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You are here: Home > Real Estate > Investing > How We Made $45,000 Fixing and Flipping a Mobile Home |
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Write You - How We Made $45,000 Fixing and Flipping a Mobile Home
Wise Ways To Use Pocket-Money d rotten walls, and ceiling from the leaking roof. The sunroom was also heavily infested with termites. This room had to be almost totally rebuilt. Termite eradication was $500.“How should I give my children pocket-money?” is one of the most common questions asked at parenting seminars.“Should kids receive pocket-money when they complete jobs and should they lose pocket-money if they are poorly behaved?” are also common queries.Giving pocket-money is an excellent way to develop independence in children and young people.Children should receive pocket-money as their small share of the family wealth just as they should share the workload at home. For this reason I prefer • We also hauled away seven large trailer loads of trash and remodeling debris. • Nearly all of repair and remodeling work was done by my dad. (Way to go dad!) When finished, we ended up putting the mobile home up for sale at $130,000. This was three months after we bought it. We had it for sale for about three weeks and then withdrew it because we started thinking about using it as a rental. It would have rented for about $800/month giving us about $300/month positive cash flow, before expenses. The day after we took the home off the market, we received an offer from a b Domain Name Insanity - Does Your Name Really Matter? In April of 2005, my Mom (who, like me, is also a real estate agent) was looking through our local “Thrifty Nickel” weekly classified ads newspaper. She saw a very interesting ad and brought it to my attention. The seller who placed the ad offered to sell six mobile homes, all on their own lots. The mobile homes were real property, not mobile homes located on rented lots. They were all being offered with seller financing.Your domain name is the .com, .net, .org or some other dot something that people use to get to your web site. affiliateblog.com is mine.A group of investors headed by Jake Weinbaum (the guy behind Disney’s go.com) paid $7.5 million for the name Business.com back in 1999, aiming to make it a showcase B2B site. According to their own press they have succeeded. Yes, it’s a terrific name — short, sort of descriptive and easy to remember. There’s some cachet there, but is it $7.5 million worth? That cash could hav The seller lived out of town and when we called him, he told us the mobile homes had been empty for a couple of years. He said to drive by them and then call him back if we were still interested. Of course we, (my Mom, Dad and I), went to look at them immediately. One was occupied by a transient squatter, so we couldn’t get in to that one. Four were literally falling apart from rotten roofs and all the rain we had been getting. The last mobile home was in good enough condition to consider. We called the owner and asked him to meet us, so we could get in to look at it. Our initial inspection revealed outdated appliances (think yellow and avocado colors). There was rotting under the kitchen sink, and an ugly master bath shower that had been painted in order to make it “look better”. There were different types of carpeting in each of the rooms, and there were water leaks in the roof in various places. Of course if you have ever worked on a fixer-upper you know that what you see on the surface is not the only work that needs to be done and we took that into account. We went ahead and bought the mobile from the owner for his asking price of $65,000 by putting $5,000 down and creating seller financing for the balance at 8% interest for 30 years with no balloon payments. I think our payment was about $500/month. We put about $10,000 and a ton of sweat equity into the property over the next 90 days. As we were working on the mobile home, we found lots of extra things that needed to be fixed. For example, we took out the old shower stall in the master bath so that we could put tile in. After it was out, we found that the flooring under the shower and under the hot water heater, located directly behind the shower, were rotted through. The rotten flooring had to be replaced, and then the hot water heater had to be replaced. Those were just one of several unanticipated costs and repairs. Other items of repair or upgrading included: • Replacing all of the carpeting. • In the kitchen: replacing the kitchen sink, repairing the rotten floor, painting the walls and cabinets, adding a dishwasher, a disposal, and then replacing the stove and the refrigerator. • Repairing the roof and then painting the ceiling where the water staining had occurred. • In the master bathroom we replaced the vanity, the mirror, and the lights. We also tiled the shower and tiled the floor. This work is what really sold the home…it looked awesome! • Outside we cleaned up the knee high weeds, removed dead bushes and trees, trimmed the over-grown shrubs and then planted lots of flowers. • The home also included a sunroom which had rotten walls, and ceiling from the leaking roof. The sunroom was also heavily infested with termites. This room had to be almost totally rebuilt. Termite eradication was $500. • We also hauled away seven large trailer loads of trash and remodeling debris. • Nearly all of repair and remodeling work was done by my dad. (Way to go dad!) When finished, we ended up putting the mobile home up for sale at $130,000. This was three months after we bought it. We had it for sale for about three weeks and then withdrew it because we started thinking about using it as a rental. It would have rented for about $800/month giving us about $300/month positive cash flow, before expenses. The day after we took the home off the market, we received an offer from a bu Credit Card Debt Consolidation - Is It Really The Best Solution were literally falling apart from rotten roofs and all the rain we had been getting. The last mobile home was in good enough condition to consider. We called the owner and asked him to meet us, so we could get in to look at it.Are you struggling with your bills each month? Do you find yourself just paying the minimum payment on your high interest credit cards and other loans? Are you behind on a few payments, which could be starting to affect your credit score?If the questions above describe your financial situation, then you may want to consider debt consolidation.So what exactly is debt consolidation?Debt consolidation services allow you to have all your monthly payments rolled into just one single monthly payment. Our initial inspection revealed outdated appliances (think yellow and avocado colors). There was rotting under the kitchen sink, and an ugly master bath shower that had been painted in order to make it “look better”. There were different types of carpeting in each of the rooms, and there were water leaks in the roof in various places. Of course if you have ever worked on a fixer-upper you know that what you see on the surface is not the only work that needs to be done and we took that into account. We went ahead and bought the mobile from the owner for his asking price of $65,000 by putting $5,000 down and creating seller financing for the balance at 8% interest for 30 years with no balloon payments. I think our payment was about $500/month. We put about $10,000 and a ton of sweat equity into the property over the next 90 days. As we were working on the mobile home, we found lots of extra things that needed to be fixed. For example, we took out the old shower stall in the master bath so that we could put tile in. After it was out, we found that the flooring under the shower and under the hot water heater, located directly behind the shower, were rotted through. The rotten flooring had to be replaced, and then the hot water heater had to be replaced. Those were just one of several unanticipated costs and repairs. Other items of repair or upgrading included: • Replacing all of the carpeting. • In the kitchen: replacing the kitchen sink, repairing the rotten floor, painting the walls and cabinets, adding a dishwasher, a disposal, and then replacing the stove and the refrigerator. • Repairing the roof and then painting the ceiling where the water staining had occurred. • In the master bathroom we replaced the vanity, the mirror, and the lights. We also tiled the shower and tiled the floor. This work is what really sold the home…it looked awesome! • Outside we cleaned up the knee high weeds, removed dead bushes and trees, trimmed the over-grown shrubs and then planted lots of flowers. • The home also included a sunroom which had rotten walls, and ceiling from the leaking roof. The sunroom was also heavily infested with termites. This room had to be almost totally rebuilt. Termite eradication was $500. • We also hauled away seven large trailer loads of trash and remodeling debris. • Nearly all of repair and remodeling work was done by my dad. (Way to go dad!) When finished, we ended up putting the mobile home up for sale at $130,000. This was three months after we bought it. We had it for sale for about three weeks and then withdrew it because we started thinking about using it as a rental. It would have rented for about $800/month giving us about $300/month positive cash flow, before expenses. The day after we took the home off the market, we received an offer from a b Planning Your Way to Success from the owner for his asking price of $65,000 by putting $5,000 down and creating seller financing for the balance at 8% interest for 30 years with no balloon payments. I think our payment was about $500/month.Whether you are a small company or a larger corporation one of the primary keys to success lies in preparing and following a good marketing plan. Why? Because you can have the most awesome product or service to offer, but without a plan in place, you may flounder for direction and waste a lot of time and energy as a result.What a Marketing Plan Should IncludeAs you prepare your plan it should contain data and specifics pertaining to your company’s goals, the product or service you’re offering, how you We put about $10,000 and a ton of sweat equity into the property over the next 90 days. As we were working on the mobile home, we found lots of extra things that needed to be fixed. For example, we took out the old shower stall in the master bath so that we could put tile in. After it was out, we found that the flooring under the shower and under the hot water heater, located directly behind the shower, were rotted through. The rotten flooring had to be replaced, and then the hot water heater had to be replaced. Those were just one of several unanticipated costs and repairs. Other items of repair or upgrading included: • Replacing all of the carpeting. • In the kitchen: replacing the kitchen sink, repairing the rotten floor, painting the walls and cabinets, adding a dishwasher, a disposal, and then replacing the stove and the refrigerator. • Repairing the roof and then painting the ceiling where the water staining had occurred. • In the master bathroom we replaced the vanity, the mirror, and the lights. We also tiled the shower and tiled the floor. This work is what really sold the home…it looked awesome! • Outside we cleaned up the knee high weeds, removed dead bushes and trees, trimmed the over-grown shrubs and then planted lots of flowers. • The home also included a sunroom which had rotten walls, and ceiling from the leaking roof. The sunroom was also heavily infested with termites. This room had to be almost totally rebuilt. Termite eradication was $500. • We also hauled away seven large trailer loads of trash and remodeling debris. • Nearly all of repair and remodeling work was done by my dad. (Way to go dad!) When finished, we ended up putting the mobile home up for sale at $130,000. This was three months after we bought it. We had it for sale for about three weeks and then withdrew it because we started thinking about using it as a rental. It would have rented for about $800/month giving us about $300/month positive cash flow, before expenses. The day after we took the home off the market, we received an offer from a b Simplicity is the Heart of Effective Web Design costs and repairs.Simplicity is the heart of effective web design Keep it simple. Will ya?Have you ever wondered over the striking commonalities among some of the tremendously functional sites of our time? Just spare some thoughts on the features of sites like Cisco, Marshall , Dell, Amazon, etc., and the answer would not elude you.Yeah. You have got it. Plain and simple. Friendly and functional. No cosmetics. No facelifts. No fuss. Simplicity matters in web design as it does in other spheres of li Other items of repair or upgrading included: • Replacing all of the carpeting. • In the kitchen: replacing the kitchen sink, repairing the rotten floor, painting the walls and cabinets, adding a dishwasher, a disposal, and then replacing the stove and the refrigerator. • Repairing the roof and then painting the ceiling where the water staining had occurred. • In the master bathroom we replaced the vanity, the mirror, and the lights. We also tiled the shower and tiled the floor. This work is what really sold the home…it looked awesome! • Outside we cleaned up the knee high weeds, removed dead bushes and trees, trimmed the over-grown shrubs and then planted lots of flowers. • The home also included a sunroom which had rotten walls, and ceiling from the leaking roof. The sunroom was also heavily infested with termites. This room had to be almost totally rebuilt. Termite eradication was $500. • We also hauled away seven large trailer loads of trash and remodeling debris. • Nearly all of repair and remodeling work was done by my dad. (Way to go dad!) When finished, we ended up putting the mobile home up for sale at $130,000. This was three months after we bought it. We had it for sale for about three weeks and then withdrew it because we started thinking about using it as a rental. It would have rented for about $800/month giving us about $300/month positive cash flow, before expenses. The day after we took the home off the market, we received an offer from a b Sales Openers: Should You Greet With Hello, Hi, or Starkly Recite Your Name? d rotten walls, and ceiling from the leaking roof. The sunroom was also heavily infested with termites. This room had to be almost totally rebuilt. Termite eradication was $500.You’re sitting down to make some phone calls to a prospecting list that you’ve assembled or purchased.Everything looks good, and you even have your script, your sales spiel, in front of you.But I’ll bet there’s something you either forgot to insert into that call path or that you didn’t completely think through: the very first words that would flow from your lips.Specifically, what is the VERY FIRST WORD you’re going to use, and did you select it after fully considering its impacts?Let’s • We also hauled away seven large trailer loads of trash and remodeling debris. • Nearly all of repair and remodeling work was done by my dad. (Way to go dad!) When finished, we ended up putting the mobile home up for sale at $130,000. This was three months after we bought it. We had it for sale for about three weeks and then withdrew it because we started thinking about using it as a rental. It would have rented for about $800/month giving us about $300/month positive cash flow, before expenses. The day after we took the home off the market, we received an offer from a buyer for $120,000, cash, which we accepted. After the remodeling dust had settled, we made $45,000. This was a tidy profit for 90 days of fix up work. We haven’t been able to find anything like this deal since then, but we keep looking!
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