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Mobile Home Park Mastermind

751 members • Free

Wholesaling Real Estate

66.5k members • Free

Coaching Inc.

163 members • Free

1000 Houses

88 members • Free

Retirement CASH FLOW

503 members • Free

17 contributions to Retirement CASH FLOW
Using this platform
Hey all! I want to introduce you to a few features here on Skool that can add money to your bank account. First off there is an affiliate program that can get you paid big time. By using the invite link on the right, that is your affiliate link. Just email someone that link to join this community. Even if it is 6 months later, if they enroll in an education program you get 20% of the purchase. Roughly 2k into your bank account. The next way is to use the link in your settings to invite someone to create their own Skool community, you get paid monthly going forward every time they pay their subscription fees. Can you think of other ways to make money on Skool?
2 likes • Dec '25
Awesome!
Mobile home parks
🚐🏡 Let’s talk Mobile Home Park investing. Most people never even consider it as a retirement cash-flow strategy… but it can be one of the most predictable, boring-in-a-good-way income plays when it’s done right in an area where these parks are widely accepted as a normal place to live. We picked North Carolina NC to focus on because of several reasons. Here’s why I’m bringing it up inside Retirement Cash Flow: ✅ Demand stays strong... affordable housing isn’t going away NC fits perfectly! ✅ You’re often renting the dirt, not the home. Water sewer and trash pickup ✅ Small changes can move cash flow fast (trash billing, water recovery, lot rent bumps, occupancy clean-up) But… I don’t want to “Preach at you.” I want to start a real conversation with everyone who are curious, skeptical, or already looking.
Poll
18 members have voted
5 likes • Dec '25
Ive been mostly doing mobiles on scattered Lots - Im looking at a small park this week with 19 spaces in GA.
4 likes • Dec '25
Merry Christmas Mike and Mary!
The day I quit my job...
I came home with a Restaurant grade charbroiler! Up until that day we had a favorite steakhouse here in town, Clarks Landing. We were able to tour the kitchen one night and I saw how they made such awesome steaks seared perfectly. I'm like...I'm getting one of those! So I quit my J.O.B. (Just Over Broke) on Friday and Saturday morning I went to the Restaurant supply and bought an $1,800 36" Charbroiler and a stainless table and my wife thought I was nuts! "You quit your job and spend that kind of money the next day? She soon figured out my logic. We were dropping $150 every steak session at Clarks Landing (roughly every 3 weeks) and now that I am Voluntarily Self Unemployed, things had to change. Up until that tour of the restaurant kitchen, I kept buying outdoor grills that would fall apart every 3 years and they never had the sear heat to properly cook a steak! It's been 20 years now and I have almost never bought a steak in a restaurant...and I still have the same charbroiler!
The day I quit my job...
3 likes • Dec '25
Was Clark’s landing in Clark, NJ?
Flipping Houses vs The Note Business
I just spent 3 days (7 hours a day) at a big real estate event and here’s what hit me. They broke the whole game down into 3 roles: Finder The dog on the bone. Calling homeowners, chasing FSBOs, digging through every crack in the market trying to find real deals at 60 cents on the dollar. Their job is to feed the Operator. Operator The flipper. The one in the chaos. Hiring contractors, buying materials, lining up the money, paying everybody, dealing with inspectors, buyers, lenders, drama, delays, all the shit that has to be handled just to get one house sold. Funder The money. Private lender comes in, looks at the numbers, decides yes or no, wires the funds, and then goes back to their life while the Operator sweats it out. When the deal closes, they get paid and look for the next one. Everyone in that room—attendees and coaches—kept pointing to the same “endgame”: 👉 Be the Funder Be the Funder Be the Funder And I’m sitting there thinking: I’ve been doing a version of this for 20 years… but louder. Because the note business is the Funder on steroids. We’re not funding one or two flips, getting cashed out, then letting our money sit around hoping for the next “good deal” to come along. It's also a race to the bottom. The operator is always looking for the cheapest money. Why borrow at 12% when I can get it for 7 or 8 or 6. Those are crap numbers. As note investors, we buy the paper. We buy groups of deals. We control the income stream. We work them out, restructure, modify, foreclose when we have to, and get paid from multiple directions. Some notes pay my retirement accounts for 20 years tax free! My family business can comfortably work 5–6 deals at the same time. Any more than that and yeah, we start to go a little bonkers—but in a good way. That’s leverage. That’s control. That’s being the Funder with way more options than a one-off flip. If you’re tired of only swinging a hammer or chasing leads and you want to see how the “Funder on steroids” side really works, drop a 🔥 in the comments or message me “NOTES” and I’ll walk you through how this model actually builds long-term cash flow.
0 likes • Nov '25
The House Fix and Flip Game is tough business! Too Hard!
1-10 of 17
Tom Nardone
3
24points to level up
@tom-nardone-7588
Investor for 40 years. A Millerite. I learned from Jack & John & Jimmy & Pete. From South Florida and host the Investor Addicts Cruises.

Active 5d ago
Joined Nov 20, 2024
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