This is an LFI episode and LFI is now part of PassivePockets.
I am excited to have Mike Simmons with me. He is a speaker, coach, and the Founder of 7 Figure Investor, one of the countryโs largest real estate mentorship in Mastermind companies. Heโs also the host of Just Start Real Estate, a podcast, and heโs the author of Level Jumping, a book about how he grew his business quickly to over $1 million in profits. Thereโs a lot of stuff that Mike specializes in as a coach and speaker. We are going to get great value from this. Mike, welcome to the show.
Thanks for having me. I appreciate it. Iโm excited to be here. I canโt wait for the talk. This is going to be fun.
The first thing I would like to do is hear about your journey. How did you figure out the finance and real estate which you want to do? I know you had a job that you werenโt satisfied with, and so you went looking for something different. You found real estate, then presumably you found coaching and entrepreneurship. I would like to hear about your journey. How did you get into all that? How did you get to where you are now?
You mentioned I had a job that I didnโt like. That puts me in the category with about 95% of America. Nothing unique there. Also, Iโm not unique in the fact that I decided I wanted out, and I wanted to do something different or find a way to take back my life. I discovered real estate back in 2003 and decided thatโs what I wanted to do. What does it take to be in real estate? You have to buy your first piece of real estate or somehow do a transaction.
Until you do that, you are talking. You are all talk. I was all talk for five years. It took me five years to go from, โI want to do this,โ to having the nerve to do it. Most people get stuck in that phase where they know they donโt like what theyโre doing now. They donโt like their job or whatever, and they have some idea what they might have to do to get out but they donโt do it because either they are scared or tell themselves they donโt have time or whatever, but I did that.
I was in that place until I got to the point where going to work one more day without doing something to try to get out of it was more painful than the thought of taking a chance and failing because everyoneโs afraid of failure. I was afraid of it, but at some point, failure was going to be less painful than doing the same thing every single day.
[bctt tweet=โEveryoneโs afraid of failure. But by taking action, it will be less painful than just doing the same thing every day.โ via=โnoโ]
I started taking action and it was a side hustle for me. I was not doing it full-time. I was trying to spin up my real estate company while I was working full-time at a very demanding job. To be honest, I was not doing enough. I was not flapping my wings hard enough to get off the ground. I was flapping my wings but I was not getting off the ground. I was doing deals here and there and making a little bit of money but it was nothing remarkable. I bought my first piece of real estate as a flip property in 2008.
I always say, โThatโs when my company was conceived in 2008.โ It was not born until about 2013. The reason and the significance of 2013, I had an incident one day at my work from 9:00 to 5:00 work where I was a project manager in an automotive and setting. We built seats for the big three. We were behind on a project and we had been there all week well after closing time. Everyone goes home at 5:00. We were there at 8:00 or 9:00 at night, working away every single night, and it was Friday. We had been there all week.
The client was in the building that night because they were upset that this project was not on time. The client walked up to me and said, โWhy are we so far behind?โ I gave them an honest accounting of why we were behind. Some of it was our fault but this was a client where they provided a lot of the engineering specs and a lot of the stuff that we needed to do the job. There were some errors in their work too. I said, โThis is what happened. We did this. This was on us. This was some stuff we got from you that caused some delays.โ I was giving him honest accounting.
He took a step forward, got right up into my face, and said, โYou are a wow F-bomb liar.โ I was like, โIโm here with my crew. We are working our butts off. We have not seen our wives and kids for the whole week. We are trying our best to get this ship straight, and all you have to say is that Iโm a liar.โ I was not lying.
I took a minute to cool down. I went to talk to my supervisor who happened to be there. I said, โWhat are we doing? Itโs 9:00 at night. Itโs a Friday. These guys are burnt out. The client is accusing us of lying. We are not productive at this point. Thereโs a point in your day where you have not gotten enough sleep. You are not productive. Itโs 9:00 at night on a Friday. We need to go home.โ He looked at me and he goes, โYou need to get your priorities.โ I was like โWow.โ
This was a supervisor I liked. I thought he was a good guy. He goes, โYou need to get your priorities straight.โ I said, โYou are right.โ I walked out of his office and he thought I was conceding that he was correct but what I was saying was, โYou are right. My priorities are my wife and kids and my mental health. I donโt want to be here anymore.โ That night, I decided this little side hustle of real estate that I was doing was going to be my escape plan for this company. I was going to start focusing on it and taking it more seriously.
That was going to be my out and a year later, I quit my job. A year after that, I went from about a $200,000 business to a $1 million business and I have not looked back since. Honestly, in that year that I made $1 million in profits, that million dollars, I went back and calculated it. It was more money than I had made in the last twenty years working for somebody else and I did it in a year. That was my ticket out. It was my proof of concept that I can do this. Honestly, once I started focusing and I started working for myself, I realized, โThis is what I was meant to do. I was not a good employee.โ
I was opinionated, pigheaded, and had better ideas. I was not the best. I need to be calling my own shots. I need to be hunting for what I eat. I canโt wait for someone to bring it to me like I was before and I would be the worst employee now. I canโt even imagine being employed now. Itโs not even that I donโt want to. I donโt but I would be awful. I would have to run the company or I would have to be fired. Thereโs no in-between for me anymore.
Thatโs a great story. I have a few questions. When you are talking about you found real estate when you were in 2003. I know you didnโt transact until 2008, but what do you mean you found real estate? How did you find it? Why did you decide real estate was the place to be?
I was working this 9:00 to 5:00 that I knew I didnโt like. I started to get a little bit panicky. At the time, I was like, โI am scared that Iโm going to have to do this for the next twenty years, what Iโm doing.โ Iโm not happy. When I looked at my finances, I realized, โI would have to work until I was 100. Iโm never going to be able to retire. I donโt make enough,โ and with the cost of living and everything, so I went on the internet. I went on Google as most people do.
I think back then it was Yahoo. I started typing in search queries like how to invest for retirement and where to invest funds and how do I invest better and all these things. The things that came up organically were people teaching you how to invest in the stock market. Day trading back then was a hot thing. I thought, โIโm going to learn about this stock market thing and Iโm going to make my money in the stock market.โ
As I dove into that world and started trying to educate myself, I was so bored. It was like reading insurance manuals to me. I could not get into it. The next thing you know, Iโm looking up stock, how to trade stocks, and what this all mean. Then an hour later, if you looked at my screen, itโs like, โYou are looking at ESPN. You are reading box scores. What are you doing?โ I got so bored I kept drifting but if you search investing, investing for retirement, or how people invest successfully, if you go far enough down, you will start seeing real estate as what people are talking about.
Once I stumbled on that, I went low enough in the Yahoo search to find real estate. I started finding these websites. Back then, there were a lot of websites and things where people would tell success stories. I became a success story junkie in real estate. Iโm reading about all these people, how they did it, what they did and I realized I would lose myself for hours in real estate and how people created successful companies and how do you invest in real estate. I never got tired of it. I was insatiable for that content.
I kept going down that rabbit hole and I decided in 2003, โThis is me. This all sounds great. This is what I want to do,โ but fear and peopleโs natural tendency to not do something thatโs going to hurt themselves kept me from being in the game. I regret it. I have done the math and went back and said, โIf I had started in 2003 as I did in 2008, how much farther ahead would I be? How much money did I leave on the table by waiting for five years?โ I know the number. Itโs $3.1 million. Thatโs what I left on the table by not getting started sooner.
Assuming thereโs still going to be a ramp-up. Iโm not going to know everything right at the beginning but still, if I had started five years earlier, thatโs an approximation of what I probably have left on the table conservatively. Time costs. Thereโs a value and a cost to time and opportunity costs. If I would certainly be much better but thatโs how I found real estate. I was looking for anything. I had to scroll past the stock market and stocks. I couldnโt bear the thought of doing that because it was painfully boring to me. As I kept scrolling for what else? Real estate started showing up and I was hooked.
Thatโs great. It reminds me whenโs the best time to plant a tree? Itโs 30 years ago and if you didnโt do it 30 years ago, itโs now. I think thatโs what a lot of people need to do with this real estate is youโve got to take action. That flows nicely into my next question. You said you were stuck for five years from 2003 to 2008. It was a failure that seemed less painful than go going to work again. That was what got you unstuck but can you talk a little bit more because so many people are stuck?
They know what they want to do but taking that first step is the hardest. Thatโs the 0 to 1 thing but once you have taken that first step, all the others are easier. Aside from finally figuring out that failure was less painful than doing what you continue to do, how did you get unstuck? How did you like, โIโm going to jump into this first one?โ
Part of the reason I was able to procrastinate, make excuses, and be afraid, the reason was nobody knew what I wanted to do. I didnโt tell anybody that I wanted to do real estate. Kept it to myself. There was no accountability at all. When I woke up the next day, five days later, or a year later and I hadnโt done anything. There was nobody saying, โWhat about this real estate thing? Have you got started? What are you doing? Tell me about it.โ Nobody was holding me accountable. Not even my wife. Itโs easy to procrastinate or live in fear when you do it in silence.
Itโs not easy but it doesnโt push you to do anything because nobody knows. These people who go on Facebook, Instagram, and TikTok and they make these New Yearโs resolution videos. You may or may not be the person who likes putting yourself out there like that but the actual value of doing that is thereโs something that happens inside of you when you announce your intentions to the world. It becomes much harder to ignore them and not do it right.
[bctt tweet=โSomething happens inside of you when you announce your intentions to the world. It becomes much harder to ignore them and not do it right.โ via=โnoโ]
If you want to get in shape and lose 30 pounds by the end of the year, tell everyone you know. Put it on social media. Tell your friends. Tell your friend who will razz you and harass you every time they see you if you havenโt lost any weight yet. The person who will try to humiliate you, who will give you a hard time, and will laugh at you, tell that person because thereโs nothing more motivating than avoiding that. We all want to avoid embarrassment. We want to avoid shame. You put yourself out there. That was one thing. I didnโt tell anybody what I wanted to do.
One of the other things was most people hide behind education. By that, they say to themselves, โI want to be a real estate investor but Iโm responsible. Iโm going to do my due diligence. Iโm going to read books and Iโm going to educate myself because I donโt want to lose money and thatโs the prudent thing to do.โ Thatโs true to an extent. You need to understand what you are doing to an extent but you can use that excuse indefinitely.
A year later, โHave you done anything yet?โ โNo.โ โReal estateโs a lot of money being transacted. I donโt want to lose money. I have this seminar Iโm going to go to in six months and thatโs going to be helpful for me.โ You can do that forever and I did it for five years. I told myself I was educating myself and I hid behind that excuses. In my own brain, I hid behind that excuse for years that I was educating myself. I was procrastinating.
The fact of the matter is, in real estate, there is a lot at stake but you donโt have to know how to get from A to Z. You need to know how to get from A to B. When you get to B, you need to know how to get to C. When you get C, you know how to get to D. You need to know the next step or two. You donโt have to understand the entire thing. I still donโt understand all of real estate investing.
Somebody tells me they are investing in notes. I understand at a high level. Conceptually, I get it. I donโt invest in notes, so I donโt know that world. I donโt need to know that world until Iโm getting ready to invest in notes but what I found myself doing and I think people do, I got a book on flipping, on rentals, and on wholesaling. Pretty soon, Iโm trying to learn every aspect of real estate and you canโt learn anything effectively that way. You have to focus, pick something, laser focus on it, nail it, and scale it.
[bctt tweet=โYou can only learn something effectively if you pick something, laser focus on it, nail it and scale it.โ via=โnoโ]
Thatโs great advice because what happens is if you pick something, you might find out itโs not for you or it is. I started the same way as you. I flipped a house and we made hundreds of dollars. We joke about that because when you flip a house if you are making hundreds of dollars, you are losing a bunch of money. We figured out thatโs not for us. We went to rentals and we did okay and got better then we finally found real estate syndications and passive investing. Thatโs where my strength is, so Iโm all in but it took me a while to find that.
The other thing that you mentioned is about losing money, which is people that are investing in the stock market. They donโt think twice when the value drops 25%. They still think, โItโs still the safest place to be.โ When a real estate syndication stops sending distributions, people act like the world is ending because they are not getting the income from their investment. You might not get all your distributions. You might lose money in real estate occasionally. Can you talk about the difference and how people view that?
Do you know why I think people have more faith or get less nervous about the stock market? Itโs because their dad or grandfather did it. Itโs been around forever. Itโs this thing that everyone knows exists. Itโs been around forever and itโs all anyone thinks about who isnโt in real estate. When I was not in real estate when I thought about investing. I didnโt even know there were other categories other than the stock market.
Itโs whatโs known. Itโs like when you go to sell your house. You know this, Iโm sure. I know this and a lot of your readers know this. If I were going to buy a property, a rental property, and if I wanted to sell it. The likelihood of me using a realtor is pretty low or at least a traditional use. Maybe like a flat fee listing or something because real estate is demystified for us. Itโs not this scary black box that we donโt understand but most people go to a realtor.
Half the time, itโs a part-time realtor who doesnโt know it and they are putting it on the MLS. Thatโs pretty much all they are doing but thatโs all they know. When they want to sell their house, what do they do? They go to a realtor. They donโt realize that they are these people like you and I who will buy it off the market and itโs safe. You donโt have to pay a realtor commission if you want to sell your house necessarily.
The stock market is this known commodity. Itโs been around forever. Wall Street and you know where that is. Itโs all people know but real estate, you are right. First of all, a multifamily building will not vaporize into thin air as a stock can. The stock that you are investing in is like you are investing in an idea or concept. That idea can disappear tomorrow, theoretically. A large apartment building will not disappear tomorrow. It could go down to value a little bit but we know if you look at it in the micro sense, you look at real estate. Whether itโs single-family or multifamily, in the micro sense, it goes up and down.
When you pan out and look at it in terms of decades, itโs always going up. Itโs like are you looking at the little bumps along the way or are you panning out and seeing the 45-degree angle that itโs going up in value? In the long term, itโs going to go up in value for sure. If you are buying and selling real estate on a daily basis, you have to be careful if goes up and down but it never disappears. We are not in the multiverse where things happen in weird ways. Itโs like a house thatโs sitting there will be sitting there tomorrow too.
It may go up in value or may go down but itโs still sitting there. Itโs tangible. Itโs so much safer than the stock market. You and I know this. People ask me all the time like, โWhere do you invest?โ Real estate and they are like, โYou donโt invest in the stock market?โ No, I donโt. You can for diversification purposes if you want, but if I have to put all my chips on something, it sure is shooting is not going to be the stock market. Itโs going to be real estate.
Iโm all in there with you as well. Talking about real estate, then you said you started with a flip. What happened next? Whatโs your focus now? How did you get there?
Yes, started with flipping. Again, itโs all I knew. I didnโt know there was anything else. Intellectually, I understand people hold rentals but my thought was, โI donโt have the money to buy a rental. I donโt have that money.โ I did my first flip and it went okay. I ended up making $15,000. It was great on a $40,000 house, so pretty good. I made a ton of mistakes. I had contractors take the money and not do work and all that. I had a contractor mechanical lien put against my house because my general contractor didnโt pay the subcontractor.
All the things that newbies do. I did it all and made $15,000. It was great and thatโs the direction I was going but I was running my business pretty poorly. In that, I had some key failure modes. I had some keystones that werenโt 100% under my control. I had one contractor that I wanted to do everything after that first one when he didnโt do a good job. I found another one. He did all my work and I had a realtor that gave me all my ARVs and values and sold them for me.
He had a lot of control. Those two people had a lot of control over my success and failure. On one particular project, my contractor flake stopped showing up and started overcharging me. I had to let him go. My realtor made some bad estimations on the value of a house that I was working on. I lost money on that house and I had to let him go. I was like, โI donโt have anyone to operate my business. I donโt know how to get values. I donโt know how to do any of the work,โ but I had leads coming in still.
I still had opportunities to buy and I found a house I got under contract. Iโm like, โI donโt know what Iโm going to do. I donโt have a contractor. I donโt have a realtor.โ I called a friend of mine whom I knew was also flipping houses and I said, โI got this deal. I told him about it. If you want it for $110,000, you can have it.โ I had it under contract for $95,000. I said, โFor $110,000, you can do it.โ He goes, โGive me ten minutes, let me run some numbers.โ
He came back to me and he goes, โI can do $110,000. Thatโs great.โ I was good. I wholesaled it to him before I even knew what wholesaling was. I wholesaled it to him and made $15,000. $15,000 at that time was on the low end or maybe even close to the middle of the road on a flip, what I could expect to make on a flip. Here in Michigan, at that time when I was doing it, I was making $15,000 to $25,000 on a flip. I was on the low end of an actual flip and it took me two weeks to get the money and I didnโt do any work.
I was like, โI like this.โ I got another property under contract in the same area for the same price. I got under contract for $95,000. I called the guy and said, โI have another one like the one you bought. You can have it for $110,000.โ He goes, โGive me five minutes.โ Does his work, came back, and goes, โI will take it.โ I sold that one to him in two weeks. I made $30,000 in a month. I had never done that before. I was like, โThis is my new life. I love this a lot. This is a lot of fun for me.โ I started wholesaling. I built a big wholesaling business.
Now fast forward, our business is split 50/50. Half of what we do is wholesaling. The other half of what we do is owner-finance but not owner-finance from a seller to us. We find properties through our wholesaling process. We identify properties. Some of them are better for wholesale. Some of them, we buy them. We raise privately. We buy the property outright then we owner-finance them. We call it land contracts here in Michigan but we owner-finance them to buyers who either canโt or donโt want to buy with a mortgage.
We played the bank. We hold these as passive investments like a rental but without the hassles of repairing toilets and dealing with leaky roofs like they have ownership. They own the property. We are playing the bank and we hold the note. We have been doing that now for about a year. We have about 25 of those. Our goal is to get up to 75. We want 50 more and what that does for us is we have traditionally run a wholesaling company but thatโs a very active business.
You have ups and downs. Sometimes your marketing produces well and sometimes it doesnโt and all these things. Rather than be on this rollercoaster, we are building this passive portfolio so that covers our base. It pays all our people, for marketing, handles all the bills, and wholesaling sits on top of that as icing on the cake. Itโs all pure profit at that point. Thatโs our direction now, whereas we were pure wholesalers for seven years. We are 50/50, wholesale and passive.
How did you find it because thatโs awesome to find a more passive way to cover your expenses. The wholesaling is as you said, itโs the bonus. Itโs all the profits. How did you think of, โMy wholesaling business is transactional,โ and itโs like flipping? Once that dealโs done, you got to go find a new one or you are not having any income. How did you figure out, โI will go passive but this is the way to go passive,โ because you are still doing the wholesale thing but you find a property and you can decide which bucket it fits in? Itโs a great plan but how did you come up with that idea?
The wholesaling side of it is our lead gen and sales side. To answer your question very honestly, I interviewed someone on my podcast who had this exact model. He is got 300 of these. His passive monthly income is off the charts. Itโs stupid money. At that point, when I interviewed him, I had about 25 traditional rentals and it was okay. I had a management company but I made mistakes.
Sometimes, when you buy rentals and itโs your first time buying them. You donโt know what you donโt know. All the things I didnโt know about how to properly buy, renovate, and manage rentals started to come back to bite me years later. When I was talking to this guy who laid out the model that Iโm using now, I was in the process of some of these deferred maintenance things. Things that I bought in the wrong places. I didnโt do the right renovations sometimes when I bought these rentals.
All these costs and expenses were starting to unfold and I was starting to have all these calls from my management company. I was a little bit stressed. He laid out this model and I was like, โThis is beautiful. This is everything good about renting and none of the bad stuff.โ It was a guy that I interviewed on my podcast. It was like I interviewed you. Matter of fact, I was DMing somebody and they are like, โThe podcast you had on with the passive guy, that was perfect timing for me because I want to get into passive investing as soon as I retire. That was a great interview and it was super timely.โ
The same thing, I found a guy. During the interview, I do what you probably do too. You hear something interesting and you become selfish and go, โI want to know more about this.โ You start asking questions, which is great because your audience is thinking the same thing and I did that. I started asking that questions as if I wanted him to explain this whole model so I could do it, and then I did.
I eventually hired the guy to come back and flesh out and fill in some of the gaps of things that didnโt make sense to me and we started running that model. It works great and there are a lot of people. Whatโs great about it too, other than not getting calls for repairs and things is in a market like ours where interest rates are going up and values are going down, we are creating a very strong buyerโs list of people who want to buy on terms because they donโt have the credit or donโt want to use a bank for whatever reason.
A lot of times, these are people who work for companies that pay them in cash, or maybe they are an entrepreneur. They donโt have great income verification but they have big down payments. They have a great history of paying their rent that they have been paying but they donโt want to get a mortgage for whatever reason.
There are a lot of people out there like that. As banks start tightening up their lending policies and things like that, we are getting more people coming to us. We have a huge community of people that are waiting for our next property. When we get a property that we want to sell on terms, itโs almost a bidding war more than it is begging people to buy it.
I was going to ask you how you find your buyers but it looks like they are finding you. The difference between the wholesale and the ones you sell, the wholesale, you donโt have to do much to them. Are you rehabbing and fixing up all these properties before you sell them to a new owner?
Sometimes. If they are not livable we are rehabbing them. If they are in good shape but dated, a lot of times, we are not because we are also not selling them at full value. We are selling them undervalued. They are getting instant equity and they can do that sweat equity themselves and save a little bit of money. The move is typical if this house is a dumpster fire, we got to go in there and fix it up. We got to make it right and make sure itโs livable.
If itโs in good shape but it was like grandmaโs house, it hasnโt been updated since the โ80s or early-โ90s but everything works. Itโs clean, sanitary, the heater works, and all that, then usually we are not. We are not doing anything to it at all. People are excited to go in there and be able to do some of the work themself and have instant equity.
These mortgages, are you doing 30-year notes, or is it shorter term notes with higher interest than the market? What is that side look like?
Itโs a 30-year amortization with a five-year balloon and we are higher than the market. We are usually around 10% or 11% interest, which sounded outrageous when we were at 3% more than normal. Now that interest rates are going up, itโs not that big of a deal but we make sure that they are not paying more than they would be paying for rent in that neighborhood. For the same price as rent, they can own the house and work toward the homeowner. They own it from day one but the idea is that they are going to pay. They are going to refi and lower their interest rate.
Thatโs the goal. What happens at the five-year mark? They are not going to have the cash probably to pay for that. Is that when they go to a traditional bank?
They go to a traditional bank at that point. At some point, the goal is that they are going to refi out of it. If they donโt, we are going to probably extend them for another couple of years until they can get it together and thatโs fine. Itโs a good problem to have but if they cash out, itโs great. We will take that money and rinse and repeat.
The idea for us is we know for our business, we need to get up to about 150 of these, eventually. Over the next 2 or 3 years, we will hit our goal of being 100% self-sufficient on passive income. These things will pop up every once in a while and we will get a little influx of cash. We will go out and buy more and keep moving along.
You fund your business through investors. Are those equity partners or private lenders?
Private lenders. We are borrowing money at 7% or 8% and we are loaning out or we are owner financing at 11%, so thereโs a little bit of arbitrage there. We are selling it for more than we bought it for in most cases because we have a wholesaling arm. We know how to buy it, $0.40 or $0.50 on the dollar. We are selling it at $0.70 or $0.80 on the dollar and thereโs a little arbitrage there with the interest.
Has the private lending market changed at all with these interest rates rising? Is private money getting more expensive or are they holding? It seems like for me, I do a little bit of private lending. I havenโt been able to push my rates hardly at all. Interest rates have gone up and Iโm still at the same spot I was years ago pretty much.
It depends on what spot you were at years ago. If you were charging 50% years ago, itโs hard to go higher. If you were charging 6% years ago, you should be getting more. The answer to your question is, it depends on who Iโm borrowing the money from. If they are in the real estate world and understand real estate, the rates are going to be typically higher.
Honestly, I prefer to borrow money from high-net-worth individuals who are not in real estate and who think that 7% is amazing to get that month in, month out, year in, and year out without any fluctuation. The fact of the matter is even private lenders want to charge 10%. If you are going to charge 10% and letโs say you are loaning to fix and flip people. You are doing private lending, fix and flip and you are charging 10% but your moneyโs only working 8 or 9 months out of the year because somebody uses it. They pay it back, takes you 2 or 3 months to figure out who you are going to lend it to again. By the time you do it, itโs another.
You are not making 10%. You are making 7% or 8%. For somebody like that who doesnโt want the hassles of the money coming going back and paperwork, underwriting, wiring, and all this stuff, I will give you 7% in perpetuity. Lend us your money and there will be no back and forth then you donโt have to worry about it.
It is a good option if you think of it that way. They go, โI want 10% and I loan 10%.โ How many months out of the year on average is it working? 9 or 10, if you are lucky. You are making 8% or 9%. You are not making 10%. Those are the folks I like. If there could be something in real estate, thatโs whom I want to borrow from. Otherwise, borrowing from a dentist or a lawyer. I have a lawyer friend who loans me money at 7% and heโs ecstatic.
He thinks he is killing it and he is. Heโs doing great. He doesnโt want to learn real estate. He doesnโt want to understand that industry to the extent that he could get a few more percentages. He doesnโt have time for it. He wants to be in real estate. He gets it and understands the value and itโs tangible like we talked about earlier. Itโs not a hope and a prayer but he doesnโt want to learn it. I give him 7%. He is tickled pink. Those are the folks that are great to borrow from.
I want to pivot a little bit. I know you coach and mentor. In our community, we do sometimes get people who are like, โCan you coach me?โ Iโm never sure how coaching works or how that operates, especially when itโs a passive thing. Itโs more like, โWe are giving you all the coaching you need on our website and through podcasts and stuff.โ Can you talk about your coaching and mentorship and how that can help passive investors who are either lending private money or investing in syndications and other types of passive investments?
I will say this before we get too far because thatโs relevant to what you are asking me now. I have created a landing page for your group. The reason I made it is I want to give them a downloadable version of my book. Itโs called Level Jumping and itโs incredibly relevant to your audience because itโs not about the nuts and bolts of investing so much. Itโs more about how I turned it into an actual business in how you take this little thing you are doing and systemize it and create an actual business out of it so that you can be free of your job.
When I said I went from like $200,000 revenue to $1 million, I outlined in my book how I did that. For people who are reading, go to MikeSimmons.com/leftfield. You can get a download version of my book. Thatโs one thing but how can they benefit from coaching? Everybody in real estate, including your folks, needs to find deals.
If they are doing something with multifamily, Iโm probably not going to be as helpful to them because Iโm not in that. If they are on any level buying single family or even small multifamily, triplex, quad, or whatever. What my real estate wholesaling company is, itโs all it is a marketing and sales company. Itโs all it is. It happens to be real estate that we are marketing to and buying but you need to understand the marketing and sales arm of the business.
How do I find these owner finance? I lean on my wholesaling company. The expertise of the people in that company to kick up these deals for me so I can make a decision if Iโm going to wholesale them or make them a passive investment for me. My program is designed for wholesalers but 75% of it is relevant to anybody. Anybody whoโs trying to find deals, negotiate a price with a seller, and get those things under contract in the most efficient, cost-effective way. My course is going to be incredibly successful for you.
You donโt have to necessarily listen to or care about the part where I wholesale it out but thatโs the very end. Everything, 75% of it is relevant to all investors. We all want to find better deals at a cheaper, better price, and be able to turn these things around and use them for whatever we want. Thatโs one reason. For coaching, to your point, I believe you are right. Your website and your show tell everything they need to know to be successful.
I know when I was getting started, I had a mentor but he didnโt do it for me. He gave me some basic stuff and I ran with it. Some people need that warm blanket over them where thereโs somebody whoโs going to answer their specific question about their specific circumstance. Thatโs a lot of times what coaching is. Itโs giving people the confidence that somebody is there. Thereโs somebody on their team or in their corner whoโs going to answer a question for them if they get panicky and donโt know what to do? My course, itโs video related. I do training but then thereโs a Q&A portion where you can ask me anything.
I will do training but if you feel like thereโs something very unique that you are dealing with, we can have a conversation about that. The fact of the matter is, there are very little unique things that happen in real estate. Itโs people who think they are unique because they have never heard it before but thatโs what we do. My goal is to teach people to demystify but more than demystify. I want to systemize and streamline what they are doing because I think a lot of people, the reason why they canโt get out of their job. This is why I couldnโt get out of it. I was treating my business like a popsicle stand at the end of my driveway.
I had no processes and no systems. I hadnโt hired anybody. I was not tracking KPIs. Nothing. I was expecting these wonderful results but I was treating it like some lemonade stand. I was not running a business. My book and my coaching, what it does are it teaches the fundamentals but more importantly, it teaches you how to create a system and a process, and a business that allows you to step back and it still runs.
Iโm buying and selling houses. We did $1 million in 2021. I swear to you, I went into maybe three houses and it was only because my sales guy got sick or my dispo guy was flummoxed on what the renovation could be or should be. I would go, โIโm going to be in the area, I will stop by.โ I could go a whole year without ever walking into a house or negotiating with a buyer or a seller because I have created systems around my business.
Thatโs great stuff because no matter what you are doing. I am a passive investor, if you put all that stuff around it, so you are running it like a business then it becomes something that you are not doing willy-nilly because now you are making plans, you are targeting, and having goals and all that. I think that makes a huge difference overall. Treating it like a business makes it become a business.
[bctt tweet=โTreating real estate like a business. Makes it become a business.โ via=โnoโ]
I will make this controversial comment on your show. Wholesaling can be passive. I told you and Iโm not lying. I swear. You can talk to my whole team. They would probably roll their eyes and go, โHe doesnโt get involved in our business.โ Sometimes they want me more involved than I am. Iโm not in the day-to-day of my business and it produces seven figures in profits.
Iโm not talking about some BS top-line revenue sales that we know are dumb. It creates $1 million in profits and Iโm not in it. Itโs passive. It is transactional and so if you say, โYou said you do this other thing,โ because it is transactional. You are correct. The houses that we wholesale this month are not helping us next month. We need to go find more property. We have to continuously hunt but itโs passive. I run a passive wholesaling company.
People would argue with me that itโs not passive. My time in it will tell you itโs passive. I spend an hour a week in my business. I sit on one meeting a week and I donโt even need to be in that meeting. I do it because it seems reckless not to be in that meeting but one hour a week and I run a $1 million business. If thatโs not passive, I donโt know what is.
Itโs not traditionally passive. Itโs not what people think of but itโs because people run wholesaling companies like a lemonade stand. They donโt take it seriously. Hire, train, and create processes and systems around it and accountability and KPIs. If you do that, Steve Jobs was running Apple. I get it. He worked all the time. He was not making anything. He was not working in the business. He was above it. He could go away for a month and it would run fine. It was passive but he loved it and he was in it. I love it but Iโm running a lending business, a short-term rental business. I have my podcast. I have other things that Iโm doing. Iโm not in my real estate business all the time.
Thatโs the way you want to set it up and it hits home because thatโs what we are trying to do with the show is to put all those systems in place because we have been running several lemonade stands from our driveway and you are always running from one thing to the next. You are right. You canโt get away from it until you put systems in place that handle everything. Thatโs awesome advice. The last question I always ask is, what is a great podcast that you listen to. Just Start Real Estate does not count. If you are a podcast person, what is one you would recommend?
I will tell you, I donโt listen to a lot of real estate podcasts. Iโm in real estate 24/7. Sometimes my brain needs a break from real estate and a podcast that I listened to religiously. It inspires me a lot, even in my real estate business. Even though it has nothing to do with real estate. It opens my mind a little bit more. Sometimes we all tend to get a little bit of small thinking and we start getting into this little bubble world that we are in.
This opens up my mind constantly and itโs a very popular podcast but itโs called My First Million. Itโs hosted by two guys. They are tech millionaires. They have nothing to do with real estate at all. They sometimes goof on real estate and they have said that, โReal estate investors are the dumbest rich people in the world,โ but itโs very entertaining. Itโs very eye-opening and mind-expanding. I love it.
If readers want to get in touch with you, whatโs the best way for them to do that?
They can reach out to me. They can go to MikeSimmons.com and they can contact me there for sure. Thereโs another thing I have. I will give this away to your folks too if they are interested. They can get my book by going to MikeSimmons.com/leftfield. If they go to WinningDirectMail.com, I created a five-video series on how I do direct mailing. Direct mail has been responsible for 80% of the money that I have made in the last few years.
I break down from A to Z exactly how I do my direct mail so that other people can emulate that and get similar results and itโs all free. Thereโs no charge. They can have that and get me there too, or you can find me on Facebook and DM me and say, โI heard you on the show. I loved it.โ We can have a conversation.
Thank you very much for being on the show. We enjoyed it. It was an interesting topic and we are thankful that you shared your time with us.
Thanks for having me. I appreciate it.โThat was a different episode than we normally have, which is fantastic. I love a lot of the mindset stuff and a different approach to doing business the wholesaling, to selling the properties. I thought that was fascinating. A couple of things he said. He was at a point where failing at real estate seemed less painful than doing the same thing over and over in his job because he was not happy in his job.
That resonated with me because I always told myself that if I was ever working a job and I hated going in every morning that I would quit and I did that with my first job after twelve years. I quit, which I donโt recommend because people think you are playing a joke on them but I have not been back since. I think they finally figured it out after many years. That was powerful for me. Failure was less painful. It finally got him to take action and thatโs the key. You got to take action.
He did not say this exactly but the value of time and that you need to use it wisely. He was talking about that. You need to think about what you are doing, put a value on it and take some action and go for it. The other thing he mentioned was accountability. I was thinking that about things as he said it is, โIf you are going to do something and you want to do it, itโs helpful to announce it to the world.โ Itโs scary to announce it to the world but itโs helpful because if you say, โWorld, Iโm going to lose 10 pounds,โ and the next time they see you, you have gained 10 pounds.
You are going to feel like, โI didnโt get done what I said.โ Getting it out and not keeping it in internally when you have a goal, whether itโs real estate, health, finances, or whatever it is. Itโs helpful to share that with people that can help you be accountable and not necessarily in a bad way but accountable, which can get you unstuck. It can get you to start and you got to start somewhere. You got to take action and that is critical.
He also talked about you want to be the one that is in control of your success. Thatโs also why entrepreneurship is so popular I think within our group and these additional income streams and creating your own businesses. Itโs giving you operational control over your success. Itโs allowing you to make the decisions and you be successful because you chose to. That goes into how we ended it, which was making your business, your passive investing, or whatever it is, turn it into a business.
Thatโs what we are finding with LFI and thatโs what Iโm finding with my own personal passive investing. The more I can systematize and put things in place, so Iโm running it like a business. The less time it takes because now I can assign other people tasks and have them do them then Iโm the one that is doing the $200 an hour tasks and farming out the $10 an hour tasks.
I think that was pretty powerful to make it into a business so you are understanding what you are doing and put procedures in place so you can be more successful. Fascinating show. I appreciate Mike being on and we will keep an eye on him and see what else he gets into because he got a lot of interesting thoughts and ideas. Thatโs it for this time. We will see you next time in the left field.
Important Links
- 7 Figure Investor
- Just Start Real Estate
- Level Jumping
- MikeSimmons.com/leftfield
- My First Million
- WinningDirectMail.com
- Facebook โ Just Start Real Estate
About Mike Simmons
Mike Simmons has shared the stage with Gary Vaynerchuk, Ryan Serhant, Jocko Willink, Russell Brunsson, Walter Bond, Andy Frisella, and Tom Ferry, among others.
As the owner of a successful real estate investing company, and also partner in one of the countryโs largest real estate mentorship/mastermind companies, Mike specializes in helping entrepreneurs create systems, processes, and automations that allow them to work on their business and not be a slave to it. Mike has personally worked with hundreds of entrepreneurs to help them optimize and grow their businesses.
Additionally, Mike is the producer and host of his own online show and has conducted over 500 interviews with entrepreneurs who run 6, 7, and 8 figure businesses.
Mike is a husband and father of two daughters and one son. Residing in Michigan, Mike is always looking for a reason to escape the cold weather and get to a beach!
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