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Real Estate Info

How Real Estate Training Works

Nov. 1st, 2008
in Buying Real Estate
by Admin



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If you intend to invest in real estate, especially if you intend to make it your full-time business, you may benefit from real estate training. Even if you feel like you have a reasonable command of the real estate business, you may find that you would still benefit from real estate training. Expert training can help you hone successful, time-tested habits, ramp up your knowledge of the real estate world, and improve your understanding of the intangible aspects of real estate investing. Perhaps most important of all, some types of training involve objective, expert evaluation of your working process.

You can attain knowledge of real estate investing a number of different ways. For example, you can adopt the do-it-yourself approach and read books and websites, and progress in your real estate investing through trial and error. If you are determined, diligent, and learn from your mistakes, you’ll eventually get to where you want to be, but this isn’t the easiest way to get there for a number of reasons.

For one thing, you are on your own in terms of evaluating the quality of what you read. If you are inexperienced, you won’t be able to tell good advice from bad until you have gained enough experience to know the difference. Another disadvantageous aspect is that you won’t have any direct, expert feedback on what you’re doing. You may think you’re doing things the right way-and without the feedback of a neutral, expert observer, you may never know if you’re right.

Another approach to learning about real estate investing is taking classes. You could take a study-at-home course; there are many excellent study-at-home courses including some offered by accredited universities. This, however, has the some of the same disadvantages as learning on your own primarily, you get no direct feedback, no real mentoring, Your real estate investment practice will still be mostly trial and error, mostly learning from your own experience, albeit within a well-informed framework.

A somewhat more personal approach is to take a class in person. This has the advantage of giving you at least some objective, expert direct feedback. Classes can be very effective, especially for grounding you in the basics. Classes offer less return on investment the more advanced your knowledge is. As you progress as a real estate investor, classes become less useful because what you really need is more hands-on, one-on-one time. if you intend to take a class, you should find out how much hands-on, one-on-one contact you will have with your instructor, and find out the class size. Large classes, not surprisingly, lead to very little hands-on attention for you.

The most personal approach is to hire a coach or mentor to teach you the ropes on a one-on-one basis. A coach or mentor can be the best option if you are fairly advanced and have already achieved a degree of success in real estate investing, A good mentor will also give you direct feedback on your business practice and goals, in case you’re not actually doing what you think you’re doing.

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
http://www.coachingbypeter.com.

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