I Gave Myself a Raise
I was reading some of the great real estate lessons at CashFlowDepot.com and ran across a great article, “I Gave Myself a Raise” by Jack Miller. You can see it below.
He makes an important point about rental property cycles and how you can get a raise every year by just sending out a little form letter. If you have 10 houses and the rent goes up just $50 a month each, that’s an additional $500 per month. With 20 houses, that’s a $1000 per month raise – all with the stroke of a pen.
What’s even more amazing is you don’t even need to own the houses to get this raise.
With a technique called Master Leasing, you can rent a property from an owner with the right to sublease to someone else. You get to keep the difference between what you rent the house for and what you collect from your tenant. Even though you don’t own the house, you can still send that rent increase letter to every house you have a Master Lease with. Another advantage of Master Leasing is you don’t have to pay for repairs.
Master Leasing is the fastest and easiest way to get CASH FLOW quickly. Many CashFlowDepot.com members have able to generate a $5000 to $10,000 per month cash flow quickly.
Join me Tuesday, March 27th for the CashFlowDepot.com training call, you’ll learn how one young couple went from zero to 42 Master Leases in less than two years. CashFlowDepot.com members, log in to the web site for call in details. (If you’re not a member yet, you can join HERE for only $97 for a full year of access.
Let’s see, 42 houses X $50 a month…. that’s a $2100 per month RAISE (on top of the cash flow they already get) … all from sending out a little letter.
If you want to learn how you can get monthly cash flow (WITH ANNUAL RAISES) on houses you don’t even own, be in Dallas Texas May 19-21 for David Tilney’s Master Lease and Manage seminar. SEE DETAILS HERE
I’ll be there — I hope to see you there too.
Best of Success,
Jackie Lange
Here’s Jack’s article
I Gave Myself a Raise by Jack Miller
There’s a cycle in the landlord business that makes my life easier than for many of those who own rental income property. First of all, unlike my tax year, my tenant year doesn’t start in Continue reading “I Gave Myself a Raise” »


