Are great property investors born or made? If you’re like me you were told from very young age that if you want to succeed at something – be it sport, school or a musical instrument – that you must put in time, hard work and importantly, practice.
Most of us learnt our times tables
by repeating them over and over – practicing multiplication was the most
effective means of learning this skill.
Well the same applies to property
investment.
Successful property investors are
not born with a “How to” manual and they certainly don’t rely on luck.
Fact is one of the big differences
between the athletes, musicians and business people who excel in their chosen
field, compared to the “average Joe” is in the years of practice they dedicate
to honing their craft.
And
this also applies to property investors
Successful property investors
understand that to be good at what they do – creating wealth with real estate –
they must learn the rules, gain experience by “doing it” and then improve by
refining how they do it.
Training
for investment success
In his book Outlier, Malcolm
Gladwell noted that in most occupations where complex cognitive and motor
skills are required – such as performing complicated surgery or playing the
piano – experts in these fields have had an average 10,000 hours of training.
The key is being able to eliminate
all the “noise.”
You need to be able to chunk down
all the information available into usable bite-size pieces through a finely
honed retrieval system that can quickly screen out irrelevant options given the
specific situation.
This skill comes from familiarity
gained by “doing it.”
It’s like top tennis players who
through experience have developed a sense of where a ball is likely to be
served by unconsciously noting the subtle changes in the stance of their
opponent.
Or the champion cricketer who seems
able to anticipate where a ball will be bowled even before it has left the
bowler’s hand.
It’s the same type of perspective
that gives seasoned property investors an edge over the average investor.
Think about it…
Having lived and invested though
five property cycles means I don’t get carried away by all the property
naysayers and doomsday merchants that seem to concern many other investors.
I’m not an eternal optimist. I’ve
just seen it all before.
Consistency is key
No matter which investment strategy
you select, be it capital growth or cash flow, renovations or property
development; you’re likely to find that a small group of investors, say 10% do
really well and the rest struggle.
Rather than jumping from one shiny
thing to the next like the average investor, these successful investors do the
same things over and over again.
They set their goals, map their
course and then keep doing what works, refining their skills along the way.
By sticking with a tried and tested
strategy, these investors know how to navigate any tricky bumps in the road and
become accustomed to seeing the opportunities and potential earning power in
market movements.
This means their success depends on them
and the skills they have refined throughout their investment journey, rather
than on the market place.
But that’s not how most beginning investors do it
They want to climb the property
ladder all the way to the top and nothing will stand in their way.
They start using the latest fad from
some get rich quick seminar, buy their first investment and then look for the
next big way to make millions.
And thus begins a cycle of jumping
from one bandwagon to the next.
However we know most investors never
achieve financial freedom. In fact most never get past their second property.
This is in part because they have
never refined their real estate strategy and taken the time to learn the rules
of the game, so they inevitably fall at the first hurdle and more often than
not, call it quits before they make any progress at all.
That’s why around 20% of those who
buy an investment property sell up in the first year and around 50% of those
getting involved in real estate investment sell up in the first 5 years.
So
when will I become an expert?
The way to become an expert is to
do one thing a hundred times, rather than 100 things once.
Yes, practice makes perfect, which
means that rather than looking for the “one big deal that will make you rich
quickly”, you should start your investment journey gently, knowing that you’ll
make mistakes along the way and learning from these will make you a better
investor.
Before you panic about having to
commit 10,000 plus hours to property investment before you can call yourself an
“expert”, let me assure you that there are ways to speed up the learning process
in real estate.
The simplest is to find a mentor who
has already achieved what you want to achieve and let them guide you.
Study how they think, because it’s
likely a large part of their success comes from their mindset.
Then emulate their successful behaviors
and learn from the mistakes they made in order to advance your own skills and
refine your own strategies.
How will you know when you’re an expert?
The main thing that separates the
successful investor from the wannabe’s is an ability to consistently outperform
the averages.
And yes, to get to this level of
expertise, takes time, patience and practice.
How you can speed up becoming an expert:
The safest way I know how to speed
up your learning curve and save yourself making mistakes is to learn from
experts
But be careful…only take advice from
those who have done it successfully and significantly and kept their wealth for
a long period of time.
In other words find practitioners
not just teachers….
There is a long, long list of people
who have conducted property seminars over the past 15 years giving wanted
sounded like good advice who are no longer around.
Sure, there are those who can teach,
even if they haven’t done it, but why take the risk.
WHAT
DOES ALL THIS MEAN FOR YOU?
Of course…if you want to grow your
property portfolio in a more difficult environment next year you’ll need to buy
the right type of property.
One that has a level of scarcity,
meaning they will be in continuous strong demand by owner occupiers (to keep
pushing up the value) and tenants (to help subsidize your mortgage); in the
right location (one that has outperformed the long term averages), at the right
time in the property cycle (that would be now in many states) and for the right
price.
To become a successful investor you will need to
surround yourself with a team of independent and unbiased professional advisors
(not sales people) – a team of people who are known, proven and trusted, so it
is probably appropriate to remind you that in changing times like we are
experiencing, no one can help you quite like the independent property
investment strategists.
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