Most new investors get what I call “Deal Fever.” What is it? Well it is the overwhelming desire to just do a deal and buy a property. This is especially strong when you’ve been looking for awhile and lost out on some previous deals, or when you start counting the money you are going to make before you have it under contract. I always think about this as a St. Petersburg Property Management Company looking for deals.
I know you are saying it, because I said it too when I first started out, “that won’t happen to me!” As a St. Petersburg Property Managerwith all these years under my belt, I still catch myself sliding into this condition. To ignore this Fever takes lots of practice and experience. Even experience investors, still fall into this condition all the time. It is perhaps the most dangerous tendency then anything else, when searching for deals.
If you feel these things, does it mean you got the Fever? Yes, usually. There is a tendency in the human mind to want something once you get invested in it. It is the whole reason why car dealerships take you on a test drive, build rapport, and spend a lot of time with you negotiating. People hate walking away once they’ve committed. How do you fight this? Have a price in mind that is conservative and stick to it before your start negotiations.
If you are patient enough and look at enough deals, you will start to notice certain deals are just excellent compared to similar properties for roughly the same price. Target those. I constantly look for realtors who misprice their listings and jump on them right away. You should be getting daily emails of new listings, pending, and sold listings. Look at them firs thing in morning, and it will help you to develop a feel for value.
Understanding what a property is worth because you’ve looked at 100 similar properties and know what they sold for is an unbelievable advantage. The normal ratio is 100 potential deals to get one good to great deal. It is the difference between a pro and an amateur. I’ve been buying properties for 15 years and I am still in the 100 to 1 ratio. In today’s Seller market it might be 200 to 1.