that’s
not going to result in a successful partnership same thing with the gym like me thinking about going to the gym and
like researching between orange Theory and power life yoga like that’s not creating any good healthy physical
habits in my life and so it’s the same thing with investing exactly so I think if you know yes we all want every deal
to be a home run but I think if you you got to be conscious of where you sit on that dial and then on the other side is
is a bias for action and sometimes people take action without preparing at all and so I think there is kind of a
sweet spot of like hey I’ve prepared enough that I’m confident that I have the skills and I have the support
network and and the things that I need and now it’s time to act um it’s always
like you said people want certainty you’re never going to have 100% certainty in anything you do real estate or otherwise so I think it’s a finding
that sweet spot where you feel comfortable enough to take action and you trust yourself that you’re going to navigate whatever comes up because
whatever your plan is there are going to be deviations from it so at some point you just have to you just have to be willing to jump in and weather the storm
Personal Finance Foundations
right yeah and I think something that I rarely talk about is what you touched on earlier is I had a really good
foundation of personal finance um and so if you’re not good at managing a
$47,000 salary you’re not going to be good at managing a $400,000 salary and so I also see a lot
of people come to me asking questions about real estate when they have a lot of Consumer Debt when they haven’t you
know they’re not even taking advantage of like a company match on their retirement plan and so like a rental
property is not going to solve all your problems it’s probably just going to create more problems if you haven’t
figured those things out I think that’s really important absolutely and so one
other lever that I I love you came and did a call on in The Mastermind that we’re both in action Academy on
Leveraging Partnerships
Partnerships and when we talk about different strategies especially for people who are busy right the the deal
triangle you either have time money or knowledge and most people that are working full-time don’t have a lot of
time for to spend on on real estate so one of the best ways to unlock that potentially is to find a partner who has
time but maybe they don’t have the same resources that the full-time employee has so you’ve talked a lot about
Partnerships you came in and did a call that really really resonated with me where you explained you know how you
appli the the disk profile which we’ll explain what that is in a second uh to try and figure out not only your
personal strengths but how you might interact with other people based on their personalities too so I know it’s a
big topic and we don’t have a ton of time but maybe this is a really fun angle of your skill set and personality that I
would love to just hear some of your thoughts on especially in the context of how busy professionals might be able to leverage Partnerships absolutely so I’m
sure a lot of your listeners um have worked with managers maybe they’re even managing people and so it’s really clear
at this point that people hear and speak differently so I might see something as
oh wow like Aaron gave me like a really detailed PowerPoint that was so helpful
or I could say Aaron gave me a really detailed PowerPoint and it was a huge waste of my time I wish he would have
just got to the point and that is all about behavior and so I love the disk
behavioral assessment because it’s not about personality it analyzes about how people behave and so dis it’s DC and the
way that it works is usually people have one to two dominant letters so for
example the C stands for like someone who’s really consistent and loves
correctness and the reason that they love correctness is they hate criticism so think of your you want your CPA and
your accountant or even your it person you want them to be a high SE because they’re going to make sure every you
know ey is dotted and te is crossed an S which is actually about 70% of our
population love steady they’re good teammates they they believe in loyalty
um and they love systems and then a high ey is all of the
real estate agents that have their face on a bench uh Your Life of the Party
friend or I think everybody has that friend that if you’re about to buy something you’re like oh I’m going to
ask jonno like he loves giving recommendations like he’s always like the person that’s about to give a
testimonial maybe he has like given the most Google reviews that tends to be that person and then a d which is only
3% of the of the population but probably the loudest these are your very direct
decisive people um think of like any movie that’s had like an angry boss
they’re probably a high and I speak as a high that were not all like that but
that’s that personality and so why I like this tool and again it’s just a tool it’s not going to solve all your
problems but I just like this tool because I can identify what someone is
and I can speak to their biggest fear as well as their greatest desire so a high
eye their greatest desire is recognition and accomplishments and their biggest uh
fear is rejection so they want to know that like this is going to make them look good if you buy this duplex and it
C and when it’s cash flowing $600 like your husband is going to be so proud of you that you like made this good
financial decision for your family that would be how I would talk whereas if they were a high see I would say listen
the you know cash on cash return for this duplex is the cap rate in the area
is this like the cost per square footage is this that that would be how I would
talk to a high SE and I have been using this tool for you know over 12 years and
I think it’s made me a really good salesperson but to your point it helped me recognize what I was looking for in
Partners so my portfolio is made up of 20 units it’s nine buildings and three
of the nine buildings I own with partners and I was very clear on the
kind of partner that I was looking for so as a highd I did not want them to
also be a high D I wanted them to be a high s maybe a little bit of C so that
we would complement each other well and our communication style would work well so if you’re listening to this and you
are that busy professional who doesn’t have a lot of time and maybe is really scared or fearful about your
first deal maybe it’s a good idea to partner with someone who has experience
you may end up bringing more money to the table and they are what I call the muscle or the on the ground you know
work um that might be a really good partnership for you and that’s what worked for me is I found someone who had
a good salary they needed to spend less time on the deal
than I was willing to do and so they brought the down payment I found the deal manag the renovation manage the
tenants really manage everything the bookkeeping the taxes everything um and they just get a nice you know owner
distribution every quarter or you know at least an update every quarter um and we split profits um uh meaning the cash
flow and then eventually we will split the equity in the property that’s amazing yeah I love using those
methodologies and those systems to try and understand not only yourself but how to communicate with other people who
value different things and communication style and the way that people like you said that the PowerPoint is a great
example some people might love just getting all that information because again information is soothing to them it
it answers questions and it reduces uncertainty and it’s polish and it’s cool looking the other person might be
like dude what’s the point what are you trying to tell me just tell like just either put it in a sentence or whatever
right text it to me like I don’t need the fancy presentation so knowing your audience when you’re talking I think
also to investors right if you’re trying to raise money trying to understand like who’s the type of person I’m talking to
do they want me to drown them in metrics or do they want to buy into the vision like what do they what is it that they
care about not only qualitatively but then you know what is the return or what
is the outcome that they’re looking for as a result of this so just training yourself to think along those lines is
valuable in and of itself and then Partnerships can provide you know they can fill gaps where you might have them
and they can also potentially even though you might think to yourself like we were saying earlier oh I’d love to design that house or I’d love to be
on the ground and handson maybe you don’t actually love that and you just want to vicariously do that through
someone else who actually does um so you can find all that stuff out if you’re willing to kind of explore this route
the one thing I want to ask you about Partnerships though is um so there it can answer a lot of uh it can solve a
lot of problems answer a lot of questions it can also create new problems yes because you know when
people I always think when people start a partnership it’s easy easier to gain
alignment at the beginning when you’re excited about something but as life goes on and as time passes and as each
person’s circumstances changes yes whether it’s life events or jobs or career changes what whatever it is
maintaining that alignment is very difficult so what are like some of the protections that you would suggest
putting in place or or whether it’s in your own mind or legal or otherwise to
kind of um manage that that Journey if you enter into a partnership yeah absolutely so the legal
side again this is not legal advice I’m not an attorney um but from my own experience we have a very detailed
operating agreement and we talked about things um one of my partners was engaged at the time so I wanted to be very clear
that I didn’t want to be in partnership with her husband not I mean nothing against him but I know that if there’s
too many cooks in the kitchen that can cause a problem so we wrote out like what is that going to look like um and
then also what in the case of death what happens um if a partner wants to get out
um so one of my partners is wanting to pull more like have more owner distributions than I would want I like
I’m pretty conservative when it comes to money and I would like for there to be a pretty good amount of reserves in that
property’s savings account um and so we we have conversations around what do we do in these
situations um and a lot of those conversations happened before I even identifi a property and so I’m having
conversations with potential Partners on what it would look like to partner with me and it probably looks very different
to partner with me I am looking for a silent partner so you don’t get an opinion on what tenants move in you
don’t get an opinion on how I’m going to furnish it if it’s a furnish rental and for my partners they are like Hallelujah
I am super busy I have no desire to like do anything related to tenants like I
just want to own rentals for tax purposes for the cash flow for the
appreciation and one of them was kind of toying around with can I do this on my own so they wanted to like see you
behind the curtain um and so I was very very clear that I wanted a silent partner whereas I have a a very good
friend and he has a a a partner that they buy rentals together they’re both very involved and they like that they
like chitchatting about what’s going to happen bounce ideas off of each other and I’m like that is not what I was
looking for and so so you need to ask yourself before you enter a partnership what are you really looking for and it’s
okay if the answerers I don’t know um at the beginning at my very first partnership I I had a I had an idea
again because I look at everything as a business but I definitely learned a lot from that very first partnership that
then dictated how I was going to approach Partnerships in the future that’s amazing so very important
Finding the Right
follow-up question where can my listeners find their own Sarah
um gosh so many places you probably work with them so um if you’re willing to be
the on the ground I call it the hustle in the muscle uh your money partner is probably a few cubicles over or maybe in
your past job think of like one of your favorite people that you worked with there are so many hidden millionaires
out there uh who have a ton of money sitting around if that’s the partner if
you are the one with the money um then I recommend putting yourself in the room with people who would act as the hustle
and the muscle so these are Retreats uh my company invested Adventures host
Retreats for Real Estate Investors and you’re going to spend four to 10 days um
either doing a like on the ground Workshop like uh like one of my Nashville Retreats or we’re going to you
know hike uh kilamanjaro this summer and go on an African safari and you really
get to know somebody when you know do something like that together we’re also exploring Japan during the cherry
blossom season eating at Michelin star restaurants all alongside other Real Estate Investors that’s a great way to
find your next partner because you see how they handle stressful situations how they communicate do you even like them
and what’s their kind of investing um strategy and does it align with what you’re doing it’s such a good point if
you meet somebody for a 30- minute Zoom call and it’s specifically about hey would we be good partners together and
you’re learning your style you can accomplish push a lot that way but when you start breaking bread with people and
you know staying for multiple days in a row you see them in the morning you see them in the evening you see like what
kind of person are they truly and um there’s something different that you can learn when you’re kind of integrated
into a more of a realistic life situation then versus like a a more
structured like networking environment and that’s that’s and that’s just an equity partnership so let me be clear
that there’s also more short-term relationships that you can so one thing I highly recommend people
do before they join an equity Partners is act as a private money lender so um
an example is I’m actually a private money lender on a deal right now so I’m lending out a set dollar amount for a
set amount of time with a set return and so I’m going to be able to figure out
how good of an investor is this person do they communicate do they give me my money back on time um how do they
operate and then after you lend as a private money l then I would you know get into
conversations about Equity partnership cuz Equity Partnerships are likely going to last 3 to 10 years and so this is not
a short-term relationship so you do want to make sure that you enjoy at least a quarterly Zoom call with this person
yeah very important distinction there well I know we’re almost out of time but I would love for you to give an opportunity to talk about your kind of
program that you’ve booted up what does that look like and who is your kind of typical person that you serve yeah so
the mentorship program is a year-long program for busy professionals so I cut
out a lot of the noise um Let me give a good example so Paul joined the program he is a busy professional in Northern
California he owns zero rentals and he had the money to invest and he with in
my program I gave him the conventional lender so mortgage lender I introduced
him to the agent the agent went and found him the deal I happen to also invest in this town so I gave him my
cleaner my handyman my lawn guy and so Paul would tell you that like he
wouldn’t have the portfolio that he has right now had he not joined the mentorship program and I really believe
that real estate investing is fantastic because we’re not Reinventing the wheel and so it is a proven strategy that does
work I think it’s very important that you don’t try to do something um brand
new for the first time without some guidance so that’s why the mentorship program is there and so if anyone’s
interested in joining I’d love to have a chat with you just send me an email or slide into my Instagram DMS um I love
helping people like you who know that they want to invest in real estate and
they’re scared to do it the wrong way and so I think uh the cost of the mentorship program is a really good
investment um I almost guarantee that you’re going to either make that money back through your first deal or you’re
definitely going to avoid a mistake that would cost you that much money yeah
that’s a really good way to think about making an investment in education mentorship Etc is it’s not so much oh
I’m going to make it back from the cash flow which you can over time but it’s also like what avoidable mistake can I
not make because I got good information from someone who’s already done what I’m trying to do so that that’s one one
really good way to think about the value of it so well Sarah it’s been so much fun I could probably talk for another I
have so many other topics I was thinking we would get to but time just flew on by I appreciate you coming on the show and
I hope we can do it again sometime soon thanks Aaron I really appreciate it thank you for making it to the end of
today’s episode as you may know podcasts are very difficult to grow organically if you’re getting value from today’s
episode I’d deeply appreciate if you can take 30 seconds to leave my show a five star rating and review this will go a
long way to helping me reach more listeners just like you thank you so much in advance