




Buy Buy It, Rent It, Profit!: Make Money As a Landlord in Any Real Estate Market Original by Chavis, Bryan M., Noel-Chavis, Laney (ISBN: 9781416589846) from desertcart's Book Store. Everyday low prices and free delivery on eligible orders. Review: great read Review: Knowledge-gathering on real-estate investing is quickly becoming a passion of mine. Buy it, Rent It and Profit is one of the best of the books I've read so far. I also enjoyed and recommend The Wall Street Journal. Complete Real-Estate Investing Guidebook . This book is more of a get-started how-to and equally pragmatic where the WSJ guide was more of a 50,000 ft. view of real estate investing but has lots of great outside references. The author, Bryan Chavis, explains why investing in apartments or du/tri/quad- plexes is a smarter investment than single family homes by explaining the concept of economies of scale concisely. I appreciate his tone in this book. It is written for beginners like myself without having a condescending or overly-simplified tone. Like lots of real estate books, Chavis advises looking for value-added properties to buy (read: distressed property) so you can immediately build equity in your purchase. He discusses the importance of an exit strategy and following a checklist before you invest so you know what parameters you are looking for and allows you to invest without getting emotionally attached to a deal. Chavis provides lots of useful, specific information on how to evaluate a neighborhood using his SEOTA(tm) analysis which is the "Strategic Evaluation of a Target Area." The specific steps he takes are sensible and you get a feel for how much experience he has just from his in-depth analysis of how to evaluate a property. He details evaluating building permits, employment, household size, demographics, psychographics, mortgage rates, rental rates, and occupancy rates. I didn't get the feeling he held anything back for a future book or to entice you to visit his site or join his association. It doesn't read like a pitch for something else and that in itself helps this book lead the field. He lays out a clearly defined program to evaluating and managing multi-family housing and gives the reader many helpful resources for finding the information he suggests that you evaluate. This is an extremely practical guide on buy and hold real estate investing. It is not a get-rich quick book and that is precisely what I love about it. What makes it a "stand-out" in the market are the no-nonsense detailed explanations of each concept. He helps beginners understand his concepts easily without glossing over concepts or the reader getting the feeling he is "dumbing it down" for beginners. I loved the concise definitions of common real estate terms. Another reviewer brought up disappointment in the follow up of his "Da Vinci Code of Rental Investing" concept and I agree, this is the only concept he presented that I didn't feel was properly supported. After re-reading this section of the book, I think he is just highlighting the three key evaluations of real estate and trying to put it in a memorable format but it leaves the reader slightly confused. Chavis gives sample leases, talks about FICO scores, loan approval, evictions, maintenance, building your real estate empire, business plans for lenders, and includes an appendix of forms you can copy and use. In short, of all I've read on the topic so far, if I had to choose only ONE real estate book to represent the best all around book for a beginner looking for useful, specific, applicable information, it would be Buy It, Rent It, Profit!
| Customer reviews | 4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars (216) |
| Dimensions | 18.73 x 2.29 x 23.18 cm |
| Edition | Original |
| ISBN-10 | 1416589848 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-1416589846 |
| Item weight | 517 g |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 290 pages |
| Publication date | 14 April 2009 |
| Publisher | Touchstone Books |
Y**F
great read
J**.
Knowledge-gathering on real-estate investing is quickly becoming a passion of mine. Buy it, Rent It and Profit is one of the best of the books I've read so far. I also enjoyed and recommend The Wall Street Journal. Complete Real-Estate Investing Guidebook . This book is more of a get-started how-to and equally pragmatic where the WSJ guide was more of a 50,000 ft. view of real estate investing but has lots of great outside references. The author, Bryan Chavis, explains why investing in apartments or du/tri/quad- plexes is a smarter investment than single family homes by explaining the concept of economies of scale concisely. I appreciate his tone in this book. It is written for beginners like myself without having a condescending or overly-simplified tone. Like lots of real estate books, Chavis advises looking for value-added properties to buy (read: distressed property) so you can immediately build equity in your purchase. He discusses the importance of an exit strategy and following a checklist before you invest so you know what parameters you are looking for and allows you to invest without getting emotionally attached to a deal. Chavis provides lots of useful, specific information on how to evaluate a neighborhood using his SEOTA(tm) analysis which is the "Strategic Evaluation of a Target Area." The specific steps he takes are sensible and you get a feel for how much experience he has just from his in-depth analysis of how to evaluate a property. He details evaluating building permits, employment, household size, demographics, psychographics, mortgage rates, rental rates, and occupancy rates. I didn't get the feeling he held anything back for a future book or to entice you to visit his site or join his association. It doesn't read like a pitch for something else and that in itself helps this book lead the field. He lays out a clearly defined program to evaluating and managing multi-family housing and gives the reader many helpful resources for finding the information he suggests that you evaluate. This is an extremely practical guide on buy and hold real estate investing. It is not a get-rich quick book and that is precisely what I love about it. What makes it a "stand-out" in the market are the no-nonsense detailed explanations of each concept. He helps beginners understand his concepts easily without glossing over concepts or the reader getting the feeling he is "dumbing it down" for beginners. I loved the concise definitions of common real estate terms. Another reviewer brought up disappointment in the follow up of his "Da Vinci Code of Rental Investing" concept and I agree, this is the only concept he presented that I didn't feel was properly supported. After re-reading this section of the book, I think he is just highlighting the three key evaluations of real estate and trying to put it in a memorable format but it leaves the reader slightly confused. Chavis gives sample leases, talks about FICO scores, loan approval, evictions, maintenance, building your real estate empire, business plans for lenders, and includes an appendix of forms you can copy and use. In short, of all I've read on the topic so far, if I had to choose only ONE real estate book to represent the best all around book for a beginner looking for useful, specific, applicable information, it would be Buy It, Rent It, Profit!
U**H
Good book with a lot of details, very well-explained and forms that you will need to launch in the real-estate rental business. I believe its the best real estate rental book I have read so far.
A**O
..SOLO CHE IN UN PAESE COME QUESTO DOVE LA PROPRIETA NON E' PIU' TUTELATA, SE NON CAMBIANO LEGGI IN MERITO AD UN AFFITTO GARANTITO DA BANCA O GOVERNO CREDO CHE IL PROGETTO SIA UN PO AZZARDATO
G**Y
Great book but needs more focus on tenant screening and cash flows.
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