Thanks tremendously
@BeExcellent that all makes sense. Can you explain a bit on how you work with the agent.
What I do once I've identified a potential market I might like to operate in is look for agents with very specific characteristics:
1. They need to be property owners themselves
2. They need to be able to rep me to buy, sell, or lease
3. They need to accept that there is going to be ongoing active management from me and they need to see me as part of the management team concerning my properties.
In short I want more involvement or control over my investments than some managers are comfortable with. So a requirement for me is a meeting of the minds, an understanding of what my expectations are. I won't sign away my rights either. I understand contracts and contract law (I'm a decent backyard lawyer - thanks pops!!) and I read legal agreements carefully. If the management contract is too opaque for my taste, its a no go.
My managers will tell you that I am firm, but fair & they enjoy working with me.
All of this is predicated on the fact that I started off in real estate investing running and managing everything myself. I wrote my own leases even. I've been to court (and won). I know what normal expenses look like & what looks odd. It becomes rather obvious to anyone who chats with me about what I do that I KNOW what I'm doing. Do I know it all? Of course not.
But I usually can identify my limitations, which keeps me out of trouble more often than not and my knowledge confers a confidence and acumen that commands respect from people in relatively short order. This assumption of competence I think, serves as a deterrent for unethical practices since I know what trends to look for that indicate whether or not things are as they seem...and even then one must remain cognizant of others' greed potential at all times.
This is why I so strongly advise getting your feet wet on your own before using a property manager. To hire a property manager without your own management experience really puts you in a position of blindly having to trust him or her. To me that creates a great disadvantage in a number of ways:
1. You are ignorant & therefore may be taken advantage of
2. You are ignorant and therefore may question or raise hell about something done for your best interest that in your ignorance you don't understand is in your best interest
3. You don't have knowledge to discern between 1. and 2., which can create any number of problems.
I've seen one of my property managers quit on owners who repeatedly exhibited trait 2. He tries to explain rationale...they just don't "get" it. He'll tear up the contract in extreme cases & quit. Not good. Suddenly having an asset without management far away or over seas is not good. It's potentially disastrous.
I stand by my recommendation to find a way to learn locally. Can you get a mobile home (trailer home) cheap? Those have low acquisition costs and will give you tremendous experience on the management side.
I do not mean to come off like a snot. You are obviously smart & have been giving this quite a bit of thought. I just think that going into this type endeavor overseas and requiring obligatory management in something with which you are unfamiliar on a very basic level has the potential for a really poor outcome you may not be able to foresee.
Having watched up close my father lose hundreds of thousands of dollars to South American businessmen on something he was not knowledgable about in another country I've seen it happen first hand. It's nasty.
Be very careful. It's not something I'd advise but only you know your abilities and situation.