Private Money: $300,000 in 3 Months
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The 4th session of the (Keep Reading to Find Out How You Too can Have The Same Success. Watch the short video at the end of this article.)
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Attendees to this APLS came from California, Utah, New Jersey, Texas, Georgia, Illinois, Connecticut, and Maryland.
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Their backgrounds and their experiences were:
- A business consultant and coach for small businesses in the South and Northeast,
- Beginning real estate investors,
- A long-time successful rehabber and contractor now taking advantage of the unbelievable prices of 2-flats to 6-flats in the city,
- A husband and wife team with 25 years property management experience and now beginning their own investments into multifamily properties, and
- Long time business partners in the rehabbing and flipping niche – now private lenders themselves as well.
Special to note here is that one attendee, Stefan Szlembarski from Illinois, joined the InvestorWealthNetwork.com three months before coming to the APLS and learned what he needed to take the first big step and landed a $300,000 investor for his business.
Stefan also took advantage of the InvestorWealthNetwork.com, ‘members only discount’, for the Advanced Private Lending Summit and joined us here in Atlanta to really turn the fire up under his new private money generating abilities.
(Watch this clip of the 1st day of the APLS where Stefan tells us about his successes just from the information he got from his InvestorWealthNetwork.com Membership, AND USED to raise $300,000.)
10 Things an Entrepreneur Should Never Tell An Investor
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When you talk to an investor about your business and your offering, he or she is usually listening with an ear of how to eliminate you from consideration. Unfair yes, but true. |
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After all, the investor is risking his or her children’s inheritance on your business, and they are very sensitive to any percieved “danger” signs.
Here are the 10 most popular “danger” signs. Say anyone of these things and you will very likely eliminate yourself from any possibility of an investment.
1. “I have no competition”. or anything indicating that you are too casual about the competition. After all, the only way there’d be no competition is if nobody wanted your product or service. The competition may not address the needs of your customer as well, or as economically, and that’s what you should address.
2. “We will capture a high percent of the market”. It is not realistic to expect your start up business to capture more than a few percent of the market (and even achieving that goal is a challenge).
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