What Type of Investor are You?

Rex Mullens


Are you interested in investing in property, or are you already a property investor?

What type of property investor are you?

What I am referring to here is specifically the process you will undertake to invest in a property.

While there are many people that invest in property, the way they choose to invest can be very different.

While opinions may vary on whether there is a wrong way or a right way, in my mind, there is a way that will allow you to achieve superior results.

So how do you invest?

Are you more of a Speculator or a Strategic Planner?

Here are my thoughts

I believe that the majority of investors are really just speculators.

They tend to make decisions based on very limited, superficial data, which in many cases, is being analysed to support a decision they have already made.

Their focus becomes on a certain property or a location that has caught their attention.

Perhaps it is around the corner in a neighbourhood they are comfortable with, or maybe a suburb that made the news headlines the night before.

Maybe a friend at a BBQ has given them advice on a potential hotspot or a promising regional town.

Once a speculator has made their decision, they then go about undertaking the “research” component to justify their decision.

But there is no thought on how it will fit into their portfolio or if it moves them any closer to their end goal.

As a result, they are quite often left disappointed when the property does not grow in value and does not as allow them to build further wealth.

They often justify this by stating that “it is not costing me anything” as the rent covers the outgoings, when in fact the real cost is the opportunity cost.

In my mind, it is the reason that 90.13% of investors only own one or two properties and many sell within the first few years.

The most successful investors treat their portfolio as a business and they begin with the end in mind.

They follow a structured framework and process working backward from their final destination.

They can reverse engineer back to the here and now and understand how to set up and structure their portfolio first.

They can then undertake independent analysis using a top-down approach, analysing the right time of the cycle and then onto the right state, suburb, and location and then finally they get to the property.

They are then able to make a shorter-term decision while keeping in mind their longer-term goal.

For the Strategic Planner, the property is the final piece of the puzzle, not the starting point and as a result, they make better long-term decisions.

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