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A Good Mentor Can Hold The Keys
To Your Real Estate Investing Success
By Peter Vekselman
The author has permitted the reprinting and redistribution of this
article.
Whether you’re just getting started down the road towards
fulfilling your real estate investing dreams or you’re a
little more experienced, a good mentor can get you closer to the
realization of your goals by showing you some of the tips, tricks, and
other shortcuts that have fueled their success.
The problem many fledgling real estate investors face – and
some with a little more experience – is self doubt about
their ability to put together profitable deals, as well as having
numerous questions about when certain techniques would be most
appropriate.
These doubts and questions can easily be alleviated by knowledge, but a
lot of real estate investors have trouble applying principles they may
have read about, heard about, or seen in a short webinar. This is one
of the primary areas a good, experienced mentor can help increase their
base of knowledge and give them the motivation and the direction they
need to reach their goals and fulfill their investing dreams.
First of all, mentors aren’t all created the same. In order
to be effective you have to have practical, relevant experience in the
same kind of real estate investing as those you plan on teaching. A
mentor can be one of the nation’s foremost authorities on
creative commercial real estate investing techniques, but much of that
knowledge and experience is pointless if you’re primarily
interested in foreclosures, short sales, or rehabbing abandoned
properties.
A good mentor will be concerned about your development as a real estate
investor and will take the steps necessary to ensure that you are
well-versed in multiple investing strategies. He or she will share with
you accumulated knowledge and advice about how to better market
yourself, and provide you with essential real estate investing tips and
strategies that you can implement in your own career. By understanding
a variety of ways of structuring investment deals, you will not only
increase your knowledge, but you'll become comfortable crafting deals
of your own.
In many cases, a mentor will work shoulder to shoulder with you in the
field and explain to you why certain strategies may or may not be
appropriate in a given situation. In addition, certain strategies can
be altered or modified in a way that a less experienced real estate
investor might not be aware of, or may not have even considered. When
you've been around the block several dozen times, you learn things that
a simple textbook just can't teach.
There's a special bond that develops between a mentor and their
students. I've developed friendships with a number of my students, and
am still in touch with a great many others on a regular basis. I get
excited whenever I hear that one of my students has put together a
profitable deal that might not have been possible had it not been for
the time spent with me listening, learning, and asking questions.
If you want to really ramp up your real estate investing career, you
owe it to yourself and your future to thoroughly investigate the idea
of working with an experienced mentor to shine a light on the
opportunity you have to build a strong investment portfolio and a
bright future for you and your family.
Peter Vekselman has been successfully investing in real estate since
1996. He has completed over 1000 real estate deals, owned a
construction company, been a private lender, and owned a property
management company. To learn more about Peter please visit
httpwww.CoachingByPeter.com
If
you would like to take advantage of the market and learn how to invest
in real estate and you are local to the Dallas Fort Worth area, I know
a really great teacher and mentor here in Arlington Texas. Please take
a look at his web site: DennisJHenson.com,
Dennis has a great Mentoring and training program, I know because I am
one of his former students. I learned a lot from his one on one
teaching technique. - Michael Harman 817-457-7572
mchfun.business@gmail.com
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