Remote Real Estate Investing and Scaling with Chris Wooten

Chris Wooten from Wooten Capital joins us today to discuss remote real estate investing! Chris is a veteran who began his real estate investing career while actively serving in the military. He has since retired and continued to scale his real estate portfolio. Today we discuss how busy professionals can start as remote real estate investors, and some of the upsides to getting into multifamily real estate.

Quotes:

I would probably say would be my first apartment complex. I say that just because I still have it. it is returning an infinite return at this point. I doubled my money on it and some and I'm still getting cash flow from it.

“I would just digest as many podcasts as I could learn about podcast, you can set the speed on that two times. I could listen to two 30 minute podcasts in my 30 minute drive at 2x speed..”

Get in touch:

Wooten Capital

Other Similar Episodes:

Wealth Strategies of the Ultra Wealthy with Richard Wilson

Self Directed IRA Myths! What are UDFI and UBIT? with Bernard Reisz

Guest Bio:

Chris Wooten is a successful single family and multifamily real estate investor, who began investing in real estate while actively serving in the military. He remotely built a single family portfolio before moving into multifamily real estate. Today we discuss his experience getting into remote real estate investing, and how you can do it too!

Transcript:

[bg_collapse view="button-blue" color="#ffffff" icon="arrow" expand_text="Show Transcript" collapse_text="Hide Transcript" ]

Chris Wooten  0:00  

leveraging the people within those groups, their experiences, their broader networks is invaluable to continuing to press forward and grow in the space.

 

Taylor   0:17  

This is passive wealth strategies for busy professionals. Today, our guest is Chris Wooten. Chris is an armed forces veteran who got into real estate investing, and it's just really scaled that business so significantly, I'm going to let him tell you about his history. Today you're going to learn about remote real estate investing at various strategies around that, that Chris has used over the years to massively grow his portfolio and execute a number of strategies from flipping to multifamily real estate investing and syndication. Without further ado, here's Chris. Chris, thank you for joining us today.

 

Chris Wooten  1:00  

Excellent. Thanks for having me on. I like to see what I can do to share and give back. definitely, I'm sure

 

Taylor   1:05  

you've got a lot that you can share with us, if you would for the listeners, you know, introduce us to you your experience and you know, let's get acquainted here.

 

Chris Wooten  1:17  

Alright, so my name is Chris Wooten. I did 20 years in the Marine Corps. In the Marine Corps, I got promoted 10 times over 17 years. I only had two promotions left in my field. I just sold that was not going to be able to continue to sustain me as far as being able to have that goal achievement piece of continuing promotion. I went ahead and looking sort of looking for other options. while I was in the Marine Corps, I was doing asset management for aviation assets. in there obviously they trained us up on Lean Six Sigma and constant process improvement and building teams. process delegation and all these things. are they okay? 

So how can I use those things and essentially, start my own business using those capabilities and, and move so many times over the years and always enjoy moving into a new location, studying the location, finding the right house that I knew I could get some appreciation or on the backside. 

I just kind of tied the two together, like all right, so around my 15 year mark in the Marine Corps, I was like, All right, I'm going to start real estate investing. it started off just doing a buy the house, set it up to where I knew I wanted to rent the house out when I moved to my next duty station, and I started to acquire a little bit of a rental structure there. But then, as I soul, things coming up, and I saw my retirement time getting closer that 20 year mark getting closer to me. I was looking more for an accurate recurring income flow more so than what I was getting from my little bit of rental flow. 

I took a lot of those skills that I had from the aviation asset management piece, and started doing a remote flipping process. I was doing all this after hours. I could control my tempo doing two to three properties at a time in various cities across the country, that I had developed teams to do the flipping in those locations that were in hot demand that I just could not be there and built that up and it was it was going good. It was actually going so good that I started to develop a little bit of an excess of capital. 

I myself, I don't like having capital, just sitting unemployed, so to speak. I started shopping around for apartment opportunities. to ramp up what I had coming in for the passive income, and found an apartment complex that had been built by this group of partners, and their partnership was a little shaky, and they were looking to offload so I was able to get a really good price on my first apartment building. 

That was about four years ago. so I accidentally ended up in the apartment space, but I was still gaining the rental. passive income from that, and continuing to flip along the way. Like I say, just two, three properties at a time. just having a teams working on those flips. I enjoyed it. But the problem that I had with the remote flipping is working in the single family space, there's a lot more emotion involved. 

People are emotionally attached to their home. prices get a little thrown out of whack, working into a deal. can be a little bit more difficult and tasking because you've got that emotional component in there. I noticed in the apartment space that it was more of a business space you're buying into a business. it's more objective, I could facilitate that better and understanding and making an honest evaluation of what the project is worth. I knew I really wanted to go more into the apartment space. then as I was exiting, the Marine Corps actually ended up buying a second apartment building, just because I was gaining that additional capital. 

I did not want to ramp up the single family flip model, because I already saw my own limitations in that space. I was wanting to go more into the apartment arena. as I was exiting, acquired my second apartment building thing, and then got retired from the Marine Corps, and and that's when I started looking at Okay, I'm gonna go full time multifamily. How can I grow this? And that's what brought me into the syndication arena. Cool.

 

Taylor   6:09  

So that is quite the evolution that you've had over time. you moved from flipping to syndication, apartment syndication, which is a not uncommon transition that folks are making these days apartments are, are great for a lot of reasons. Now I like to step back to you know, Chris, and when he's in the Marine Corps, thinking about getting into real estate investing in some way you already had those houses you said from from moving around, but really ramping up your real estate investing. 

What was it like deciding to do that first flip and then actually walking through the steps to me, we don't need to go through all the steps but actually doing it for the first time. They will What did you do? How did you? Did you take a course? How did you figure it out the first time so you didn't completely lose your shirt and decide not to do another one good point to pull out

 

Chris Wooten  7:11  

because I kind of glaze over a little bit. yes, I knew I wanted to get into the flipping arena. I didn't know anything about it other than I knew how to manage assets, I knew how to work with people and develop the teams. I did one of the work coming to your town free weekend seminar things. 

I did that they give you just enough to be dangerous is my takeaway from that. But I did go ahead and buy the upgraded version. do the investment in yourself. I had started to learn that from I was just starting to learn about mentors in business. I really, I guess I hadn't thought about it. 

In the Marine Corps, we had developed a mentorship program. I hadn't really considered having a business mentor, but I had started doing Getting involved with business mentors and they had all talked about a train up, find mentorship and grow from that weekend seminar, they had the mentorship program. 

I went into that, and they continue to teach more. they started off teaching wholesaling. I knew I really didn't want to mess with that. It's a very, in my perspective, a heavy tempo component, and I needed an after hours hustle. Flipping, if you're actively flipping is a very busy component as well. 

But what I had developed was I had enough of a margin there that I could hire professionals to do what they do still make a net for myself as well. But then it didn't require as much as my time. from going to the course going through the mentorship and melding all the components together, from what I was Doing an aviation and then rolling into the flipping arena and being able to make it remote. I was able to develop a solid process and continue to develop that by continuing to work with and I went on a vacation with some mentors, we went to Hawaii and went to a mastermind out there. 

they weren't necessarily talking to flipping. There was one there that was doing lease options. There was one there that was doing short term rentals. But just hearing how they build and develop their businesses and the systems they put in place. help give me some more insight to build my own for the remote flipping piece. a lot of it is not trying to fight the uphill battle on your own and stumble along, find the mentors get the education and build the processes off of what's happening. True already. in there as well mixed in with all that. I had a 30 minute one way commute to work every day. I would just digest as many podcasts as I could learn about podcast, you can set the speed on that two times. I could listen to two 30 minute podcasts in my 30 minute drive at two x speed. 

Wow, just go. the good thing for me was I just had a see he was probably one to two years old at the time, kid in the back. He didn't care about music. He's just back there doing his own thing. I could let this podcast just go through. I'm taking in all this information along with all the stuff that I'm getting from the mentors and getting from the masterminds and redeveloping my processes to make them better and more efficient.

 

Taylor   10:52  

Nice. Okay, so you're you're riding the car, listening to podcasts on to x Listen to the Smurfs tell you about real estate investing, you're going to these seminars, learning from mentors and you're also learning along the way as you execute these business plans and before we move on to the apartment syndication, I'm curious over the time that you were flipping, no matter all markets in the country were changing pretty significantly. you mentioned you had enough margin in your business to be able to pay others paid professionals to do a lot of these services.

 

Chris Wooten  11:33  

So

 

Taylor   11:34  

I'm just curious like what class de flips were you looking at? What kind of margins Did you need to have to make the business plan you know, profitable, it tells us about that before we move on to the apartments.

 

Chris Wooten  11:49  

Okay, so

 

Chris Wooten  11:51  

typically, every team that I would set up, I would have a an agent on the ground. I would have a contractor in the area, I would have an inspector in the area, and then a title company or attorney. that was typically the team. 

I had a lot of people that had been in the space for a long time. All Why would you pay an agent, their commissions, you could save that percentage, like that's great, but I can also pay them that piece as long as I make sure my margins are good on the front end. I'll even dial that back one more line. Majority of the properties were coming straight off the MLS. many people get wrapped around the axle of you have to go direct to seller mailers, whatever to get the margins you need. 

When you actually don't, you just have to find the value add component in the property and you can pull property straight off the MLS. Normally what I was looking for was to be able to buy 65 to 70% of after repaired value. that would give me enough margin to pay the professionals to do their duties. I was still able to make my net on the back end. what I would typically find was maybe not even necessarily a really dilapidated property, we did have a couple of those. I had one that the chimney was pulling away from the house. we had to bring in a structural engineer for that. 

But most of them people were living on, it was just the area had a higher demand, maybe there were some other flippers in the area that were bringing in better finishes into the spaces. I was just able to leverage off of that, because we were only doing a couple so we could leverage off of that and clean them up bringing better products. potentially increase the classification level of the property in that space, and be able to get that margin that we needed to get

 

Taylor   13:53  

interesting and how many markets had you narrowed it down to because you have a limited number of hours you have to look at these deals in your free time you have to make offers on them on your free time. you need to know all these numbers for these markets before you even start. what do you do in terms of markets and everything.

 

Chris Wooten  14:15  

So you got it I was working for markets. I use for it kind of goes back to the way that the Marine Corps operates is in fire teams. When you start to function, a team of greater than four items, you start to lose connectivity with the effectiveness of the overall team. for people on the team, for markets, and just grow, grow, grow, and then letting the team members have their swim lane of what they do, but also try to keep them not over task words, a saturation and they can focus on their core. competency, and you get the most efficiency out of the team that way. 

just keeping everything in force. did the four markets. Obviously the the market stays on the front end. But then I had the realtor there in the market that could keep me up to date on any market changes. If a new sub market within the market was coming up, if things were slowing down in one area that we were previously in, all those kinds of things, I've kind of keep a pulse of the market that way. that's essentially the way to success that we used was just to not oversaturate any one person and delegate out to where nobody really had more than four responsibilities to tend to, and you can maintain good focus.

 

Taylor   15:44  

Okay, one of the things we talked about on this show is the importance of mindset and commitment when you're getting in any new business but real estate investing specifically. as far as the year commitment level, like when you're looking at a new market or you were looking at new markets, how much study time did you give yourself? And maybe days or whatever, however you want to break it down, where you said, Okay, I need to pick another market. I have two weeks to figure this out, or how did you think about that? So you're setting SMART goals and keeping that timeline in mind. 

 

Chris Wooten  16:32  

I like to run fast, so to speak. if I knew I needed to shift markets, or essentially, potentially build another team, what I would do is I would really go into crunch time where I might work later into the night sacrifice of sleep and get it done. I can't really say exactly how many hours it would take, but I had criteria That I would evaluate Current Population population growth or de escalation, employment and diversity of employment because you definitely don't want a one horse town. I would also look at crime stats and crime stats really comes into play when you're looking in the specific sub markets within the market. Because street to street can be very different. you need to get a feel for that. 

Also looking to see comparable properties and what's going on looking at sales in the market and see what the markets doing holistically with regard to that. with the sales, not just looking at the data, but actually digging into the properties because I was remote. I would look at the pictures of the listings, I would have contractor inspector or the agent, go to the property send me pictures or even virtually walk me through the property while they were on FaceTime or Skype so that I could see what kind of finishes were being put within the properties and that would kind of help us get a feel for Where that area was going? schools, definitely look at school ratings. That's really the main criteria. 

I mean is your population, your employment, your schools and your crime ratings. just make sure that everything is on an upward trend, not any still spaces, especially when you're working with flipping market. You don't want any stagnation in there. those are the primary things we look for. Cool.

 

Taylor   18:28  

So hey, we were talking before we hit record. You did a total of 20 remote flips. I have the number, right.

 

Chris Wooten  18:37  

Yes, it's right at 20. that was over. Right about four years we were typically completing about three times a year. We had some heavier and some lighter years. like I said, that was all just after our stuff and a lot of that was me holding the reins back because I didn't want to overcommit and get the tempo too high to where I couldn't maintain a good solid control of it. that's also what kind of got me into the apartment space was to redeploy some capital rather than bringing on another project. It was just it made more sense to me to get that different income stream and get into the apartment space.

 

Taylor   19:28  

Absolutely. I mean, at the end of the day, this is passive wealth strategies for busy professionals and the flipping world. Man the flipping business is very much a business it is taxed as such. It's taxed at a much higher rate than investing in a cash flowing real estate like we do with apartment syndication. you're holding yourself back by your own admission might not be the right word, but by your own destiny. 

You're holding yourself back. you didn't get over committed very smart. But it also sounds like this was taking you a considerable amount of your personal time would be considered your personal time outside of your WT you mentioned, you have a kid. you've got your whole family there to your other priorities. making that shift into multifamily. What was it like getting that first apartment acquisition? What did you do? Did you partner with others? Tell us about that. Okay, and

 

Chris Wooten  20:33  

that was actually I glossed over the taxes. I'm glad you brought that up. what I noticed early on, when I initially got the wholesale training, was wholesaling gets crushed with taxes, because you don't have any Well, you have minimal write offs when you're in the wholesaling world coming over into the flipping world. 

There's some additional write offs that you get from flipping but you still have a heavy tax burden because It is still active income. I knew from my rental properties that I liked having additional depreciation. 

I liked the festivity of it all. when I had the extra capital from the flips, a way to redeploy over into an apartment complex made sense to me because of the scalability versus buying multiple rental homes have one building so to speak, one roof, so to speak, and have multiple units within it. It lets you lever vacancies, you can scale, there's some scalability and your maintenance capability, getting different maintenance contracts done at a cheaper price because they're not having to relocate to a different house for multiple calls. I liked that idea with the apartment space. when I had that extra capital and I was able to find a good price on an apartment complex, I went ahead and bought it and that was me on my own. bought the first one, were just my own capital. even the second one was just my own capital. that was, once again, I hadn't really been exposed to the syndication arena at that point. 

I had been doing private notes with the single family flip space. on some of the single families, I may have a private note holder with me in the deal. I was able to that was one thing that I pride myself with is my entire time doing single family the remote flipping, I returned double digit returns to my note holders for the entire four year span I was doing that. I like to carry that over into the syndication space as well as I always work in that arena of my average annual return going into the double digit range to continue that track record that I had set of always being open revived that the double digit returns. 

They're not always easy to find. But if you stay in contact with the market, you stay in contact with the professionals that are coming across the opportunities and let them know what you're doing. They'll bring you in when the right opportunity presents itself. then you go in and execute.

 

Taylor   23:19  

Nice and you were in the rental game before but now you're you're really committing to a rental focused model where your income is coming in through just people renting the property. Are you doing a value add strategy on these apartment complexes you're acquiring?

 

Chris Wooten  23:40  

So yes, I like the idea of infinite returns. what I had on the first apartment complex, it was the partnership was shaky, so I was able to get a good price there. But I also saw the value add in the property. Those a couple of vacancies They had not normalize the rents to market in any fashion. I saw those two opportunities. they had, there was some physical modification of the property that could be done to make the property more effective for the market just had a bad unit mix. I was able to go in and get the unit mix correct for the market. then really just put a good management and driving direction. Within the three years we've pushed for, it's about 50%. we've hit that infinite return mark on that one. I say infinite return. the objective there was to be able to cash out refine myself because I was the only owner in it, get 100% of my capital out, and then I'm still in the deal. I still own the property. at that point, the return calculation is infinite. Obviously, there's still some Phantom equity in there which is great. But calculation side of the house got an infinite return. 

I still work to accomplish that, on the projects that I'm working, going forward is in time achieving that infinite return and still having myself with investors into the deals, they are more difficult to find. Now, the market is more saturated with people doing the same syndication model. those opportunities are harder to find and not be in heavy lift situations because that's something that I never wanted to take on either I going into the apartment space, something else that I liked was having a cash flowing asset from day one. that at least knew that the property the business could take care of itself. I wasn't going to need to bring in capital to pay the bills on the front end until I get it up. operating. 

I continue to operate with that same mindset of having a stable asset on the front end that can at least take care of itself that can pay its own bills. The return may not be great on the front end, which typically isn't. that's where the process improvement piece that I that I brought over from the Marine Corps life was being able to get into an asset, improve management processes, improve the property itself, make the property more efficient, and then be able to realize that gain on the back end and that increased return on the back end. what I also liked with the multifamily space was the ability to force appreciation which you can't do with single family and single family. 

You can model the product to marry up with the market and get the comparable appreciation, but you can't force the price. One of the product store in multifamily you can go in, physically clean it up administratively clean it up, whatever you need to do to increase that in a lie, and in turn, force the appreciation of that asset. I myself being very good at increasing efficiency in administrative processes and in the physical property itself, I've been able to really push the in a lie, to gather a better appreciation on the back end, which further facilitates being able to gain a supplemental note or even a Rifai to where you minimize the capital that's still in the deal. Going down the road, keep the property especially if the property is cash flowing and it's performing for you keep it but pull as much capital out as you can, ideally, all of it so then you end up in that infinite returns scenario.

 

Taylor   27:58  

Now, which one markets are you in and your multifamily investments is that and you're the ones you're looking at is the same for that you were in your flipping business or how have you reimagined so to speak the geographies that you're investing in now?

 

Chris Wooten  28:18  

Got it. Okay, one of the markets that I was doing the flipping in was a coastal market. I'm okay with that flipping because it was a short term hold environment. I don't like to take on extra risk and being along the coast with Hurricane potentials. I'm not a fan. I do not have any apartment holdings in that city. 

Two of the other cities, the multifamily space got very hot and they had a lot of new development in the multifamily space and those two cities, so it didn't make sense for me to get in there with what I see as all Market saturation. I knocked out of those. I stayed in one up in Clarksville, Tennessee. I stayed in that market. I continue continue to look for multifamily properties as they become available. The city it's on pace to grow an outpaced Chattanooga within about the next five years. Because they've had an inflow of Google, Amazon tires. The university up there just a couple years ago got a large grant to continue to grow and build out their platform. there's a lot of things happening within the city and the downtown area is gentrifying, as well. there's lots of things happening in that city. it's still attractive to me. 

But I needed to find extra cities, especially going into the syndication arena, bringing in investors needing to provide them the opportunity to not only get double digit returns, but also Ideally capture that infinite return and still stay within my population and employment demographic spaces. which took me into Louisville, Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky. 

Notice no coastal cities here. just very solid, tried and true cities that I when I'm looking for especially for syndications because I'm dealing with bigger product and more investors. I'm even more careful with the investors funds to ensure that as much risk as I can mitigate, mitigate. I go in and I look at even longer term demographics. If I can go back 20 years, I go back 20 years and see how the towns and how the sub areas of the towns have done over different market cycles to where I myself was it in The apartment space during those various cycles, but I can look back through the data and find that. 

I always have property management, or another apartment investing partner. in those areas that have been through the various cycles in those areas. There's only let's see, you've got three things you can leverage. You can leverage time, you can leverage money, and you can leverage people. Well, I'm syndicating because I don't have a ton of extra funds. that's how I'm leveraging some money. 

I leverage people by bringing on experts in each town that I'm working in, so that I can share in their knowledge and experiences and not have to replicate any headaches down the road from things that have happened in the past. then leveraging time kind of ties in with leveraging people. If you're utilizing people, delegating tasks, you're effectively gaining more time and accomplishing that same end product. I do those things. When looking in various cities, to make sure that I have a depth of understanding over many years of what the city's done through different market cycles, to make sure that it is stable, going forward to help roll out additional risks to help mitigate those risks. I've looked in and around Atlanta. Atlanta is difficult because it seems like everybody's going into Atlanta.

 

Taylor   32:27  

So true. Yeah.

 

Chris Wooten  32:29  

I haven't bought anything in Atlanta, but I do keep my eyes open to it. I still shop the Chattanooga market, even though I don't see it growing as fast as it once was. It still has a very solid data points to it. it's still continuing on an uptrend as it hasn't completely normalized and as it downgraded any. It's just not as high of a growth area. But I am researching other markets. I'm currently researching Evansville Indiana. 

There's some future developments. As far as infrastructure coming into that space that I see being beneficial for that market, it may still be five years out, but I've at least got it on my scope to continue to watch. if the right opportunity were to present itself in the next year or two years, even knowing that mark would be five years out, if I'm buying in one to two years, I'm only potentially three to four years from that infrastructure trigger. I'm holding for that whole period, because I normally like to look at at a minimum of five year old, but more often than not, to get into the infinite calculation space. 

You've got a five year old with a supplemental somewhere between the three to five year mark, and then your end hold is a seven to 10 year. I'm all my areas that I'm looking into I'm looking for up to a 10 year old after achieving a significant capital return, if not a complete capital return, and just keep that cash flowing asset in that space.

 

Taylor   34:13  

Nice, nice. unds like you've got it all worked out. Now we are going to take a quick break for our sponsors. All right, Chris, I've got three questions. I asked every guest on the show. Are you ready?

 

Chris Wooten  34:26  

I'm ready. All right.

 

Taylor   34:28  

First one, what is the best investment in real estate that you've ever made?

 

Chris Wooten  34:33  

best investment in real estate, I would probably say would be my first apartment complex. I say that just because I still have it. it is returning an infinite return at this point. I doubled my money on it and some and I'm still getting cash flow from it. that to date is my best one, even though I've had some very high yielding Single Family flips, that one is continuing to grow. If I were to calculate a number, that return is continuing to grow. But since I've fully returned all the capital, essentially, it's an empty return at this point. Cool.

 

Taylor   35:16  

I like it. On the other side of that, what is the worst investment that you've made?

 

Chris Wooten  35:21  

So the worst investment, I had one flip. it really surprised this really surprised us. We did our market study, we did our sub market study all the way down to the street. we saw the benefits and it met all of our margins and everything looked amazing. we finished out the flip. Problem one, we finished out the flip it was coming into the winter season, and the market tends to slow down as far as people buying single families going into the holidays. okay, we may have to hold this for a little longer than we wanted to. not ideal but we'll deal with Well, we got into February and an ice storm came in, and there was a large tree. 

Needless to say, the ice storm brought the tree down. we had to redo a big section of the roof. we lost a lot of our springtime buyers. We got the property back on the market coming into the summer. It was back on the market for about six weeks, and the AC that was in the attic, eight itself and essentially flooded the living room. we had to go back into another repair cycle without one. we lost the remainder of the summer. We got into the fall, got it back into market and finally got it sold. not only did we have to completely uncontrolled issues pop up that took us some additional repair components to get it done. 

But we Also, like I say, we were off by one street, we were not able to get the cops on our side of the street versus the other side of the it's a three lane road, the main artery of the town, we were on the wrong side of the main artery of the town to be able to get the comps equal to the other side of the road. we were not able to get a buyer at the market point we wanted to get to, but because we had already had the two additional repair events that we had to take care of, we just cut our losses. I say losses. 

We still had a positive return coming out of it. But essentially, I ensure that my my note holder got their double digit. I took a low single digit, so it was painful for me. But it was better than what could have been if we would have continued to hold it and waiting for going through another winter. Who knows what else could have happened. just went ahead and cut loose for that one. I took the small single digit return myself and moved on.

 

Taylor   38:05  

Man that is painful. Now my favorite question here at the end of this show is what is the most important lesson that you've learned in investing?

 

Chris Wooten  38:17  

So the most important thing that I've learned in investing and in business is constant mentorship and growth. obviously, I've gone to the courses, I continuously just digest podcast, just keep a market and understanding what markets are doing an understanding of what people are doing, how new technologies may be affecting the way processes are happening and systems that people are using. 

But also getting into to taking additional courses. Getting into masterminds. I'm in a multi family syndication mastermind, and I believe they're the largest one in the country is the way that advertising come across. I will hold to that and leveraging the people within those groups, their experiences, their broader networks is invaluable to continuing to press forward and grow in the space.

 

Taylor   39:18  

Awesome. I love it. Chris, thank you for everything so far today if people want to learn more about what you're doing in your apartment syndication business, where can they get in touch with you?

 

Chris Wooten  39:30  

So my company is Wootencapital.com you can check us out on there and read a little bit more about us and contact us on there. I'm also on all the social media as real Chris Wooten @REALCHRISWOOTEN and you can connect with me on any other social media platforms with that tagline,

 

Taylor   39:58  

awesome. Much appreciated. Once again, thank you for joining us. Thanks for all the wisdom and best of luck in continuing your apartment syndication business.

 

Chris Wooten  40:09  

Awesome. Thank you for having me. It's a great show. Thank you.

 

Taylor   40:12  

been my pleasure to everybody tuning in. Thank you for listening today. If you're enjoying the show, please leave us a rating and review on Apple podcast. gotta stop saying iTunes, gotta say Apple podcast, but it's a big help helps other people learn about the show. If you know someone who could use a little bit more passive wealth in their lives, please share the show with them and help bring them into our little tribe will get them going in their investment business. Once again, thank you for tuning in. I hope you have a great rest of your day. Have a great rest of your week and we will talk to you on the next one. Bye

 

[/bg_collapse]

This episode is brought to you by Roofstock, the world’s largest residential real estate investing marketplace. Open an account for free and start browsing turnkey investment properties today.

We are also supported by You Need a Budget. YNAB is a different kind of personal financial tracking company. They’ll help you track and plan your money with your priorities in mind. Open your trial account today and give it a shot!

About the Host

Taylor on stage

Hi, I’m Taylor. To date I’ve acquired or partnered on over $250 Million in Commercial Real Estate Investments. I help busy professionals invest in multifamily and self storage real estate through my company NT Capital

Not Sure How to Tell a Good Deal from a Bad Deal?

Learn 7 Red Flags in Passive Real Estate Investing

Free 7 Day Video Course

Real Listener Reviews

Extremely useful podcast
Extremely useful podcast
@thehappyrexan
Read More
Short, impactful with excellent guests. If you have a full time W-2 job or business and are looking for ways to get involved in real estate on the side, this is for you.
Simple & effective information!
Simple & effective information!
@jjff0987
Read More
This podcast is worth listening to for investors at all levels. The information is simplified for the high level investors but detailed enough to educate seasoned investors about nuances of the business. I recommend!
Awesome Podcast!!!
Awesome Podcast!!!
@Clarisse Gomez
Read More
The host of Passive Wealth Strategies for Busy Professionals podcast highlights all aspects of real estate investing and more in this can’t miss podcast! The host and expert guests offer insightful advice and information that is helpful to anyone that listens!
Great podcast!
Great podcast!
@Owchy
Read More
Love all the information and insights from Taylor and his guest. Fun and entertaining. Highly recommend.
Previous
Next

Popular Posts