Avoid These 5 Costly Investing Mistakes
Posted by Barbara Musoka // February 1, 2019
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With any business, the goal should be to constantly take incremental steps forward. If you can scratch out even a small profit on every deal you will ultimately be ahead of the game. As a real estate investor, you are faced with a handful of important decisions daily. Without even knowing it at the time these decisions shape not only your day to day activities, but the long-term course of your business. Just one false step can lead you on the wrong path that can be difficult to get out of.
While
there is value in learning from your mistakes, it is always better
to learn from others rather than make them yourself. Catching yourself before
one big misstep can literally save your business or at least keep it on the
right path. Here are five real estate investing mistakes you should avoid at all
cost.
- Rushed partnerships. A common theme in all these
mistakes listed is hurried decisions. We hear all the time that business
does not wait for anybody. While this is true, it doesn’t mean you need to
blindly jump at every opportunity that comes your way. There is a balance
between doing your homework while still acting in a prompt manner. Almost
every new investor is offered the opportunity to partner up with someone
along the way. This could be on a one-off deal or something more long
term. As you will see, a partnership can catapult your business to new
heights. However, the wrong partner can sink it quicker than the titanic.
You will throw time and money at a partnership that doesn’t produce any
results. You will not only be frustrated, but you will end up right back
at square one, without any assets to show for it. Partnerships are great,
if you are in the right one.
- Lazy due diligence. One of the items you don’t
see on TV is just how hard you need to work to get a deal. Even if you
have been in the business for decades, it can still be a struggle keeping
your pipeline full. When a new deal does come along it is easy to dismiss
it or make assumptions. The reality of real estate is that you will work
hours on deals that ultimately don’t produce a return. As frustrating as
this can be, it shouldn’t influence your future actions. Every new deal
that comes in must be vetted in the same manner. You need to go down your
checklist of diligence with the same vigor. The minute you let your foot
off the gas and get lazy you will run into trouble. All it takes is one
oversight either with the property, the contract or the deal to set things
in motion. It is nobody else’s responsibility, but yours to do your
homework. Never trust what the seller, your real estate agent or a
wholesaler says. Lazy due diligence directly leads to big problems.
- Avoiding partnerships. I know, I know. Just a few
lines earlier I said that you shouldn’t rush into partnerships. That being
said, it doesn’t mean you should avoid them. It is unfortunate, but we
live in a skeptical world where we sometimes think the worst of people. We
hear stories about bad partnerships and avoid them at all cost. You should
avoid rushed and negative partnerships, but embrace strong ones. If you do
your homework and you and your potential partner are on the same page
about everything, certainly dive in and get started. The right partnership
can literally help your business grow stronger and faster than anything
you can do on your own. When opportunity presents itself, you need to be
willing to embrace it and run with it. If you are constantly skeptical and
apprehensive about every opportunity you won’t get very far.
- Avoiding worst case
scenario. As
we stated, there is always a fine line between diligence and paralysis by
over analysis. Of course, you need to take your time and know what you are
getting into, but you still need to act. A common problem for many
investors is getting into deals assuming everything will break right. Instead
of being cautious, they are overly optimistic and think nothing bad will
happen. While most of the time they are right there is still a chance of
the unexpected. When the unexpected does happen, you need to be able to
quickly respond to whatever comes your way. You don’t need to be so
negative that you only think about the worst-case scenario on every deal,
but you do need to consider it. At least play out these possibilities and
think about what you would do if they happen.
- Cutting losses. If you watch enough real
estate shows on TV, you will think every deal has a happy ending. 90% of
the time this is true, but what you do in the 10% that don’t impact your
business. There are deals where you simply cannot make a profit or make
the profit you initially anticipated. Instead of throwing good money after
bad you need to cut your losses and move on. This takes a good amount of
discipline, but it is essential for a healthy business. A small loss you
can quickly recover from, but making the problem worse will bleed you from
necessary capital you will need on future deals. It is ok to cut your
losses and move on.
Mistakes
are part of any business. You can learn from small mistakes, but big mistakes
will wipe you out. Avoid these five mistakes at all cost.