How To Sell Your House on Ebay Getting Started Tip
January 3, 2009
http://www.sellinghousesonline.com When you get redy to sell your house on ebay. Before you sit down at the computer, get everything ready. (Pictures, videos, address, zip code, how much to sell for) To get your home sold right now on ebay go to
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January 3, 2009
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Selling Houses Online Drew Perry Adam Remer
January 1, 2009
http://www.drewlive.com Selling Houses Online Drew Perry Adam Remer
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Sell Your House on eBay
November 19, 2008
By Rhea Perry
Foreclosures are at an all-time high in America and many homeowners don’t have a clue how to sell their house in their hometown, let alone on online.
But did you know that one of the fastest ways to sell a house, land or any other type of property is on eBay?
Everyone knows someone who has bought a car on eBay. Most buyers don’t even bother to inspect the car before they purchase it. They just look at the pictures and check the CarFax report.
Well, my family has had the same success selling houses online. Most of the buyers never come to inspect the property before they bid. They just shop, bid and send the money.
Some buyers NEVER see the property. They simply want to own it.
Want to hear a cool story? Get this.
When Drew was 18, we started studying real estate and he finally found what he loved. So in about three years, he purchased 24 houses and created an income that allowed his dad to come home from corporate America.
Then that fateful day came when he could not rent or sell one of his houses.
So after ten months of worrying about it, he decided to try selling it on eBay.
He listed the down payment only and offered to finance the balance. The biding started at $1
When ebayers saw the $1 bid, they couldn’t believe it. The buzz drew tons of traffic to the auction. Over the 7 day listing period, that auction received about 9,000 hits.
At the end of 7 days, he had a bidder. The next day, the down payment was in his PayPal account.
He got more for the down payment than the cost of the entire house.
And the buyer was from the UK!
He never saw the house and hasn’t seen it to this day. That’s when we realized we had discovered a secret.
We combined real estate with the power of the online auction using eBay.
Since then, Drew has sold over 60 houses and has created quite a passive residual income by providing owner financing.
One of the biggest advantages to selling anything on an auction site such as eBay is that the market is the whole world. Instead of offering your house to buyers in your city or even in your state, investors from all over the place can see your house virtually!
One of our buyers purchased 11 houses in one auction. He was from San Diego;
the houses were in Florence, Alabama.
This buyer actually did fly out to see the houses before he purchased them. In fact, he flew out three times to see them.
On each trip, he was coming to pick up a car or a truck he had bought on eBay and wanted to “drop in” to see the houses.
When he finally purchased the houses, he moved from California to Alabama where the houses are. And now he goes with us on vacation every year, to weddings, funerals and birthday parties and has become part of the family.
Did we take advantage of him?
Nobody here thinks so.
He actually bought 12 houses instead of just 11. When he inspected the property, he discovered we had another fixer-upper nearby that we had chosen not to list.
Because real estate requires a legal closing, auctions conducted in the real estate category are a little different from regular auctions. So if you are a regular eBay seller, realize that the rules are a little different.
The pricing is also different. There are no final value fees.
The main advantage to using an online site such as eBay is to find investors who
have money to spend and who are ready to buy. Even in depressed economic times, there are always investors who have money.
What Drew has discovered will eventually change the way people sell real estate.
Before you try this at home, it’s important to understand the fundamentals of real estate investing and of selling items on eBay. If you do this by yourself, we suggest you start small and work your way up to bigger items to learn the ways of eBay.
We listed one auction and Drew almost lost $100,000. The buyers fell through and we eventually found a buyer that resulted in a successful transaction. We learned a huge lesson about what not to do.
If you don’t know what you’re doing, that could happen to you. That’s why Drew created a live 3-day workshop to help others avoid the expensive mistakes he made.
If you want to sell your house, land or property quickly, consider eBay. The world is your marketplace and investors with money are just waiting to find you.
If you are a real estate investor and want to create many residual streams of income, consider using eBay. It provides a very viable option.
The power of the Internet, and specifically the auction format, is changing the way we invest in real estate.
Get Drew’s FREE 27 Tips for Selling Your House on eBay at www.DrewLive.com.
SellingHousesOnlineWorkshop.com Launched
November 19, 2008
If You Need Options to Avoid Foreclosure,
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AskDrewPerry.Com is Officialy Launched
November 19, 2008
Check it out here
How I got Started Investing In RealEstate
June 24, 2008
How We Got Started Investing in Real Estate
By Rhea!
During the fall of about 2000, Drew and I spent $1500 to take an Internet Marketing class. That particular class didn’t teach us what we wanted to know about Internet marketing, but believe me, we learned plenty.
First of all, since it was a small class we had to introduce ourselves. We met Joe and Jim who were both full-time real estate investors. I have wanted to do something with houses all my life. I tried to follow in my architect father’s footsteps but that just wasn’t for me. So after two years of college, I changed to Education. About 20 years ago it seems, I read Nothing Down by Robert Allen and begged my carpenter husband to give it a try. But his commitment to staying out of debt kept us from going down that road.
Soon Joe and his wife met with Drew, my husband and me to explain what he does. Wendell showed him a real estate magazine with an ad in it that he had been considering and asked Joe what he thought about it.
His reply was, “If you don’t buy it, I will.”
About two months later, we bought 13 houses in one transaction well below appraised value.
A week later when the pipes thawed in the only empty house, Drew became the chief repairman. Following the advice of his mentors, he hired contractors to do all the work. He bought a cell phone, hired all the contractors, ran an ad in the daily newspaper to rent the place and had it rented within the month. He discovered he loved real estate.
We didn’t learn much about the Internet but we uncovered one of our mutual loves.
We also “met” one of our new mentors through that class. The teacher of the class gave us points for reading the book Rich Dad Poor Dad by Robert Kiyosaki. Being the hopeless bookjunkie that I am, I went to the bookstore on our lunch break.
Robert Kiyosaki’s father was the Superintendent of Education for the state of Hawaii . His advice to Robert was to study hard so he could get a good job and live a secure life. But after running for political office on the wrong ticket, he never worked in the field of education again. He died broke and in debt.
Robert’s next door neighbor didn’t finish the eighth grade but built businesses to provide his own security. This Rich Dad started apprenticing Robert when he was 9 and spent 30 years teaching him six basic concepts of financial success which Robert has now explained in his best-selling book Rich Dad Poor Dad. His Rich Dad left an empire to his son, Mike, who was Robert’s friend.
This book changed the way my husband, my oldest son, and I think about business in general. He doesn’t have any children but if he did, I’m sure Robert Kiyosaki would homeschool them. Throughout this book and the others in his series, he explains what parents can do to train their children to be successful and not just follow the crowd.
Robert Kiyosaki has become one of my mentors. When I get discouraged, I can pick up one of his books and he immediately helps me re-focus on my overall purpose - to successfully train my boys to contribute to their societies in a godly way.
Another thing we learned in that Internet marketing class was the concept of becoming an affiliate. An affiliate program is set up by a major company that allows individuals, like me, to offer their products for sale and earn a commission without going into business. The individual sends the business to the company that tracks the sale and sends the commission on a monthly or quarterly basis. Both parties have the ability to view the transaction record.
This is just one way of earning an income on the Internet that is becoming very popular. An individual can affiliate with many, many companies will only a simple web site. And some affiliates simply require an email address to be able to let others know about their products.
Proverbs says, “A wise man provides an inheritance for his children’s children.”
If we are to provide a financial inheritance for our grandchildren, we must learn to make wise use of our money. Unfortunately, most of us haven’t gotten a financial education. That’s why Robert Kiyosaki took the time out of his busy life to share his life’s lessons.
He’s made his fortune in business and real estate. Now he wants to share his knowledge with others through his books.
Was the money we spent on this Internet class wasted? I think not.
It changed our life.
So many books, so little time…
Rhea!
Who met Robert Kiyosaki this summer for lunch in AZ.
Helped my Best Friend Get $47,000 as Down Payment
June 24, 2008
How Drew Helped Us Sell Our House
By Dewayne Broyles
Our house in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania was initially listed with a conventional real estate agent with an asking price of about $140,000. We felt this was priced to sell quickly since the house appraised for $150,000. After trying to sell the house unsuccessfully for over a year in a strong housing market, the agent suggested lowering the price.
Making two house payments for over a year was a strain on our finances so we ended the contract with the real estate agent and advertised the house for sale or rent. We leased it with an option to buy with nothing down. But we didn’t qualify the buyer.
Even though the buyer made payments for two years, we were losing money every month so my parents decided to sell the house and asked her to move out. We didn’t know what to do so after talking to Drew, I did what he suggested.
I listened to some tapes he had on owner financing and ran an ad in the newspaper that Drew helped me write. So the Saturday before 9/11, I flew to Pittsburgh to stay with a friend and sell the house.
I got 20 calls in the first week and showed it to several qualified buyers. I realized people expected new carpet upstairs, so after talking to my parents, I had a friend help me pick out some new carpet. I also added room fresheners that made the house smell better. The changes made the house seem like it had recently been remodeled.
After that, the second person that saw the house fell in love with it and said she just had to have it. As Drew had taught me, I asked her what she had to work with as a down payment.
She said she had a $50,000 CD, would that work?
I told her I’d call my partner and consult with him. Of course, it was my dad and he was cautious but thrilled.
That week, the World Trade Center was bombed and the plane that crashed in Pennsylvania landed only about 45 miles away. So things were a little unstable for awhile.
My mom was a nervous wreck until I got home.
But then in October after paying the penalty for cashing in the CD early, she gave me $47,000 as a down payment and I sold her the house for $137,000. A realtor friend said he’d be surprised if we could get $125,000.
Just last month, the buyer received a settlement and paid us the balance so we paid off the loan.
Our profit was $30,000.
My mom believes we would still have the house if Drew hadn’t taught me how to sell it.
The buyer had no idea that my 19-year-old friend had trained me and that I was just 17.
With all the things teenagers can do these days, isn’t it interesting what good they can do when they are focused on serving the Lord and their families?
Dewayne is now overseas serving with the U.S. Military
Throughout most of history, it has been considered an honor and a duty to be trained to defend one’s country. I feel a resurgence of that sense of honor and duty returning as God stirs the hearts of young men in our country like Dewayne.
I also consider it an honor for my sons to have a friend of character such as Dewayne. Quality friends are so important.
Solomon, the wisest man who ever lived, said, “He who walks with wise men will be wise, but the companion of fools will suffer harm.” (Proverbs 13:20)
Only time will tell what this young man will do with his life.
In the long run, I’m sure he will be an asset for our country.
In the meantime, I sure miss him sneaking into my refrigerator.
So many books, so little time…
Rhea!
who misses her other son
Bought a house For $880 and made $10,000 Cash
June 24, 2008
Drew Perry’s $880 House Story
By Rhea Perry
In the summer of 2002, Drew Perry bought another house. That makes 13 houses in two years. Drew paid $1000 for this one and Friday Drew sold it for $15,000.
A realtor had contacted him with a 2000 square foot house in town that had a fire in the bathroom. Drew offered him $1000 for it and they set a closing date.
Although we don’t believe in going into debt for consumer items, he borrowed the money from the bank for this investment and went to closing. There the attorney deducted $120 for taxes that had already been paid on the property, so when he left, Drew had only spent $880.
The next week he and his younger brother Will and their friends Dewayne and Benjamin Broyles cut out the charred wood in the bathroom. He borrowed another $2300 to replace the bathroom fixtures and paint the trim on the outside of the house.
Drew then had his property manager run an ad to sell the house in the local newspaper and several months later, a local real estate investor who rehabs houses saw it. He purchased it for $15,000 and will probably spend a few thousand dollars fixing it up before he either sells it at market value or rents it.
Everyone involved in this transaction was happy and after everything was paid, Drew cleared a profit of $10,000.
Not bad for a 21 year old kid who still lives at home.
He’s been homeschooled since the second grade and was just managing the family farm, the Backside of Nowhere, when he started studying real estate at age 18.
He learned how to buy houses, along with a variety of other incredibly useful skills, from marketing genius Ron LeGrand. We spent many dollars and many hours traveling together across the country going to seminars and buying books and tapes to learn how to invest in real estate.
And not all of his purchases have worked out quite this well. But we call those Lessons, not failures. The more expensive they are, the better we ALL remember them!
We think our time and money investments have been worth it.
It seems to me that a basic education ought to include learning how to buy and sell a house. After all, that is more than likely the biggest purchase you will make in your lifetime.
If you truly want to educate your children to be successful, then read at least one book on how to buy houses. I read Nothing Down by Robert Allen 20 years ago when it first came out. Since then, we’ve read several.
We’ve bought almost as many real estate courses as how-to-homeschool manuals but Drew has gotten the most out of Ron’s three courses - Lease Options, Owner Financing and Wholesale-Retail Boot Camp.
They may seem expensive but considering what you learn, they can save you a wad. Knowledge of what not to do and mindset that can give you an incredible profit justify the cost.
And if you make a $10,000 profit on one deal, it was worth every penny.
There’s more to Real Education than we think.
The main element I’ve found my children need is to develop vision, or the ability to see. Then they’ve got to be self-motivated enough to set goals and diligent enough to work at achieving them.
Learning how to make wise decisions and being confident enough to act on them is what growing up is all about.
We start with learning to see when the trash can in the kitchen needs to be emptied.
And we’re still working on that.
To me, a successful education means finding what God has placed you on this earth to do, defining it clearly, and doing the right thing, at the right time, in the right way, and for the right reason.
If you’d like to make school real like we try to do, start including activities relative to life, like cooking, buying and selling clothes, or buying and selling a house or two.
Wouldn’t it be great if your children loved what they do?
So many books, so little time…
Rhea!
who wants to be a rehabber when she grows up
hey to everyone I met at ebay live
June 24, 2008
hey
catch yall later