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I am a Realtor in North Idaho. Coeur d' Alene, ID to be exact. I have been in the business for 8 years. Two years ago I saw that the market was shifting downward. Our foreclosure rates were on the rise and I saw an opportunity in a field that I had always wanted to pursue. I had done three bank owned deals in my career. They were all with local mom and pop banks. How did I break into the REO's?Well for one, I refused to accept the mantra that it is a closed field. I followed FC notices in our paper and followed homes that interested me all the way through the sale. When no one bid at the auction, I googled XYZ bank REO department. I called and stayed on hold forever. I was always polite. When I got through to the right person, I would say "Hi I am an agent that works in the area that your bank just took a home back in. How would I go about getting on the list to be an approved Realtor to help sell this asset for you? Most times they would say "we are not interested". This actually rarely worked but I kept at it. One day I was walking in my neighborhood and I noticed a vacant house with dead grass (the REO calling card!) The neighbor was super helpful and told me she heard a bank out of TX owned it now. I googled this bank and got the right number to call them. I gave the lady my spill and she said "I was just about to assign that one; it is right in front of me. What is your fax number and I'll send you over the agreement!" I don’t know if cloud 9 would be high enough for how high I was floating!I may have been on cloud 9 but I was clueless too! I knew how to sell homes but the REO side was new to me. I never let my seller know how clueless I was. Anytime something came up that I was unsure about I got online and googled till I figured it out. I registered on the various sites to upload the offers and forms, again learning as I went. I paid invoices with no idea of how I was going to get paid back. I was able to get this little home sold for a good price and the asset manager was happy. Not a week later the same bank sent me two more REO listings!From there, I could see that I was on to a good thing and that this is something I needed to pursue all out. I began buying courses, googling, reading blogs, and just getting information anyway I could. One of my courses gave me a list of banks to register with. I built a resume and gathered the necessary forms. I spent one week registering with every single bank on the list. I paid for memberships to several REO platforms so asset managers could find me. I continued following foreclosures in the paper all the way through the sell. I continued calling those banks. My business grew and grew.To this day I continue doing all of the above. I never sit still or take my inventory for granted. I would say that I am one of the smaller fish in this huge pond of REO brokers. I currently have 12 REO's in some stage of the process. Just yesterday I closed two and one more is signing today. I have been able to build a list of investors that want these properties so I find myself doing both sides of about 25% of my properties. I consult with them throughout the remodel and then help them sell them if they are flip deals.I learned early on that you have to build systems to maintain the influx of properties. My scanner and Blackberry are my new best friends! People drive me crazy when they say "ohh, you are so lucky to have all these deals in a dead market." My broker once told me the harder you work the luckier you are. Now that I can believe. If you want to get started in REO's work at it, envision it, be determined, and stick to a plan. I believe this REO boom will be around for awhile. Grasp the opportunity and go for it!P.S. I am envisioning myself working with Bank of America and Wells Fargo! I'm not sure how that is going to come about but I know it will! Any tips?The Holy Grail in my business would be to get in with Bank of America or Wells Fargo. If anyone has any tips there, that would be great.
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