Want to cash in on real estate investing? A millionaire tells you how. Tips, Tricks, Foreclosures, & Flips of a Millionaire Real Estate Investor features ideas and techniques from millionaire real estate investor, Aaron Adams. Inside, he details the strategies he’s repeatedly used to make money―and shows you how to do the same. Incorporating advice from Adams's mentors and experienced investors who taught him the pros and cons of investing, he details how he learned to pick an individualized strategy based on where he was living. . . so that you can do the same. • Harness the techniques that have made Aaron Adams millions • Discover insiders’ tips on real estate investment • Implement proven strategies with cash rewards • Get started right away with confidence For those with real estate investing experience, this book offers new ways to use old ideas in the contemporary market―backed by Adams's experience purchasing hundreds of properties over the years.
A good book indeed, but definitely not worth the $25.00 sticker price, so I highly suggest that you borrow it from the library like I did.
If you're interested in getting started with real estate, I don't think this is the book for you, because Aaron kind of skips over the beginning aspects of starting in real estate investing, and jumps right into the more experienced levels.
I say start off with a beginners guide, then read this book for a better understanding as to what is going on, and to take your real estate investing business to the next level.
This book needed to be proof read before being published. There were numerous errors (ie using "peaked" instead of "piqued" or skipping a connecting word in a sentence or using "principal" instead of "principle") as well as messed up section titles (ie using "lower than average emoyment" when he meant "lower than average unemployment"). I also noticed this book ended on page 162 in the middle of a sentence. Then, to add insult to injury, it had already repeated the 30 pages before.
Print and proof reading issues aside, I found some of the points of the book interesting and useful. Most of it was at too high a level with terms never defined and a mention given of a technique with no explanation of the technique or how to use it. I don't recommend this book, and am glad I didn't actually buy it or attend the author's sales conferences. I can only hope he attends to his actual business more than he attended to his book. Clearly, his system failed him in his proofreading.