OP
ultrarunner
Epic Contributor
- Joined
- Apr 6, 2004
- Messages
- 24,079
- Tractor
- Cat D3, Deere 110 TLB, Kubota BX23 and L3800 and RTV900 with restored 1948 Deere M, 1949 Farmall Cub, 1953 Ford Jubliee and 1957 Ford 740 Row Crop, Craftsman Mower, Deere 350C Dozer 50 assorted vehicles from 1905 to 2006
I'm overwhelmed by all of the great advice which helps to formulate a plan if only in my head.
At 57 and no company retirement, frozen over 10 years ago, not sure I would be out looking to hire on.
Thankfully, I have kept a small portfolio of rentals which are now all paid for... so it is not a question of putting food on the table... my needs are really very modest.
Part of sticking with the program has been my desire to settle down at a forever property... someplace in the county with rooms for my tractors and cars.
One thing I learned is getting any kind of mortgage is heavily weighted on earned income... no job or no solid pension like my LEO friends makes a huge difference as rental income is so heavily discounted it rarely amounts to much.
A lot of TBN members like Curly Dave are living their dream which is one of the reasons TBN is inspiring... plans that become reality.
No one is indispensable but the loss of a key personnel can have very long lasting affect when all of a sudden the jobs still need to be done but who is going to do them.
Part of what I find prevalent in management is often the time it takes to bring someone in, supervise, etc... the job could have been done... plus more expensive because now there is the added overhead of a manager added to the cost.
Last year we brought in a new Laser for surgery... it required a dedicated 70 amp circuit that none of the Operating rooms have... the Doctor came to me at 3:30 in the afternoon and said it would mean a lot to make it happen... working most of the night I laid all the conduit, pulled the wire with my retired neighbor... the new circuit was in and ready overnight.
The big guys simply cannot move that fast... it would start with RFP and 6 weeks later might get done.
I'm a believer in Time and Materials for my best vendors... and never once have we not come out ahead... we share the risk and the reward...
Before I was recruited for this job, I ran my own full service Property Management company full time and something I could expand on.
What a lot in the corporate world forget is business is built on relationships... having committed people willing to step up when needed.
At 57 and no company retirement, frozen over 10 years ago, not sure I would be out looking to hire on.
Thankfully, I have kept a small portfolio of rentals which are now all paid for... so it is not a question of putting food on the table... my needs are really very modest.
Part of sticking with the program has been my desire to settle down at a forever property... someplace in the county with rooms for my tractors and cars.
One thing I learned is getting any kind of mortgage is heavily weighted on earned income... no job or no solid pension like my LEO friends makes a huge difference as rental income is so heavily discounted it rarely amounts to much.
A lot of TBN members like Curly Dave are living their dream which is one of the reasons TBN is inspiring... plans that become reality.
No one is indispensable but the loss of a key personnel can have very long lasting affect when all of a sudden the jobs still need to be done but who is going to do them.
Part of what I find prevalent in management is often the time it takes to bring someone in, supervise, etc... the job could have been done... plus more expensive because now there is the added overhead of a manager added to the cost.
Last year we brought in a new Laser for surgery... it required a dedicated 70 amp circuit that none of the Operating rooms have... the Doctor came to me at 3:30 in the afternoon and said it would mean a lot to make it happen... working most of the night I laid all the conduit, pulled the wire with my retired neighbor... the new circuit was in and ready overnight.
The big guys simply cannot move that fast... it would start with RFP and 6 weeks later might get done.
I'm a believer in Time and Materials for my best vendors... and never once have we not come out ahead... we share the risk and the reward...
Before I was recruited for this job, I ran my own full service Property Management company full time and something I could expand on.
What a lot in the corporate world forget is business is built on relationships... having committed people willing to step up when needed.