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You are here: Home / Archives for landlord tips

Bed Bugs – Pests In My Rental Property Part Two

November 15, 2013 By Landlord Education

Bed Bugs – A Landlords Nightmare

Landlords and bed bugs - pests in my rental propertySo, here we are a week later and if you read my previous post where we first discovered we pests in my rental property (if you haven’t read it yet, please start here and then come back Bed Bugs Part 1), you’re probably curious to see how I dealt with them.

Well, I’m still actually dealing with these pests in my rental property, so it’s not over, but the good news is, our treatment is working after initially messing it up. Just to get you back up to speed, I initially had two options to get rid of them.

Bed Bug Treatment Options

Option one was spraying. This was going to require minimum three treatments and typically four or five. Each treatment costs around $600 and the overall effectiveness is around 90%. Part of the problem being where you catch the bugs during their life cycles.

If they are sprayed, haven’t died yet and then lay more eggs, you have to repeat with another spray and so on and so on, until you catch them at the right time. The downside being a) it’s not 100% effective, b) they become resistant to the pesticides over time requiring stronger and stronger chemicals and c) no one can be in the property during the spraying because of these chemicals for six hours. Then even after six hours, do you really want to be around the chemicals?

Option two is heat treatment. This works out to also require three treatments as the property has two upper levels and a finished basement. So one day in the basement, one day on the main floor and the third day on the upper level. The positive is this is 100% effective as they superheat the house to 120 degrees fahrenheit for several hours which kills the bugs themselves and I can only guess poaches the little eggs before they hatch rendering them inert.

This can be even more expensive though as it’s $1150 per day around here plus travel costs. Also, the tenants could stay for the first two treatments, although the house will be very warm, but on the third day I would have to put them up in hotels or find other alternatives, so it would easily be $4,000 for this approach.

Now fortunately, my pest fellow also introduced me to another option involving traps and dry ice. These involve small plastic containers with a center area where dry ice is placed and an outer ring that is covered in a fine talcum powder.

Bed Bug Traps

Using Dry Ice to Trap Bed Bugs - pests in my rental propertyUsing the dry ice traps was going to be considerably cheaper as the traps themselves cost about $120 for 24, plus the dry ice, which at the time I had no idea what the costs would be. It turns out for around 6 Kilos or 13 pounds, it’s just under $40 and I need that much each time I set up the traps.

The idea is you load up the traps, the dry ice which is CO2 evaporates and the bugs are attracted to the trap as the CO2 is what attracts them to people as they sleep. Once they climb over the outside wall of the container, they get trapped in the talcum area with the powder and can no longer climb out.

You simply go back the next day, empty the trap of all the bugs in the toilet and reload and repeat until there are no more bugs. Simple right? Well we really only learn from our mistakes…

Mistake number one, I picked up the traps on the Friday, went and bought my dry ice from one of the few local places that sell it, and proceeded to the property to set up the traps. I managed to roll this all into some other appointments that day and had all the traps set up by shortly after one in the afternoon and proceeded home to strip out of my clothes and set up a couple traps around my clothes in case I had brought visitors home with me.

Now it was waiting time! And learning time….

Apparently dry ice has a fairly short shelf life. So when I looked at my traps at home around nine that night, it was almost all evaporated, and by ten, completely gone. Since bed bugs are nocturnal, I wasn’t so sure how well this was going to work. My traps at home had nothing in them, which was good, I hoped, but the true test would be checking the property the next day.

The Next Day

So fast forward to checking the traps for bed bugs at the property and nothing. Absolutely nothing!! Just to complicate things even more, the dry ice place wasn’t open Saturday, Sunday or the Monday which was a holiday, so at this point I didn’t know if they simply didn’t work, if I set them too early, or if I really did have bed bugs!

Fast forward even more now to Tuesday. I’ve done some research and I’ve talked to my pest guy. He tells me that I should have caught something, even during the day if there was a huge infestation, maybe just maybe I only had a couple male bugs, and no females and I got lucky, but I’m best off trying again.

My research on dry ice helped me avoid a major catastrophe as I planned on buying more of it, taking it home and storing it in my freezer until that night when I would go out and re-set the traps. Apparently the extremely low temperatures of dry ice will cause freezers to shut down, instead you need to use coolers to slow down the evaporation and the coolers cannot be air tight as the gas needs to seep out. I was glad I did some research!

So picked up the ice, brought it home, put it in the cooler and off that night to set the traps around 7:30 and once again, I wait.

The Day After The Weekend After

So it’s Wednesday by now, time to see what if anything I’ve caught and lo and behold “Thar be bugs”! It looks like I’ve caught about 8 of them in the various traps spread around the rooms. All of them are very very tiny which indicates to my pest fellow that these are young bugs and I may have caught them fairly early in the cycle. That’s a good thing!

So Thursday night I repeat the process, I catch even more and here we are on Friday where I’m heading out this afternoon to buy a large order of dry ice which I’ll store over the weekend so I can make three more trips. I’ve been buying it in 6 Kilo batches, but for the weekend due to the decay of it, I’m going to pick up probably 30 Kilos so I still have some left over for Sunday.

The trick now is to stay on top of this every day until my traps remain empty. The positive is, it seems to be making a difference, none of the tenants are reporting any new bites and  the traps I set up at home haven’t caught anything which is making my wife very happy.

I’ve also found multiple other variants on dry ice traps explained out on the internet and I’m not sure if they will work better, worse, are easier to work with or would be harder, but this is working for me, so I will just carry on.

It does require cooperative tenants and they see that I am trying to help them which really helps, and hopefully by mid next week and for around $600 in total I should have this solved! Fingers crossed!

As always, love to hear your thoughts and any feedback you may have.

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Filed Under: Landlord Business, Landlord Information, Landlord Video Tips, Property Management Tagged With: bed bugs, investing in rental properties, landlord business, landlord tips, Property management

What’s Your Plan? Or Do You Have one?

November 1, 2013 By Landlord Education

Your Landlord Plan

Blueprints for your landlord business- have a planIt’s amazing how often a landlords plan it to invest in a rental property and rent it out. There done, that’s my plan. But is it a plan or is it a part of a plan.

In the following video I talk a little bit more about landlord plans and hope to provide you with some clearer thoughts about what your landlord plan should be.

I experimented with some close ups (sorry if I scare anyone), and my new microphone had the volume levels too low so hopefully you can still hear it. As always, love to hear any feedback you may have so leave me a comment, send me an email and be sure to share with any other landlords you may know.

Hey, if you have a plan and want to share it for inspiration for other new landlords out there, we’d love to hear it so leave a comment below. Hope this video helps with your landlord education. As always, if you have other areas you’d like to see videos or articles on, let me know.

Landlord Plans Update

I just finished a chat with an aspiring landlord this morning. He’s nearing the end of month three and getting ready to start month four of his two month renovation before it’s ready for tenants.

He had a plan, but couldn’t stick to it for various reasons. And that’s fine, sometimes your landlord plan has to change to fit the landlords situation!

Just remember that plan is what will get you to the end, so if you have to adjust your plan, make the adjustment to continue to move you forward.

With the fellow I talked to this morning, his challenge was lack of time as he was doing all the work. To help him get back on track I recommended his plan change to include some paid workers to get the property back on track.

His two month over run cost him not just his mortgage payments, but utilities, taxes, insurance and his lost time. Worse yet, he had tenants lined up and the delay could end up costing him another month of vacancy once he’s done.

Spending $1,00 even $2,000 to get it done, now, will change the plan, but it will get ti back on track as well.

So the lesson here is be ready to adjust and correct plans that don’t work!

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Filed Under: Investing In Rental Real Estate, Landlord Business Tagged With: buying rental properties, investing in rental properties, landlord advice, landlord tips

Renting Out Rooms – Running A Rooming House

October 28, 2013 By Landlord Education

Running A Rooming House As A Rental Option

Running a rooming house and renting out roomsThe longer I’ve been in Real Estate, the more ways I’ve seen to make money with Real Estate.

Whether it’s flipping properties, rent to own strategies, buy and hold or any of the myriad categories in between, there are simply dozens and dozens of ways to make money in Real Estate and running a rooming house is one area I specialized in.

Now, word of warning, rooming houses aren’t for everyone! Just like some individuals can’t handle the stress of flipping and others can’t handle the stress of dealing with tenants, rooming houses require a specific mentality to balance everything out.

Rooming houses as a category typically come with a poor reputation. With stories of problem tenants, drugs, sketchy areas and more it scares many potential landlords off before they even start. And truthfully, it can be this way, but it doesn’t have to be.

So what does running a rooming house involve? It’s usually a home or a building that rents out rooms on a daily, weekly or monthly basis. Most are furnished, and they typically provide shared washrooms, possibly kitchens and possibly laundry areas.

They also tend to cater to people at the lower end of the rental system who may not qualify for typical rentals or who don’t wish to be tied down to extended leases.

Folks who cannot afford deposits or first and last months rent, people who tend to deal in cash and people who get paid weekly.

These are your normal rooming house tenants, sounds appealing so far doesn’t it?

Our First Rooming House

It was in 2004 that we bought our first “rooming house” style property and we bought it for a couple reasons. First it was the other half of a duplex we had already purchased earlier form the owner and second, cash flow. Huge stinking cash flow!

Rooming House kitchenYep, we were suckered in by money and we quickly learned some lessons about running a rooming house. This particular property was set up with three rooms downstairs that were rented out on a weekly basis as furnished room rentals and the owner lived in a suite upstairs. They had a makeshift kitchen in the basement crammed in with the laundry. With all three rooms full we would make in two weeks what a normal basement suite generated in a month.

Our thoughts were to upgrade the basement units a bit and to rent out the upstairs to an onsite manager who would deal with collecting rents, signing people in and out etc.. The former owner had mattresses on the floor, supplied black and white 13″ TV’s and was typical of rooming house landlords. We have learned consistently not to be typical!

First thing we did was replace the mattresses with new futons that allowed the guys to have beds or couches in the limited space, we got rid of the crappy TV’s and upgraded them to 20″ color TV’s and brought in night side tables and a few other “upgrades”. Two of the rooms were already occupied, so we painted the hallways, the other room and generally updated what we could, but it was still a cheap rooming house, sigh.

My First Negative Experience

Needless to say the rules involving running a rooming house and for renting out to weekly tenants are often considerably different than renting out to longer term tenants in regular rentals. Due to the high turnover, the cash based business, the timing required and the type of tenants, credit checks are simply not done. That’s the first challenge with running a rooming house.

People show up cash in hand and need a place now typically. There’s no two or three day waiting period to check references or get reports back, it is cash and carry. This leads to all sorts of “fun characters” and takes us to my first negative experience which took place within the first month of taking over.

The key to making this work is to stay on top of the tenants. Rent is due weekly and it must be paid on time. See any problems yet….

Within the first month I put in a new fellow, sketchy would be putting it mildly, but he had cash in hand, By the end of the first week I had complaints from one of the other longer term tenants. He was leaving dishes in the sink, he would forget to lock the door, typical problems and things that have to be dealt with quickly.

I was due to collect rent so my wife and I headed over to get rent, do some more work to improve the place and make sure it looked ok. At this point I need to bring up the fact I was brand new to this and had only been a landlord of any capacity for just over a year, so I didn’t necessarily know the rules, or follow them…

Don’t Try This At Home Folks

I knocked on buddy’s door and I could hear him moving in there, but he didn’t answer. So I knocked louder. Still nothing, I told him I could hear him, still nothing. So being a frustrated landlord I broke the rules and the law and unlocked his door to confront him.

To add some perspective I stand around 6’2″, weighed around 220 pounds and I’m reasonably athletic (at least at the time). Buddy was 5’8″ maybe 150 pounds, so I wasn’t worried about a confrontation, although I was getting my money, I hoped.

When I open the door, I find buddy sitting on the floor, needle in hand and likely just finished shooting up. Being a calm, rational person I did what anyone else would do. I blew up! I told him he had 15 minutes to vacate (also against the rules, but by his glazed yet fearful expression he understood it was time to leave).

I went and explained to my wife what had happened and the door to the basement opened and the tenant I thought I had confronted walked in. I had just evicted someone who wasn’t even supposed to be there. In my defence, there were no lights on in the room, they both had long shaggy dirty blonde hair, they had the same build and I had only met him once.

I explained to him what I found, told him as well, 15 minutes be gone. I gave him 15 minutes, went back to the door and he had his stuff packed and was ready to go, then I noticed the TV was missing. When I politely inquired about it he told me that someone had come to take it away to fix it. I went from seeing red to seeing crimson and told him he had about 1 minute to get the hell out, to forget about his security deposit and to avoid me for the rest of his likely short life. Welcome to running a rooming house and the experience of renting out rooms.

Rooming house info and resources Click to get more info about rooming or boarding houses

That Was Then

We were ready to shut down that experiment, but for some reason struggled through and learned some valuable lessons. About six months later someone else approached us with a rooming house they hoped to sell. This time though, it was a full duplex at a price we couldn’t refuse. It had ten rooms in total and when full generated almost $6,000 in gross income every month.

With new systems and process in place from our earlier mistakes, we continued to expand and at our peak had eight rooming properties and over 50 individual rooms that I dealt with on a weekly basis. That equates to collecting rent 2,600 times in a year if I was 100% occupied. Talk about an advanced lesson in landlording and running a rooming house business.

Now, many years later, would I do it again?

Definitely, although I know I would make numerous changes along the way.

Would I recommend it to everyone?

Not really.

Although there are many that could make some huge income off of this. The income from that one duplex alone was over $30,000 per year, even after vacancies and expenses. Plus, it’s almost doubled in value from our original purchase price.

Is it a lot of work, yes, but is it 40 hours a week? No, usually only four or five per week which makes it an exceptional return on the investment.

The point of today’s article isn’t to get you to thinking about rooming houses as an investment, but rather to get you thinking about other opportunities available out there. I preach that up down rentals with detached garages, in my opinion, are the best way to go as far as good rental properties, but I also own condos, single family homes and yes rooming houses.

In some of my interviews with other landlords and in conversations, many are doing great with everything from vacation rentals to furnished executive rentals to single family homes. So there is no one right way. you just need to find the right way for you and then learn as much as you can to specialize in that area.

Rooming House Examples

Screening TenantsWhen we started to expand with our properties we had simple rules we stuck with. The properties we felt were ideal for running a rooming house had to have at least five rooms  to rent or capability to build up to five rooms. It had to have an upstairs and downstairs bathroom and shower setup, or again space for us to build it.

They had to have great transit access. We understood many of our tenants were new to the city and often took transit, so access was incredibly important. And we had to be close to the work, so our properties were positioned close to industrial areas where many labourers and trades would be working.

Knowing your tenants and their requirements was part of the battle and is something you as a landlord should be aware of as it makes finding and keeping them easier. Understanding what our style of tenant needed made our job of advertising and renting out so much easier.

The other lesson we learned was learning where to find our tenants. We hit up training centres for the trades, unions and even immigration companies about our properties. We took those that were interested on tour and we even found one company who rented an entire house from us for two full years at $4,000 per month to house incoming workers for a major project.

Finally, I’ve incorporated a series of questions I ask people who call my ads. Much like screening my regular tenants, I have filter questions to narrow down my waisted time. All designed to get better people in and to save my time.

So, my challenge for you, even if you have a regular rental, is to make sure you know the benefits of the property you currently have, or if you are planning on buying a new rental property, the nearby benefits. Then find that avatar or perfect tenant and find out where they work, what they do and then go advertise or visit those places in preparation of your next vacancy.

Investing in Real Estate isn’t fire and forget, it’s a business and requires some strategy behind it. Hopefully you enjoyed my long drawn out story and can learn some lessons from it you can apply to your landlord business!

If you liked this article let me know, if you want more stories about my experiences (both good and bad) tell me. Or if you just want more tips and generic landlord advice let me know too!

Just to add to this you may want to read another post I have about rooming houses. you can find it here, Profiting From Rooming Houses 

Boarding House and Rooming House information - Running a Rooming House
Rooming House Resource Page

Rooming House Tips


Guide to Getting Started With Rooming HousesIf you’re serious about running a rooming house or have just started one, I’d highly recommend you check out my Basics of Rooming & Boarding Houses Guide.

It’s $17, includes information on how to determine the best areas for rooming properties, the options for daily, weekly and monthly rentals and it gives you the information I wish I had when I started!

Click here to get your copy now (it’s a PDF, so you can have it in minutes) The Basics of Starting Your Own Rooming House


The Basics Of Running A Rooming House

So, are you intrigued? Does the idea of owning and running a rooming house sound like a journey you might be interested in taking?

Over the years I’ve owned a lot of properties and a lot of rooming houses and it hasn’t all been perfect, but that’s part of the learning curve. Sometimes there are expensive lessons we learn and other times there are inexpensive lessons.

That’s why it’s important to go into this with your eyes wide open.

Running a rooming house is more than just buying a property and putting bodies in.

There are rules and regulations that vary from place to place, city to city and even district to district. There is higher demand in some areas and lesser demand in others which can lead to underperforming properties.

Then there’s the concept of targeting certain segments of the population to develop a steady stream of clients. We learned early that we constantly needed to be advertising as an empty room meant we were losing money. Later we learned who and how to market so that we found our ideal tenants.

Learning all of this took years and not knowing it from the beginning likely cost us tens of thousands of dollars of lost income and bad purchases and nearly causes us to quit before we even got off the ground!!

In hindsight if I could have found training or information to help guide me and avoid those early mistakes it would have been priceless.

But that was my bad luck, or in this case your good luck as I have that information and I have a way to share it with you so you can avoid the costly lessons I learned.

I’ve put the information you need to know before you buy your first Rooming House property into an online training program call The Basics of Rooming Houses.

Now this may not be for you. If you like making mistakes, losing money, getting frustrated and quitting in frustration then you should probably don’t want to consider taking my training as it will make the majority of those painful experiences go away!

However, if you’d like to learn how to determine the local demand for rooms (along with understanding what you can charge for a room) I can help with that.

If you’d like to discover how the rules work in your area for room rentals or rooming house properties I explain how to figure it out and who you can talk to in order to get the details.

Perhaps most importantly, once you get through the initial training I teach you how to start finding more and more tenants so you eventually get to the point where you can live off of referrals and repeat customers! Once you understand how much easier this business is when people are calling you all the time you’ll really start to appreciate it.

I guess it really comes down to how serious you are, or how much money you want to lose on your own..

So if you’re someone willing to learn, to get educated and to get off on the right foot, you’ll want to go sign up for this course and get started today.

Click here to invest in your rooming house education – The Basics of Rooming House Course

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Filed Under: Investing In Rental Real Estate, Landlord Business, Landlord Information, Rooming Houses Tagged With: investing in real estate, landlord advice, landlord business, landlord tips, landlord training, running a rooming house

Interview With A Landlord – Donna F.

October 12, 2013 By Landlord Education

Interview With A Landlord Series

After the great response regarding my first interview with a landlord, I managed to wrangle another landlord into an interview to help provide some more insights into her landlord business and the overall experience of being a landlord.

I’ve actually known Donna for about six years now and  she has a great story for you in this video interview.

She started with a plan, has a goal and is making her way through it and provides some great advice for other landlords out there. If you’re wondering if it’s possible to create your own landlord business while working a full time job, here story should serve as an example that it is possible and hopefully inspires you as well.

I’m always looking for other landlords to talk to and my hopes are to have one interview a month that I can share with you, so if you have stories you believe will help other landlords with their landlord business or even cautionary tales that will help protect landlords, I’d love to hear from you.

Also, if you’re enjoying these series, let us know! Leave us a comment, share it with friends and tell Donna how she did!

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Filed Under: Investing In Rental Real Estate, Landlord Business, Landlord Information Tagged With: buying rental properties, investing in rental properties, landlord advice, landlord interviews, landlord tip, landlord tips

Landlord Tools of the Trade – Painting Tools

October 7, 2013 By Landlord Education

Landlord Tools

Painting Tools for Landlords

Every business has the tools of the trade, whether it’s wrenches for a mechanic, spreadsheet for analysts or even color swatches for designers. Knowing what tools to have can make those jobs easier, faster and hopefully more profitable.

The same can be said for the landlord business. So to provide some ideas of items you may want to have, I’m going to create a few articles with some of the items and tools I use to make my work easier and in turn, hopefully yours too.

Speed Up Your Painting

Hopefully you’ve seen my previous article/video about choosing paint colors (A Quick And Easy Landlord Renovating Tip), if not maybe go take a quick look at it after you’re done here. It gives you some ideas about saving time later and it revolves around painting which is where today’s tools come to play.

Now as much as I would like you to hire someone to come in and do the painting for you, it doesn’t always work that way. Hiring someone may not fit in your budget, you may have plenty of spare time or you may even find it relaxing. So if you’re doing it, make sure you have the right tools to get the job done.

I actually have several of the tools I take with me whenever I have to paint a property in the image at the top of the page. The obvious ones are the huge bucket of paint, the small ladder and the drop clothes. The less obvious ones are the scraper on the floor, the roll of sandpaper (the sanding block actually isn’t in the picture, but you’ll want one of those too) and my handy rolling stick.

Obvious Painting Tools

We buy the large buckets of paint as we use the same color in all of our properties and by purchasing in larger containers we save money. The small ladder allows us to reach the corners and top edges when painting. In my case I’m over 6′ tall, so I don’t need a very larger ladder, you might want to consider a slightly larger one if you need it. My wife actually has one with a shelf to set the paint on and it’s her favorite ladder for painting.

Drop clothes, these should be mandatory! You can purchase them from most paint supply stores, but we also use old sheets and for those paying attention the blue sheets are actually old sheets from the surgery ward in hospitals. No, they weren’t used, but they were thrown out and a friend who worked at the hospital donated them to us. They are AWESOME!

Having drop clothes can save you a ton of clean up after the fact and although it takes a bit more prep time to lay them out, you will be thankful the first time a big glob of paint falls on them.

Less Obvious Tools

The less obvious tools are the scraper for cleaning up edges, removing silicon or for outside wooden frames with pealing paint. The sand paper may actually be one of the most important pieces.

I could probably turn this into a five thousand word article about painting, but to keep your attention, I’ll gloss over a few things, and just do some Coles notes on them. Starting with prepping the walls. The amount of prep work you do prior to painting will really help determine how it looks.

If you spend extra time mudding and sanding any imperfections, patching any plaster that is damaged and scraping any old paint off it will make the finished product so much better. That sandpaper you brought with you is worth it’s weight in gold to accomplishing that goal.

On top of that, doing a quick sanding between coats can also help create a smoother finish along with helping the second and/or third coat adhere better. Don’t skip this step.

That brings me to one other tool we use in concert with the sanding, the painting pole. Obviously we use this with the roller (should I have mentioned the roller as an obvious tool?), but we also have special sanding blocks that attach to the painting pole as well. This makes the process of doing a quick scuff up of the wall fast and easy.

It’s a quick sand, you don’t want to take the paint off, just scuff it a bit to smooth out any imperfections and to allow that next coat to stick more. Trust me, if you haven’t been using a pole already for rolling the walls, just having one will make a huge difference in your speed (and it makes you back feel better too).

Finally, don’t forget a couple plastic bags full of rags. This is dual purpose. The first time you paint a wall a new color you’ll need to do a couple coats. Wrapping your paint brush in a wet rag and leaving it in the fridge over night will help stop the paint from hardening allowing you to come back the next day and apply the second coat.. You’ll also be able to use the rags to touch up any booboos.

The plastic bags (sorry environmentalists) work great with the roller and the rolling tray. If you need to come back later or the next day for coat two, make sure the tray is full of paint, the roller is soaked and then then cover the tray with two bags, one over the thick end first, then across the other end. It keeps the air away from it and allows you again to set it aside until the next day without worrying about the paint hardening or destroying the roller.

Other Painting Tips

This one is a little more advanced and may not work for you, but we don’t use painting tape. We cut in by hand along the ceilings, baseboards (when we don’t remove them first) and door frames. It takes a steady hand and it doesn’t hurt that my wife is an artist as well so she can follow the lines. I’ve just had lots of practice and I stock extra rags in case I mess up…

If this is something you’re going to try, make sure you have a two or three inch wide wedge style paint brush as the wedge shape helps keep that line and we find it’s a bit easier on the hands. If you’re not familiar with this, it’s just having the tip of the brush angle down instead of squared off when you are looking at the brush when it’s flat on the floor. See the image for a visual explanation.

Paintbrushes

If you use drywall mud to patch holes, go over the mud after you patch with a wet rag. It will remove the excess and just leave the filled in hole making the wall look smoother instead of patchy.

You can use stir sticks to stir paint that has been sitting for a while or you can purchase attachments for your drill that will do a much better job of stirring paint. If you do a lot of painting, this attachment can be very handy.

Remove all switch plates and electrical covers and bring a couple boxes to put them in so they don’t get lost. If they are grimy and dirty we often put them in the sink with a little dish soap or cleaner to soak. then we remove them and wipe them down with some of our plentiful rags later and they come out much cleaner. If they aren’t coming out clean, consider purchasing new ones or the work you did making the walls all pretty is for nothing.

Did I miss any handy tips or tools to make your next painting project easier? Do you have some you can share with me? Either way I’d love to hear your thoughts about these tips and whether you would like access to more of the tools I use and how to take advantage of them to their fullest. So leave me a comment below.

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Filed Under: Landlord Business, Rental Property Renovations Tagged With: landlord advice, landlord tip, landlord tips, rental properties, rental property renovations

Interview With a Landlord

September 23, 2013 By Landlord Education

Can you believe it’s fall already? Time has absolutely flown by and I apologize for the extended layoff with videos and posts. I think putting that Screening Course together in August threw me off further than I thought.

On the positive side, I have more information started that I want to get out to everyone and it starts with an interview I did last week with a landlord I’ve been mentoring for the last four years. I’d known Tim before he started in the landlord business and since he knew what I did, he reached out to find out more about being a Real Estate investor.

I think I gave him enough to get started as it wasn’t too much longer before he picked up his first rental property and now he’s got several in his portfolio and isn’t done yet. With an eye for analyzing potential properties he’s done well in picking some properties with great potential, but he’s also had some hiccups along the way.

In this 8 minute interview Tim sits down with me and goes over some of what he has discovered along the way and shares a bit of his story, I hope you enjoy it.

If you did enjoy this and feel your story would be interesting and informative to others I’d love to set up an interview with you. Since our readers are scattered all over the country I can do interviews via Skype if that works or I can even set up an online meeting to record our conversation.

To get started, email me at info@TheEducatedLandlord.com and let’s help make you famous!

 

Bill

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Filed Under: Investing In Rental Real Estate, Landlord Business, Landlord Video Tips, Property Management, Rental Property Renovations, Tenants Tagged With: avoiding problem tenants, buying rental properties, investing in rental properties, landlord tips, Property management, rental properties, rental property accounting

Landlord Video Tip – Tips For Choosing Your Next Rental Property

August 18, 2013 By Landlord Education

Parking Space and
Thinking Like A Tenant

I’m still wandering down the path of helping some of you make decisions about your next rental property, so today’s video talks about two things. Parking and thinking like a tenant.

Having enough parking for suited properties can be a bit of a nightmare and the associated problems that come with it it can easily be avoided if you make it one of your concerns from the get go. Making sure there is more than enough spaces to suite the number of tenants before you buy, rather than discovering it after, is one tip that can make you sleep easier at night.

This video is a little longer than normal, but I go a bit further in depth on the topic of parking an dhow it can be an issue with illegal suites. I also go into the mind of the average tenant and bring up some other points you have to be aware of before you buy your next rental property.

Buying Your Next Rental Property

Buying your next rental property can be an adventure that is both exciting and scary. There are so many pitfalls and unexpected bonuses along the way, so be sure to check out more of my articles and videos for additional guidance.

Remember, running your landlord business well is an ongoing education, so if you’re not already registered on the sites to get our free emails and tips, take a minute to sign up down below or on the top right of this page.

As always, I appreciate your feedback, so if you have thoughts to add, to counter or just some additional questions leave us a comment. If you have some positive feedback we LOVE to hear it and if you have some negative feedback, let us know too

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Filed Under: Investing In Rental Real Estate, Landlord Video Tips Tagged With: buying rental properties, investing in rental properties, landlord advice, landlord tips

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