About this episode
Many people invest in real estate hoping to make “passive income” but instead find they work more than they would at a day job! But not all real estate niches require a lot of time—and today’s show proves that! Today on the BiggerPockets Podcast , we sit down with Dr Kenyon Meadows , a real estate investor who chooses to invest his money using a variety of passive real estate vehicles, including funding other real estate investors, investing out of state through several turnkey companies, and investing in over 30 crowdfunding deals! If you are looking to make your real estate more passive, this is one show you can’t afford to miss! In This Episode We Cover: Who Kenyon Meadows is What you should know about alternative assets How he got into real estate How he structures his private money lending Whether track records matter to him How to impress a private money lender Tips for building permanent wealth How he got into turnkey properties Advice on finding the right turnkey property provider A look at the numbers for a turnkey property How he structures his deals How real estate crowdfunding deals work Kenyon’s future plans What he would tell someone starting out A discussion on investments outside real estate And SO much more! Links from the Show BiggerPockets Forums BP Podcast 048: Duplex Investing, Finding Great Properties, and Tips for Managing Tenants with Darren Sager BiggerPockets Invites Serial Podcast BiggerPockets Analysis P2B Investor Funding Circle Books Mentioned in this Show Essentialism by Greg McKeown Bridge Over Troubled Wall Street by Mr. Stephen E. Gardner The Alternative Answer by Bob Rice Alternative Financial Medicine by Kenyon Meadows Tweetable Topics: “I don’t think you should invest in anything unless you really know the ins and outs of it.” ( Tweet This! ) “Loaning is great, but if you want to build permanent wealth, then you’ve got to own this stuff.” ( Tweet This! ) Connect with Kenyon Kenyon’s Personal Website Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices