Let's begin easing you out of the pits.  I mean, comfort zone!  I'm 
going to slowly and methodically give you as many little sparks and 
insights to the relatively simple ways that ordinary people use real 
estate to achieve extraordinary results.
Stories are the best 
spark plugs.  They let you casually observe from a safe, secure and 
understandable view point.  I will write to answer most of the questions
 that I feel I myself would ask if I was reading what you are about to 
read.
I want you to know something from the very start of this 
report and that something is this:  I care about you and I sincerely 
mean that.  I really do want you to move to a new comfort zone, one that
 is pleasurable and free from fear.  A place where you realize you have 
the power to achieve greater things than you currently can imagine.
It's
 possible for you to start being a more powerfully directed 
purpose-driven individual who is well organized and on track to higher 
achievement.  You will change and grow, slowly and steadily with every 
page you read.  With every thought and insight you gain, your desire and
 courage will grow as well.
Napoleon Hill wrote one of the 
greatest books of all time.  It's called "Think and Grow Rich."  The 
essence of that book, the secret it reveals time and again is this:  you
 must develop a burning desire.
Don't put this book down thinking 
the previous statement is cliché and that you already knew that!  I am 
simply leading you to my next point, the next point being is - your 
desire needs a starting point.  So to start developing desire, my secret
 is you must have a purpose.  Why do you want to pursue real estate?  I 
know what you're thinking: to make money, to have security, to feel 
useful and appear successful.  Good points.  I agree you can have all of
 that and more if that is what you desire.
Now here is something 
that comes before any of those things you desire.  What is the purpose 
of all those things?  Purpose, purpose, purpose...you need to first 
define purpose before you get the things.  My purpose, or so I thought 
early in my career, was to move up to a nicer house and have my first 
house become my first rental property.  When I moved up to the next one,
 I quickly learned as soon as I rented it out, I was in some way 
responsible for creating happiness and security in the life of another 
person that was of no relation to me.
It soon was evident to me 
how the choices I made in choosing that first property either would help
 me or hurt me in my quest to succeed in the real estate investment 
business.
All of it is cumulative, everything you do and how you 
do it adds up.  It compounds itself and it either makes your life easier
 or more difficult.  I am going to give you experiences that you can 
learn from that will make your life easier; I am going to show you how. 
 That is my purpose.
The book that gave me the unknowing courage 
to take my first steps in real estate was a book called "How I Turned 
$1000 into $3 Million in real estate in my spare time" by William 
Nickerson.  He was a master storyteller and by osmosis, after reading 
his book, I found myself gravitating towards the real estate classified 
section of my Sunday paper.
Eventually I leapt and my life had 
changed.  It was an FHA foreclosure, a two-bedroom, one-bath home with a
 built-in, screened-in pool, with a Jacuzzi and a built-in sprinkler 
system.  I bought it for $46,000 and used the HUD 203K rehab program to 
fix it up.  I spent $16,000 to update and make repairs.  They then gave 
me one loan for a total of $62,000.  It took me three months to complete
 it and I was in; I had done it!
My life changed, I learned, I 
took the leap.  From then on I had confidence.  I had already had my 
first home but now I had two.  Well, I was in the Coast Guard and 
wouldn't you know, three months later we moved.  Uncle Sam took me out 
of St. Petersburg, Florida and dropped me in Kodiak, Alaska, for my next
 tour of duty.
Well guess what?  I was armed with ambition, 
courage, confidence and just enough knowledge to be considered 
dangerous, so I bought a duplex as soon as I came ashore on Kodiak 
Island.  Now I had three dwellings and my relationships and 
responsibilities were growing with my new tenants counting on me to 
provide a clean, functional and pleasing environment for them to exist 
in.
It looked like this:  My mother rented my first house and an 
elderly couple rented the second one and my duplex came with an existing
 tenant who was a hospital administrator, so I was lucky.  I was able to
 ease myself into the role of landlord without getting burned early in 
my career.  I now had two houses and a duplex in the span of about one 
year.  My brothers and some other family members took notice and were 
pretty well dumbfounded.
They couldn't figure out how I had, all of a sudden, become a real estate wizard.
It felt good to make that change in so short a time.
I
 got that from reading a book!  And that my friend is how you are going 
to do the majority of everything you do in real estate, by reading and 
taking steps towards duplicating the success of others in a repeatable 
pattern.  The key is to understand that you can do it if you read the 
right books and apply the very basic formulas that are handed to you.
There lies in: Magic Bullets in Real Estate
There lies in: Magic Bullets in Real Estate
This is a common 
man or woman's real estate manual.  William Nickerson never gave me 
anything so easy as "Magic Bullets!"  So I learned trial by fire and it 
has been very gratifying.  I've since went on to collect 17 properties, 
23 tenants, 2 real estate licenses in Florida and Alaska, an assistant 
appraiser's certificate and over a hundred books on real estate.  I just
 kept learning and growing and gaining momentum for the last 13 years.  I
 am still in the Coast Guard, too, and I work at Alaska One Realty in my
 spare time.  In two more years, I will be retired at the ripe old age 
of 42.  Sounds like a sort of fairytale, doesn't it?  Don't let me fool 
you.  It's hard work and I'm still not a millionaire, but I want you to 
have the truth, so I will be honest with you every step of the way.
I
 know why I am not a millionaire and here is why.  I would periodically 
sell property that was going up in value and paying for itself through 
the rent checks.  But being in the Coast Guard would dislocate me every 
four years, so I found myself selling out in order to avoid being what 
is called "an absentee landlord."
This is an important lesson for 
you.  It has prevented me from becoming a millionaire up to this point. 
 The lesson is: find an area on this planet that you could and will live
 in, and stay close to it.  Don't move more than 10 miles from your farm
 area.  The farm area is where all your properties are located.  Long 
distance "land lording" is tough!  It can be done but you lose the 
ability to control the situation compared to if you were there.  I've 
served my country and saved people's lives, so for me it has not been in
 vain.  I have no regrets but if you don't have to leave your area of 
expertise, don't!
The networks you build and the contacts you 
build, in the process of "doing" real estate, are so valuable that when 
they are no longer at your disposal, it puts you at a serious 
disadvantage.
Not to mention when you move you have to acclimate 
yourself to an entirely different market, build new trust-based 
relationships and start all over again.  It's like a treadmill you'll be
 running and running, however it gets you nowhere.
I've used it to
 my advantage.  I have been forced to accelerate my abilities to rapidly
 duplicate my success whenever I am moved, but it is still an uphill 
battle.  My point:  Don't move too far from your farm or your network of
 bankers, appraisers, carpenters, tradesman, real estate, friends, 
tenants and so on.  Once you have the skill you can duplicate your 
success anywhere you go but if you don't have to go...enough said on 
that!
I like to say, "Don't sell the goose to get the eggs."  What
 that means is if you need money to buy more property, use equity lines 
from other property to do it.  You will get the same amount of money or 
more by using an equity line as if you sold it.  However, you get to 
keep the asset and the money!  I go into this in "Magic Bullets," so I 
won't drone on here.  Just know you don't have to sell your property to 
get the cash out of them.
So here we are.  You know a little bit about me and you may have picked up a nugget or two.  Let's find a few more.
There
 once was a man who wanted to buy some investment property, so what he 
did was look at growth patterns.  You should do this too, by going to 
your city's planning and zoning department.  You can see growth patterns
 and you definitely want to buy property that stands in the way of 
growth.
This is how he used what he learned.  He saw that city 
planners had decided that a new artery (highway) would benefit their 
city by creating linkage to another city about 100 miles away, so being a
 smart investor he only went as far as a ten mile limit to be able to be
 close to his investment.
Now on average, new growth will radiate 
out from existing prosperous cities in the direction it is planned at a 
rate of about one mile per year.  So our smart investor had a 10 - 12 
year plan to cash out in about 10 - 12 years.
What he did was buy,
 I believe, 10 acres of commercially zoned property very cheaply because
 there was no demand at the time.  He bought it, fenced it in, put up 
some lights and a gate, and held onto that little bugger.  Now that new 
highway was coming his way and the good folks, through their taxes, were
 paying to have it built.
It didn't take long for the heavy 
equipment to start cutting a swath towards his fenced-in storage 
facility and when they got close enough to him, he started renting out a
 secure area for everything, from road cones to generators to backhoes. 
 You name it - it was stored there.  This more than paid his land off.
Now
 the men and their equipment eventually moved on further down the trail 
but they left a finished highway behind them.  And guess what?  Low and 
behold, people started driving on it, and then started buying property 
to build houses on to get away from the city.  Since the new highway was
 a straight shot into town, ten miles out was breeze.
Well, of 
course, here comes the herd and everyone is just populating the whole 
darned area.  And within ten years, residential housing surrounds Mr. 
Investor, and can you guess what he's got?  Yep, a prime piece of 
commercial property, 10 acres large.
So in accordance with his 
10-12 year plan, he sells his storage facility to make room for the new 
office/business park complex for over $2,000,000.  That, my friend, is 
vision, and the sooner you get a clear picture of what it is that you 
want to specialize in, the sooner you can retire to the islands.
How
 hard was that?  Don't tell me you can't do it, you can!  I'm here to 
help you.  I'm going to give you secrets no one else dares.  Do you ever
 wonder why people won't tell you the secrets?  Of course you already 
know this but I'll tell you anyway.  It is because they are operating on
 a scarcity mentality, as though there won't be any left for them.  Or 
if learn something and act on it, you will get ahead and have a great 
life.  Well, misery loves company and silent oppression is the rule.
Here's
 a little story that poor quality real estate agents won't appreciate 
either but I'm going to tell it to you anyway.  The reason I can tell it
 is because there are some great real estate agents out there who 
absolutely don't fear what I am about to tell you and would let you know
 it if they were in my position.
Here's the deal:  Some agents 
want to be like the Wizard of Oz.  They want to create the appearance of
 marketing and transacting real estate as being technical and very 
legal, a deep dark mystery.  Well, it's not!  The truth be told, you can
 write a contract on a napkin and it would stand up in court.  I will 
emphasize here that you write on that napkin along with the terms of 
your agreement, "The terms set forth on this here napkin are subject to 
my attorney's approval."
An attorney will cover you completely for
 around $750.00. Prices may vary, however that is an average home 
transaction.  There is a lot I am leaving out here but my point is this:
  If you own property, you can sell it anyway you want.  "Magic Bullets"
 will teach you.  Let's move on.
Exposure is the key to finding 
buyers and sellers in real estate.  If a property is priced fairly and 
everyone who is looking for that type of property knows that it is in 
the availability pool, it will be found and the transaction will proceed
 as advertised.  Price it right, advertise it properly and let the 
lawyer take care of the details. No commission, just a flat fee.  
Period.
Now that I have that off my chest, I will tell you a story
 about Dan, a 21-year old friend of mine, and his wife and their new 
baby.  He's a hardworking guy who does his work without complaint and 
all the other "workers" pick on him for working so hard.  Can you 
believe it?  The other guys are so insecure and lazy that they make fun 
of a guy who is doing the work of three men, mainly of the three who are
 ridiculing him.  Well, believe me, this doesn't go unnoticed by me and I
 take him under my wing.  Dan wants to buy a house, so I begin the 
process of saving him years of trial by fire and save him $25,000 at no 
charge.  That is because he deserved my help.
Anyway, here is the 
story:  I began with him by asking him what type of home he thought he 
would be comfortable with and a price range.  He indicated a 3-bedroom 
for around $100,000.
Knowing what he wanted and knowing the area, I
 was able to take him shopping for the house he was looking for.  Now I 
always go after the "For Sale by Owner" homes first because I know they 
won't be adding any commission figure into their price, because they 
won't be paying one.  So at 6% of $100,000 he will get $6,000 more 
"house" for his precious dollar.
I also told him besides the "For 
Sale by Owner" homes, we would be looking at oddball discount companies 
that help distressed sellers further part with their money and property.
  The mentality of a seller who uses cheesy companies to help them sell 
their property is pennywise and pound-foolish.  If you're going to use 
professionals, then get a professional.
So off we go.  After a day
 or so, we have found our house.  Sure enough, El Cheeso Inc. has a sign
 on it.  The screen doors are flapping in the breeze, the weeds are 
dancing on the lawn, but this house is indeed a 3-bedroom, 2-bath, 1-car
 garage with a fenced yard and it's selling for $110,000.  Well, due to 
the fact that there is a divorce in progress, and a new girlfriend who 
doesn't like the place, and El Cheeso Inc. giving no representation, I 
negotiate for Dan and he gets it for $99,000.  What's so great about 
this deal is this exact same floor plan in another house was for sale 
down the street, on the same street, for $25,000 more.
The moral 
of the story is good things come to those who deserve it, and that is 
another key to real estate.  You must work hard so others will take 
notice of you and help you succeed.
Here's a beauty for you.  This
 is about being in real estate circles and keeping your eyes and ears 
open and often times your "yapper" closed.  This is the story of Brian 
and Julie.  Here we have two hardworking souls.  They have been married 
for 20 years and they have weathered the storms of matrimony.  Julie 
works at a real estate office as an office manager.  No real estate 
license, but she works at an office that sells a lot of waterfront 
property.  So we are talking about location and being in the right place
 at the right time, and here comes a seller in the door of the office 
stating she is going to sell her older waterfront home.  She is willing 
to take $180,000.
Julie tells Brian, they look at it and sure 
enough, this pearl is right on the water.  She's a gem waiting to be 
polished up, so Brian and Julie sell their condominium and move in.  
Well, they aren't making any more waterfront property, so Brian goes to 
work polishing this jewel up.
Now, they have bought this house 
under market value in an appreciating market.  So about one and a half 
years later, this property is worth over $350,000 and still climbing.  
Well, Brian is no dummy, so he gets to know his neighborhood.  He 
strolls, takes walks and notices, you guessed it, a vacant, neglected 
jewel on an inside double lot.  He tracks down the elderly lady, who is 
living with her sister, through the county records office and buys the 
house, including the extra lot, for a total of $120,000.  Now Brian can 
walk to his new "jewel" and he starts polishing it.  The neighbors start
 noticing and are amazed at his deal.  He has offers of $180,000, 
$200,000 and $60,000 for just the lot.  You name it.  Now that the 
exposure is there, everyone wants a piece of it.
Well, this is 
what Brian did.  He rented his first house out, moved into the second 
one and used plans that I gave to him to build a third house on the 
vacant lot, using the equity he accumulated from the first house that 
went up so much.  And here's how this thing shakes out:  $180,000 for 
his first house and it's value goes up to $365,000; he picked up the 
next jewel for $120,000 and he paid cash using the equity from the first
 house.  Now he takes out a new mortgage on his second house for 
$120,000 and builds a third.  The value at last count was $815,000 and 
he owed a grand total $300,000.  That's a half million-dollar profit in 5
 years!
Now what does this story tell us?  #1 - it says, "work 
hard";  #2 - keep your eyes open; #3 - use equity lines; #4 - don't 
sell; #5 - learn how to be a landlord; #6 - be in locations that 
appreciate; #7 - buy things that are limited in availability; #8 - know 
how to research owners and repair property; #9 - get your partner's help
 (spouse); #10 - use knowledgeable friends to help you see potential (I 
gave him the plans and advised him not to sell anything!).
Can you
 get any more lessons out of this story?  I'm sure you can.  Just read 
it again and think on it.  Jot down your ideas and put them to work.  
Real estate is not that hard, folks!  You can do it.  With a few magic 
bullets, some spark plugs and a good mentor to show you how, you can do 
it too!
Let's you and me talk for just a minute here, OK!  Have 
you ever been really good at something and been able to step back and 
see the whole thing for what it is was?  You just know exactly how to do
 it and you can see the end result clearly in your mind before you 
start.  It's predictable to you.  It's almost second nature, so you are 
comfortable doing it.  It's almost become boring to you; your comfort 
zone is such that you can do it in your sleep.
I've gotten that 
way with certain types of real estate and I see people everyday that are
 so afraid of taking the first step that they are literally paralyzed.  
They make excuses and put it off, and rationalize and live a quiet life 
of desperation.  They don't trust themselves and as a result of the 
unknown they can't trust anyone else either.  This is a vicious cycle 
because the longer they wait the more it reinforces their beliefs.
I
 just want to grab them by the collar, take them to the bank and make 
them tell the banker, "Pre-qualify me!"  Then walk them out the door and
 show them how to do something that will change their life forever, and 
that is to buy the first property, and then a second.  Then their fear 
is gone and they grow to be of service to everyone who is ready for 
their assistance.
Let me tell you this:  After you finish reading 
the rest of this report and you read the "Magic Bullets" book, your 
fears will be subdued and you will do something and your life will 
change.  If you cannot succeed with what I am intent on showing you, 
then something is not right.  I believe your desire would be your major 
obstacle, so if that's the case, read "Think and Grow Rich" by Napoleon 
Hill and come back to me then.
Let's get back to real estate 
education, shall we?  Do you know who the largest commercial real estate
 owner in the U.S. is?  It's McDonalds Corporation.  Yep, and on top of 
that, they also have the most valuable locations for their type of 
business.  The research they do on demographics and traffic counts is 
unparalleled!
If you were ever going to open a fast food 
restaurant, just put it near a McDonalds.  You would survive just on the
 volume of people who flock or pass by the location that McDonalds has 
already decided meets all the critical data to support their restaurant 
business.  Your restaurant, if you had good food and service, would 
flourish.  Just sell something a little different than McDonalds.  
That's leveraging someone else's expertise in evaluating a location for a
 certain type of real estate.
Now that is a principle and 
principles are like natural laws.  A natural law always works in every 
situation in its own way.  It's like gravity - it always works!  Here on
 earth, anyway.
So in real estate it doesn't matter what type it 
is, whether it's commercial, residential, industrial or recreational.  
Look for signs that serious market studies have been undertaken by major
 operators and buy things that can flourish in the presence of those 
concerns.
For instance, let's use Home Depot as an example.  If 
Home Depot decides to build on a site, every residential lot within a 
mile of that new center will be bought up as soon as the Home Depot 
commits to build!  Why?
Because smart investors know that Home Depot has done the market study and   the area will be a prosperous one.
On
 top of that, it will provide jobs, it will pay taxes, it will provide 
materials to actually build the neighborhoods with, and people will shop
 there once their houses are built.  The same goes for Wal-Mart, Lowe's 
and other smart business concerns.
You may or may not have noticed
 this but take a look the next time you are driving around.  Here is 
what you should see.  As you drive into cities from the suburbs, you'll 
notice donut shops, gas stations with convenience coffee centers, bagel 
shops, and etcetera, on the side of the road that people travel to on 
their way into the city to go to work.  These are morning activity 
business centers.
Now on your way home, out of the city, you will see restaurants that cater to the evening meal crowd: KFC, Taco Bell, Subway and Pizza Hut. That's because people don't go there for breakfast. They get it on their way home, outbound from the city at night. If you put your restaurant on the wrong side of the road, you could be making a huge strategical error. Think!
Now on your way home, out of the city, you will see restaurants that cater to the evening meal crowd: KFC, Taco Bell, Subway and Pizza Hut. That's because people don't go there for breakfast. They get it on their way home, outbound from the city at night. If you put your restaurant on the wrong side of the road, you could be making a huge strategical error. Think!
Location, location, location as they 
say, are the 3 most important things in real estate.  That is a very 
true statement.   With residential property, that boils down to safety, 
security and convenience.  So buy homes in good neighborhoods, 
cul-de-sacs preferably.  No noise or through traffic, no escape routes 
for thieves, and a private setting, where kids play in the street 
without getting run down.
Security = close to hospitals, police and fire protection for obvious reasons.
Convenience
 = stores, gas stations, restaurants, small businesses, parks and 
recreation and access to major highways to circulate or evacuate if 
necessary.
You might get a great deal on a piece of properly but 
if it takes you a half hour to get a loaf of bread.  What kind of resale
 will that great deal offer?  Another great deal may back up to or face a
 busy street.  That's often a poor choice as well...noise, pollution, 
the loss of privacy and curb appeal are all factors here.
The two best types of property to buy are:
1.	Property that no one else knows is for sale!  Why?  Because you have no 
competition.
competition.
2.	Property no one wants!  You just have to figure out why people don't want it.
If you can turn that lemon into lemonade through some problem solving, that
jewel may just shine because you used the right magic polish.
In real estate, you get paid when you solve problems.  That is a fact!
Here
 is a golden nugget for you.  If you do this, it will catapult your real
 estate investment career.  I guarantee you will gain more insight to 
real estate by doing this one thing than just about anything else you 
could possibly do.  The golden nugget is this:  Take a real estate 
appraisal course.  It will fly by, a few weekends and it's over, but the
 perspective and the information you gain from the class is priceless.  
It gives you vision, ideas and understanding.  You will have an edge 
over every other investor who has not done it.
I had an 
instructor, who by some stroke of luck, I was privileged to be taught 
by.  His name is Steven V. and he is truly a genius.  This guy could 
make millions if he applied himself to real estate investment but he 
chooses to teach and give back to others in that way.  He is very 
comfortable in life and money is a by-product for Steven.  When I 
finished the class, I had appraisers wanting to hire me to go to work.  
Now I don't want to work as an appraiser.  I just want to think like one
 and that is why I took that four-weekend course.  That class taught me 
more than both of my real estate licensing courses combined.  The reason
 for that is real estate classes deal with state laws, contracts, 
regulations and ethics.  Appraisal focuses on evaluating real estate and
 that is what you want to learn as an investor.
A real estate 
license can actually hold you back from being a savvy investor and 
here's why: #1 - You have to announce to every seller that you are an 
agent.  It's an ethics rule and a disclosure law.  Well, now the seller 
is on guard for all kinds of reasons and you waste precious time 
overcoming negative reactions.  #2 - When you go to sell your real 
estate, the same things apply but add to that scenario the fact that if 
you make large profits on property that you sell, people can come after 
you, saying you took advantage of them because of your expertise.  And 
they win!
So you don't need to go to college for 4 years and you 
don't need a real estate license.  What you do need is a guy like me to 
convince you to go to appraisal school and read books like the one you 
have now.
Then go out and do it, using a lawyer to protect you 
every step of the way.  Again, here is a good point to make.  Simply 
weave into every agreement or offer you make the following statement:  
This entire agreement is subject to my attorney's approval.  I can't 
stress that enough.  That's one line of text.  That covers it all.  It 
gives you time to investigate deals.  It protects your interests and 
keeps you from getting burned in this business.
Here are a couple more beauties that I use to protect myself and you should too.
These are used with initial purchase offers:
These are used with initial purchase offers:
1.	Willing to pay X amount of dollars or appraised value, whichever is less.
(That says, "I'm only going to pay so much but if the appraisal is lower than
(That says, "I'm only going to pay so much but if the appraisal is lower than
what I offered, than I am going to get it for the lower price.  I don't get
burned!)
2. Subject to my partner's approval. (My partner was always my wife, and if she
2. Subject to my partner's approval. (My partner was always my wife, and if she
didn't like it, the deal was null and void, cancelled, over, kaput, finito.)
Now nothing says my partner wasn't my dog, so if there's no fire hydrant, well the deal could be off.
Those
 are examples of escape clauses that could be abused to the point of 
being called "weasel clauses."  Don't be a weasel!  They give you a 
short period of time to have the option to buy something first with the 
right to cancel the deal, contingent upon something or someone else's 
decision.
I use them to protect myself and to get a little time to
 do my research on the property.  Don't use them to unfairly tie a 
seller's hands. Be fair and try to move quickly when you do employ them.
What you are doing is creating a short time, zero-cost option to buy real estate. Here is a little trick and I don't use it very often but it can be used in a fair manner so I will give you the nugget. When you write an offer to purchase property, on the top line of the contract is a line that indicates who the buyer is. On that line in certain cases, I will write my name plus the words or assigns, like this:
Buyers: Dan Auito or assigns
What you are doing is creating a short time, zero-cost option to buy real estate. Here is a little trick and I don't use it very often but it can be used in a fair manner so I will give you the nugget. When you write an offer to purchase property, on the top line of the contract is a line that indicates who the buyer is. On that line in certain cases, I will write my name plus the words or assigns, like this:
Buyers: Dan Auito or assigns
What that word "assigns" does is 
this: it allows me to sell by assigning my right to buy the property to 
someone else.  Dirty dealers will take advantage of people with that 
word if they can get away with it.
Here's where I would use it.  
In real estate, a lot of bargain hunters look for distressed property.  
You know, the fixer-uppers, the abandoned, condemned, fire-damaged 
stuff.  I go a step further and look for distressed sellers such as 
death, divorce, relocation, but a lot of times I don't specialize in 
that type of property.
That's OK because if it's a steal and I get
 it for 40 - 50% off, I will assign it to someone who does deal in that 
type of property and make a profit by assigning it.
I'll always 
ask the distressed seller if that is a problem and if it is, I will buy 
it outright, then flip it but it costs more to do that.  So I'll explain
 this to the seller and get their permission to use it.  I don't slip it
 in on them.  You will have a miserable existence if you practice real 
estate by deceit.  Natural law will crush you; play fair!  Purpose, 
passion and desire cannot be achieved or acquired by deceit.  That's a 
quotable quote.  I hope you remember it.
Let's get on with another
 story.  This illustrates another fine example for you.  This story is 
about a family who had business interests outside of real estate 
investing and as a result of the successes of their other businesses 
they had fairly large sums of money to play real estate like a monopoly 
game.  Power can be dangerous in the wrong hands!
So here we go.  
This flush with cash family sees an opportunity to take advantage of an 
overlooked or left alone market.  That market is the old-fashioned 
trailer park, or shall we say Mobile Home Park.
Anyway, the way 
most mobile home parks came into existence was this: Usually a man of 
integrity and strong work ethic coupled with a love for his fellow man 
would buy a piece of land suitable to the placement of mobile homes.  As
 people moved in, he and his wife would welcome them and the neighbors 
would greet them and the community would become established.
The 
private owner would dig his own sewer lines and cut his own roads and 
landscape the park.  Maybe put in the clubhouse complete with a swimming
 pool, shuffleboard, pool table and meeting hall.  As time marched on, 
the residents bonded with each other and a family-friendly community 
took root.  Well this man of integrity had a problem.  Since all of his 
tenants are his friends, he is pressured not to raise the lot rents with
 inflation.
So the rents over the years are kept very low in the 
park and now this man and his wife are getting old.  Perfect timing for 
our investors to come knocking and offer our private aging park owner a 2
 million dollar price for his 10 acres of mobile home lots.  This is a 
once in a lifetime offer and many park owners cashed out.
What 
people didn't see was these investors were systematically and 
methodically doing this all over the place and once they cashed out as 
many mom and pops as they could, they lowered the boom.
Now they 
the investors had control of many parks in the same areas and they 
started raising the lot rents.  You see, they didn't have any emotional 
ties to the residents and they didn't live there, so it was a 
straightforward business deal: either pay the new higher rent or move.
The
 residents said, "To hell with you new owner, we are moving."  "Well, 
fine, go ahead," they said.  Now the residents started calling around to
 find another park with low rents but guess who owned those?  Yep, our 
investors did, and those lot rents were going up too.  So the mom and 
pops who didn't sell were full and it would cost on average of about 
$7,000 to relocate to another park even if they could find a vacancy.
The
 old folks who had it so good for so long were faced with a new reality 
and that was that they had no choice but to pay up or move, and moving, 
in many cases, wasn't an option.  These investors exploited a complete 
segment of the market and made millions and millions in profit and 
continue to do so today.
It wasn't long after this happened that 
you started seeing signs saying, "This is a resident owned community."  
People eventually got smart and started buying that little lot that 
their trailer was sitting on and they began paying association dues for 
the clubhouse and security and grounds, maintenance and road repair.  
The good ole days are nothing but a fond memory.
Life goes on but 
America did not change for the better as a result of these types of 
people.  Their only purpose was to make money; I believe they will die 
alone and in misery as a result of their way of life.
So I ask you
 again, can you be passionate and put your heart into investing in real 
estate by investing the way our corporate investors did?  I think not.  
Money is no good when you get it by deceitful ways.  I encourage you to 
work at balancing your objectives.  Lease optioning, flippers...you are 
walking a fine line.
Here's a flip side to communal living.  This 
story is a happier scenario, so let's have a little joy here.  I once 
lived in Key West and I lived off base.  Well, I thought I lived next 
door to Noah, and it sounded as though he was building another ark.  All
 summer long, hammers and saws seemed to be making some type of racket, 
so naturally being the neighbor I was, I got to know the man next door. 
 He never went to work and I asked him one day, "Don't you have a job 
and he kind of grinned and put his hammer down and this is Mark's story.
Mark
 and his brother were from the Northeast and they had a 30-room boarding
 house for college kids there, at something like $300.00 a month.  That 
was about $9,000 a month and they made the parents responsible for the 
rent payments.  Mark would spend his time with his family in the Keys 
for the nine months that school was in session.  His brother was a local
 up North and he took care of the toilets, faucets, doors and windows.  
Yes, they had their very own animal house going on there, but Mark 
factored in the abuse and would spend 2 - 3 months a year, putting the 
animal house back together while the animals went home for summer break.
Mark
 only worked three months a year and the house (ark) that he built next 
to us was a masterpiece; it was beautiful.  He was a master craftsman 
and he loved his work and spent a lot of his time with his family in a 
wonderful climate.  Makes you kind of jealous, doesn't it?  Well, don't 
let it because you can do it, too, but you must get started.  Mark was 
45 when I met him.  I believe he was 25 when he got started, so my 
advice to you is to get started now!