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The Real Estate InvestHER Show with Elizabeth Faircloth and Andresa Guidelli
Creatively funding your deals will help you grow your real estate portfolio more quickly. On today's episode, we talk with Tamar Hermes, a full-time real estate investor and educator, about the power of private money. We discuss with Tamar how she how she went from house hacking a duplex in her twenties to passively investing in syndications, how creative financing can help you achieve your real estate goals, and how to get over the fear of the first deal. We also discuss the three things that hold women back from getting started in investing and how you can move through the doubt. Tamar Hermes is a full-time Real Estate Investor and educator. After building successful businesses in retail and entertainment industries, she turned her attention to Real Estate with a mission to get more women to become investors and continue to build her portfolio. Tamar has been investing in Real Estate for over 20 years with a focus on appreciation with buy & hold single-family homes and duplexes in Los Angeles. In the past few years, she has expanded her portfolio to include passive multi-family investments across multiple states, private lending, and Airbnb properties. She bought her first duplex when she was 28. She has three kids, married for 18 years, and plans to relocate from Los Angeles to Austin in July On today's episode, we discuss a ton with Tamar, including: How to approach a private lender for funding The importance of a credit score when securing loans What holds women back from stepping into the wealth they deserve Why you should be crystal clear on your investing formula and strategy. Books/Resources Man's Search for Meaning by Viktor E. Frankl Discover the Power of Real Estate Investing webinar Contact Information Wealthwarriorwoman.com hello@wealthwarriorwoman.com InvestHER Community Our mission is to support and inspire women real estate investors around the globe to live a financially free and balanced life. We are dedicated to creating empowering online and in person communities where women have a non-intimidating environment to ask questions and receive the support they need. Our vision is to see all woman investors achieve her financial freedom goals on her own terms. How To Join the InvestHER Movement 1) The Real Estate InvestHER Podcast - The weekly show details the journey of some of the most amazing women real estate investors around the world, who open up their lives and share practical and strategic tools for growing a rental portfolio, flipping houses and the mindset that allows them to run a successful investing business while taking care of their families and most importantly taking care of themselves. Subscribe via Itunes Subscribe via Android Subscribe via Stitcher 2) InvestHER Community on Facebook We have 2k+ members in our Facebook InvestHER Community (and growing!) This is a safe place for women to ask real estate investing questions and gain the support they need to achieve their goals! 3) InvestHER Meetups Around the Globe We have over 4k+ meetup members attending close to 25 InvestHER Meetups across the country and Canada. Meetups are being held monthly by experienced InvestHER Leaders! Learn more about our InvestHER leaders, meetup locations, and how to become an InvestHER Leader HERE!
Today's first headlines: Rome musician Lee Shealy joins legendary Atlanta Rhythm Section. ‘We all get along great. It’s just neat to listen to all their stories from years together.’ Business: As first half of 2020 ends, some big minuses but also hundreds of millions of dollars in new investment across Northwest Georgia despite the pandemic. State-record 2,226 new COVID-19 cases since Saturday; Georgia sees 11,282 additional positive tests in 7 days, a 17.1% surge. Reports: Woman dead, man shot Sunday evening near Crump Road in Cartersville. Business: Second downtown Rome studio on the way as Playa Azul Media moves in above Jamwich. Rant of the Day: A different way to celebrate the red, white and blue. So how do we celebrate Independence Day this year? The spirit certainly is willing but the options for what helps make it all magical -- the time spent with family, friends and neighbors, from parades to fireworks to picnics and trips to the lakes and rivers -- are limited. Ridge Ferry Park will not be the base for the community celebration we're used to although Rome-Floyd Parks and Recreation and sponsor Redmond Regional Medical Center promise to light up the sky for a good 20 minutes that night. (One of the best seats in the past? Atop the parking deck by Town Green). The day-long celebration in Cartersville is on hold this year as is Calhoun's star-spangled extravaganza. The Rockwell-like community parade in Cave Spring is a go, with social distancing precautions and all, but will people turn out to march or watch? And will the homemade ice cream be served? A three-hour event is planned in downtown Rome -- including prayer, songs and a citizens parade -- but who will show up, especially in 90-plus degree heat and a thunderstorm threat? Will everyone be wearing masks? Will we social distance? And, if not, will we pay a price with more positive test results in mid-July? On the day we celebrate our freedom, we're likewise supposed to be observing vital health restrictions to limit the spread of coronavirus. Perhaps America in 2020 has to learn about new types of sacrifice. But that doesn't mean we can't come up with new ways to celebrate as well. After all, look what a Cave Spring parent did to both educate and entertain her young sons 35 years ago. Today, it is perhaps the most nostalgic thing we do in Northwest Georgia. It doesn't matter how you celebrate; just remember what we're celebrating. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/john-druckenmiller/support
The Republican Party’s 2020 primary season has been pretty straightforward. President Trump has no serious competition for the Republican nomination. But for the Democrats, it’s far less clear who will become their party’s nominee for president of the United States.With so many candidates competing to define the future of the Democratic Party and running on a range of ideologies, it’s been a heated presidential primary season.Candidates have tried to boost their potential and their profile by winning early voting states. But those states offer a very small portion of the total delegates needed to secure the nomination.Things change a bit on Super Tuesday, which falls on March 3. On Super Tuesday, the most states at a time hold nominating contests, the most voters have a chance to go to the polls, and the most delegates will be allotted to candidates. More than a third of all delegates for the Democratic National Convention are up for grabs on this day alone.Despite recent dropouts from Pete Buttigieg and Tom Steyer, the Democratic primary field is still quite large and therefore delegates may be broadly split among candidates. So what happens if no candidate wins the majority of delegates needed to become the nominee at the party convention in July?On this episode of the “Can He Do That?” podcast, “Primary Politics” author Elaine Kamarck answers questions like: How are delegates allocated? What’s a superdelegate anyway? And why is it all so complicated?Related episodes:Hacks, chaos and doubt: Lessons from the 2016 election revisitedIf a president is impeached, can they run for reelection?
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