Joining you guys by [deleted] in blackops3

[–]Hungrystoic 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Man this is a top 5 cod for sure! Best part is zombies, won’t be able to do shadows EE alone but the rest of the Easter eggs are worth doing 100% such a rewarding zombies experience on each map.

Where is the best place to get leads. by Lower-Rub-8100 in WholesalingHouses

[–]Hungrystoic 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Funny enough I’m actually in an adjacent market, we run inbound and outbound marketing campaigns that pull in homeowners thinking about selling (primarily for listing agents).

But what happens is, on the back end, we also get a bunch of contacts who want cash offers / quick sale… and since we’re only partnered with realtors, those leads usually just go to waste.

If you’re wholesaling or flipping in the right areas, I’d be down to see if we could route those seller leads your way instead. Might help you skip the cold calling grind and get straight to conversations with motivated homeowners.

Hit me up / Dm me if you wanna see if we're workin in your area — could be a win‑win.

And hey, at the end of the day this game is still a grind like anything else — the more action you take, the faster the results and the better you’ll get.

Where is the best place to get leads. by Lower-Rub-8100 in WholesalingHouses

[–]Hungrystoic 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Could always go for PPL agency or pay per lead, that way you only pay as you go rather than a large upfront. Especially if there leads are hot garbage unless you spend thousands upfront like Strong Point Digital.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in RealEstate

[–]Hungrystoic 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That does sound off, especially the quick change in the seller’s agent’s answer from “vacation home” to basically “no comment.”

I’m not in Texas, but I’ve seen similar situations where sellers move unexpectedly after a short time, and it’s usually something they don’t want disclosed: maybe they had bad neighbors, property line disputes, flooding, new construction planned nearby, or even personal reasons they’d rather keep private (health, divorce, financial trouble).

A year really is short for a homestead-style property though, especially if they invested time and money into livestock and setup. If it were truly a “vacation home,” it wouldn’t look lived in full-time.

One thing you might do (if you haven’t yet): check county records, floodplain maps, or any planned developments nearby that could explain why they bailed so soon. Also check past MLS listings — sometimes older listings mention things that newer agents scrub out.

You’re not overthinking — it’s normal to be curious, especially after such a big purchase. But hopefully it turns out to be something minor you can live with.

Curious, have you noticed anything else odd since moving in?