You know why you are investing and what you are looking to buy. Now comes the hardest skill in real estate — finding good deals and knowing quickly whether a property is worth pursuing. This module covers the complete deal-finding system, the essential financial formulas every investor needs to know, and how to identify the motivated sellers most investors never find.
The most common complaint among beginning investors is "I can't find any good deals." And almost every time, the diagnosis is the same: they are not generating enough leads at the top of the funnel. They browse ten listings on Zillow, see nothing that excites them, and conclude the market is too competitive. What they have actually discovered is that ten listings is not enough to find a deal — not that deals do not exist.
Real estate investing is a numbers game. Good deals are not sitting on the first page of Zillow highlighted with a badge that says "great investment opportunity." They are hidden beneath the surface — waiting for investors who build systems to surface them. The investors who consistently find and buy good deals do not get lucky. They build a funnel and work it every week.
Marketing systems consistently generate potential purchase opportunities. This is where most investors fail — they generate too few leads. The top of your funnel needs to be wide. Plan for 50–100 leads to produce 1 deal. More leads = more deals. This is the number one lever every investor can pull.
Apply your buy box criteria quickly to eliminate properties that do not fit your investing profile. Is this in your target location? Is the property type right? Does a rough look at the numbers suggest it could work? This step saves you from spending time analyzing deals that were never going to work for you.
For leads that pass the pre-screen, dig deeper. Talk to the seller. Understand their situation — why are they selling, what is their timeline, what problem are they trying to solve? Walk or drive the property. Get the financial details. This is where relationships are built and deals are shaped before any offer is made.
Based on your financial analysis, make an offer that works for your numbers. Good investors make a lot of offers — many of which are declined. That is expected and normal. An offer is not a commitment. It is a conversation opener.
Many of the best deals come from sellers who said no six months ago. Their situation changes. Their urgency increases. The investor who stays in contact — politely, without pressure — is the one who gets the call when the seller is ready to move. Most investors give up after one interaction. The deal-finders follow up consistently.
An accepted offer moves to contract. This gives you the legal right to buy the property and the due diligence period to verify everything you need to know before closing. The clock starts here.
Verify the financials, inspect the property, confirm title, finalize financing, and close. By the time you reach the bottom of the funnel you have a much smaller number of deals compared to the leads at the top. That is how it is supposed to work.
When investors tell Coach Carson they cannot find good deals, he can predict their problem 99% of the time before they finish the sentence: they are not generating enough leads at the top of the funnel. If you are not buying deals, work backwards. How many leads are you generating per month? How many offers are you making? Almost always, the solution is more volume at the top — not a change in strategy or market.
Coach Carson walks through the complete back-of-envelope rental property analysis framework — from the Warren Buffett rule for rental deals through the 1% rule, unleveraged yield, cap rate, cash flow, cash-on-cash return, and all four sources of equity growth. Published December 2025. No spreadsheets, no complicated calculators — just the mental math and frameworks experienced investors use to evaluate deals in real time. This is the most practical deal analysis video available for small and mighty investors.
Back-of-envelope analysis, the Warren Buffett rule for rental deals, unleveraged yield, cap rate, cash-on-cash return, and all four equity growth sources — with a real duplex example at the end. The most comprehensive and current rental analysis walkthrough available. Directly reinforces Lesson 2 of this module.
Coach Carson · YouTube December 2025 · ~46 min · Comprehensive
The difference between a good deal and a bad deal is in the numbers. Not the feel of a property. Not the neighborhood name. Not what the seller is asking. The numbers. Every experienced investor has a set of formulas they run on every property — quickly, often in their head — to determine whether a deal is worth pursuing. Here are the essential ones.
The fastest initial screen. If a property's monthly rent is at least 1% of the purchase price, it has a chance of producing positive cash flow. This is a rough filter — not a final answer. Use it to quickly eliminate properties that will never work and focus your time on those that might.
Another quick screen. GRM tells you how many years of gross rent it would take to pay for the property at full price. Lower is generally better — it means you are paying less per dollar of gross income. Compare GRM across properties in the same market.
Once a property passes your quick screen, you need to estimate Net Operating Income (NOI) — the income the property generates after operating expenses but before mortgage payments. The long way is to estimate every expense line by line. The fast way is the 50% rule: assume operating expenses equal approximately 50% of gross rent. What is left is your estimated NOI.
The 50% rule is a fast estimation tool — not a substitute for real underwriting. Actual operating expenses vary by property type, age, location, and management approach. Well-maintained properties in good areas often run 40–45%. Older properties with deferred maintenance may run 55–60%. Always verify actual expenses before committing to buy. The 50% rule tells you if a deal deserves more investigation — not whether to close on it.
Also called cap rate. This tells you what return you would get on the property if you paid all cash — no mortgage. It lets you compare properties on a level playing field regardless of financing. A 7% cap rate means $7 of annual income for every $100 of property value.
How much cash does the property return annually relative to the cash you put in? This accounts for your mortgage — so it reflects your actual leveraged return on investment. A 10% cash-on-cash means for every $30,000 you invested, you get $3,000 back per year in cash flow.
What lands in your bank account each month after all expenses and the mortgage payment. This is the most concrete measure of a property's immediate financial performance. Positive cash flow means the property pays you. Negative means you subsidize it.
The fastest way to build equity is to buy below market value. A 10% discount on a $200,000 property creates $20,000 of instant equity the day you close. This margin of safety also protects you if the market softens after you buy.
Cash flow gets the attention. But the full picture of why real estate builds wealth requires understanding all four ways a property grows your equity over time:
Buying below market value immediately creates equity. A 10% discount on a $200,000 property creates $20,000 of wealth the day you close — without the market moving, without doing any work. The skill of finding motivated sellers and negotiating effectively is the primary engine of this equity source.
Physically improving a property (renovating, adding a unit, converting space), operationally improving it (raising rents to market, reducing vacancies, cutting unnecessary expenses), or legally improving it (rezoning, converting to condos) all increase NOI — which directly increases value using the income approach. This is the active wealth-creation engine of real estate investing.
Real estate in high-demand locations tends to appreciate passively as population grows, inflation rises, and housing supply fails to keep up. The US average long-term appreciation rate is approximately 3–4% annually — roughly matching the rate of inflation. In high-growth markets it is meaningfully higher. You do not earn this — you benefit from it by holding.
Every month your tenant's rent payment covers your mortgage — and a portion of each payment reduces the loan balance. This principal paydown starts small (most early payments go to interest) but compounds over time. After 10 years on a 30-year mortgage you have paid down roughly 10–15% of the original balance. After 20 years, significantly more. Your tenant built that equity for you.
Most properties listed on the MLS are priced at market value. The sellers are patient, represented by agents, and expect to go through the standard process of listing, showing, and closing at the best price the market will pay. These sellers are not your primary target — not because they are bad people, but because the numbers rarely work at market price for an investor who needs a margin of safety.
Your target is the motivated seller — a property owner with a problem to solve that outweighs their desire to maximize financial return. Motivated does not mean desperate. It means their situation has created urgency, and that urgency creates an opportunity for you to solve their problem while getting a property at a price that works for your criteria.
Here is an important insight most beginners miss: motivation can come from anyone. It can come from an individual homeowner going through a difficult life event. It can also come from a seasoned investor who owns a problematic property they no longer want to manage. It can come from an institutional bank trying to get a foreclosed property off its books by end of quarter. The source of motivation does not matter. The urgency does.
Notice how this list spans all kinds of people and situations. The three highlighted categories — burned-out landlords, inherited properties, and pre/post-foreclosure — represent the majority of motivated seller deals most small investors close. These are the categories worth learning to find and approach first.
"By learning to solve the problems of the human beings who own real estate, you can find and buy as many deals as you want. Real estate investing is only partly about the property. It is about the people. Finding motivated sellers and understanding their situation is what separates investors who consistently close deals from those who search endlessly and buy nothing."
Approaching motivated sellers requires empathy first — understanding what problem they are trying to solve. If a landlord has been managing a difficult property for 15 years and is exhausted, the solution is not telling them they should have maintained it better. The solution is making the process of selling easy, fast, and certain. A clean offer with a flexible close date and no financing contingency solves their problem better than a higher offer with a 60-day close and bank approval risk.
Coach Carson and expert deal-finder Justin walk through four practical, low-cost strategies for finding off-market investment property deals — getting on wholesaler buyer's lists, building referral networks, direct mail campaigns, and online marketing. These are the same channels that have produced hundreds of deals for experienced investors. Published January 2024 — practical and evergreen deal-finding content.
Four practical deal-finding channels: wholesaler buyer's lists, referral networks, direct mail, and online marketing. How to get started with each, what to expect, and the realistic effort required to generate consistent leads. Directly reinforces Lesson 4 of this module.
Coach Carson · YouTube January 2024 · ~50 min · Evergreen deal-finding strategies
The best real estate investors do not wait for deals to fall in their lap. They build systems that generate leads consistently — week after week, month after month — so that when a good deal surfaces, they are ready to act. A deal-finding system has two parts: your written buy box that defines exactly what you are looking for, and your marketing channels that bring those properties to your attention.
A buy box is a one-page written statement that defines a good deal for you. It is the GPS that guides your search. Any property outside your buy box you ignore — which frees up time and mental energy to focus only on properties that could actually work. Your buy box should include:
Write your buy box down on a single page and share it with your real estate agent, property manager, and anyone else who might bring you leads. The clearer you are about what you want, the more useful your network becomes.
Wholesalers are investors who specialize in finding motivated sellers and putting properties under contract — then assigning those contracts to end buyers for a fee. Getting on local wholesaler buyer's lists puts you first in line when they find a deal that matches your criteria. Find them at local REIA meetings, BiggerPockets local groups, and Facebook real estate investor groups. Build relationships — be responsive, be clear about your buy box, and close when you say you will.
Tell everyone you know that you are a real estate investor actively looking to buy. Share your buy box with your real estate agent, property manager, CPA, attorney, contractors, neighbors, and former colleagues. When someone in your network hears that a property owner wants to sell quickly, you want your name to be the first they think of. Referrals produce some of the best deals — they come pre-qualified because someone who knows you and the seller is vouching for both sides.
Send letters or postcards directly to owners of properties that fit your buy box. Target lists include: non-owner occupied landlords, absentee owners, owners who are behind on property taxes, estate properties, and owners of properties with code violations. Mailing lists are available from data providers. Response rates are typically 1–3% — which means you need volume. Plan for 500–1,000 pieces per month to generate consistent leads. The most important thing after mailing is following up on every response.
A simple website that says "We buy houses — fast, as-is, for cash" combined with targeted Google Ads or Facebook ads can generate inbound leads from motivated sellers actively searching for a buyer. This channel requires more setup and budget but can be highly scalable once optimized. Pair online marketing with a reliable follow-up system — many leads require 3–5 contacts before converting. Tools like DealMachine help automate the outreach and tracking process.
Pick one or two channels and work them consistently for at least 90 days before evaluating results. The biggest mistake investors make is trying three channels halfheartedly, getting no results in 30 days, and concluding "deal-finding doesn't work." It works — but it requires patience, volume, and consistency. A direct mail campaign that generates zero responses in month one may produce two leads in month three from sellers who finally reached their decision point. Stay in the market. Keep the funnel moving.
Coach Carson — Real Estate Investing 101: How to Get Started or Restarted
The comprehensive 1.5-hour nine-step framework for the complete investing process — including steps 4 (investment property criteria), 7 (raising cash for down payments), and 8 (creating a plan to find deals) which directly complement this module's content. The #2 most downloaded Coach Carson episode of all time. Save it for a deep-focus session.
Coach Carson — If the 1% Rule Doesn't Work in Your Market, Try This Instead
In many high-cost markets (California, New York, major coastal cities) the 1% rule is nearly impossible to hit. Coach Carson walks through five alternative approaches for making real estate investing work when the 1% rule is not achievable — including equity-focused investing, live-in flips, and creative financing strategies. Essential for investors in expensive markets.
5 questions — click your answer, then check all at once.
1. A property is listed at $180,000 and rents for $1,600 per month. Does it pass the 1% rule?
2. Using the 50% rule, what is the estimated monthly NOI for a property that rents for $2,000 per month?
3. An investor buys a property at $190,000 that has a market value of $220,000. They put 20% down ($38,000). What is their instant equity at purchase?
4. A landlord has owned a 6-unit apartment building for 12 years. The roof needs replacement, two units are vacant, and he hasn't raised rents in five years. He is ready to sell quickly without going through a full listing process. Which category of motivated seller does he represent?
5. An investor starts a direct mail campaign and sends 300 letters in month one with zero responses. They conclude direct mail does not work and stop the campaign. What is the most likely problem?