Note Camp LIVE
Note Camp is the real estate industry’s largest and longest running online note convention focused on the niche of distressed mortgages. Note Camp focuses on providing Content, Actions, Marketing, and Profit generating nuggets for your real estate and note investments. Note Camp features speakers, vendors, investors, and professionals in the note and distressed mortgage arena to help you overcome obstacles and take your business to the next level.
The Note Camp Podcast is the recorded replays from each session of the live conference. Past speakers have included Sharon Lechter, Rhonda Britton, Greg Reid, Joel Block, Eddie Speed, Donna Bauer, Kristin Gerst, Aaron Young and a variety of other real estate, marketing, legal, and mindset experts to help you make the most of your time and effort.
Note Camp is hosted each year by “the Note Guy” Scott Carson who is the founder of WeCloseNotes.com Inc (http://WeCloseNotes.com) and the host of the Note Closers Show Podcast.
In this commercial real estate investing series, Scott features experts in raising capital, self-storage investing, real estate syndications, apartment investing, commercial finance, self-directed IRA investing, loan servicing, 1031- Exchanges, bankruptcy, accounting, and a variety of other experts to help you to help you grow and expand your real estate investing experience and knowledge.
You can watch the video replays of each session at https://bit.ly/NoteCampCommerical. You can also register for the next Note Camp convention at http://NoteCamp.live.
No matter what your level of investing experience is you will find something to help you expand your real estate investing by listening in and attending Note Camp. Each session is recorded LIVE and each speaker provides time for Q&A while delivering reliable and real-world content during their presentations.
Whether you are focused on investing in residential or commercial real estate, performing or nonperforming notes, rentals, apartments, or other commercial asset classes Note Camp is the place for you to learn from the best and brightest in the industry. If you struggle with raising capital, marketing, accounting, or the legal side of investing, Note Camp is the place where you will find answers and real world solutions.
Scott Carson has been an active real estate investor since 2001 and focused solely on the niche of distressed debt investing since 2008. He has purchased over $1 billion in distressed notes and he has helped his students close on thousands of notes for their own portfolio and wealth accumulation. Make sure to check out his other podcasts including the Note Closers Show Podcast and the Note Night in America podcast. You can also schedule a call with Scott at http://talkwithscottcarson.com. Scott has also been teaching the niche of note investing since 2010 and offers a variety of training programs, classes, and 1:1 coaching programs to help you capitalize on the ever-growing distressed note industry.
Scott Carson was the 2014 Note Educator of the Year (Noteworthy USA) and the runner-up for 2018 Investor of the Year (Think Realty). He has been featured in a variety of publications and media including the Wall Street Journal, Investors Business Daily, Yahoo Finance, Investor Magazine, Realty411, and Inc.com. Scott was also recently recognized as a Top 10 Entrepreneur to Watch in 2022 by US Reporter News magazine.
Episode Blogs
We are all responsible for our own success. Some people always look for somebody to blame for not having success in real estate. You got to know you can’t have success without failure in any type of investing. If you’re in a position of not having the type of success that you want and you’re not in the place that you want to be, you have two choices. You can either just continue along
One of the great things about traveling abroad is you are able to take in some of the advantages and disadvantages of travelling. There’s always the good, bad and ugly part of travel when you take a long, extended vacation. When you’re in the note business, it’s important to make sure everything keeps running. The beautiful thing about being in the note business is you don’t have to be here to have to take
Gail Villanueva and Cody Cox discuss some things you could do when life throws you curve balls, because in life, sometimes you have to be Semper Gumby. If you aren’t flexible and adaptable both in life and in the note business, then it’s going to be very difficult. Curve balls can happen sometimes, both as personal and professional events. From a note perspective, you go through training, you build your processes, and you have
Everybody out there is good at something and they know something that they can share to the world through their network of people. That should be an easy one, but another thought is what you do not know. Think about something that you don’t know, then do the research and learn how to do them. Eric Hyde and Katie Moton talk about different ways you can market yourself. Eric proves his point about how
In the note business, the primary intent is to let the borrowers keep their home and happy about their choices. When you’re a nonperforming first note holder, you are first in line, you have a lot of flexibility going there, and you have a lot of options that you could provide the borrower to ensure that they can keep their home. Patty Ped of Aider Financials shares it’s more challenging to provide the help
When it gets down to it, people want to see numbers. They want to know how notes are doing the return on investment. They want to know the real world situation. Eric Hyde and Gail Villanueva break down a case study on a note deal that Eric calls Paying in Dayton. They talk about the marketing that went behind it, the finding of a JV partner and what that entails. In the note world,
It’s very easy to look at other real estate investing sometimes as a zero sum game where I win, you lose, or vice versa. That’s not always the case in notes. In the note business, you can positively help someone’s lives at the same time that you can earn a return for yourself and a return for your investor. Another thing is there’s a very high degree of camaraderie. You meet and work with
Just starting out? A lot of folks getting into the note business will go ahead and commit to getting the free online training courses, listening to the podcast. That only gets you so far. It’ll give you a 40,000-foot view of what the note business is about. But when you get down to it, there’s so many moving parts in a note transaction. It can just make a complete left turn on you if you’re
Are you seeking better ways of maximizing a conference’s value? Attending these events can be a lot of fun, but you want to make sure you’re extracting their maximum potential. Don’t just waste precious time and money going around and not really getting anything out of it. Make a game plan ahead of time! Grab a pen and paper, and write down your goals for the event. What do you really want to accomplish there? What do
Your note investing horror story happens more often than you think. Problems with vendors, deals and other people in the note investing industry can really affect your quality of life. But even the ugliest of stories can contain valuable nuggets of wisdom to be used for next time. Learn how to pick the most effective solutions for common problems in note investing with Chris Seveney of 7E Investments and Gail Greenberg of Win Win
Staying motivated in note investing can be difficult at times. How does your inner wound manifest itself in your life? Maybe you’d be passionate about new goals but later lose interest in pursuing them. Maybe you’ve always felt like your lack of confidence is keeping you from getting there. Here’s the thing: it’s all in your head. It’s your subconscious saying that you don’t deserve to succeed, and that there would be bad, unwelcome
It might sound odd, but the only way to succeed in marketing for note investing is to be willing to fail. You’re not going to be an expert at it right off the bat. You’re just not. No matter how many exit strategies you have, things can still go wrong and that’s okay. What did you learn from it? How can those insights be used to give you an edge next time? Learn how