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Monday, June 16, 2014

Getting On Track for Retirement? Sell Your Los Angeles House Now!

Hi! Let's Talk!

Are you looking to sell your Los Angeles house before you retire? You can retire with a truly peaceful mind once your house worries are sorted out. If your current house does not fit into your future plans, you can put it on the market and get a decent price. The only trouble, you need ample amounts of patience to inch closer to a sale. So, common questions would-be-retirees ask is, “Can I sell my Los Angeles house fast because of retirement?” or “How do I make the most of the transaction at a low risk?” This is where a real estate investment and development company like Blue Label Properties, LLC steps in. As Los Angeles real estate investors, we can take the house off your hands and offer many benefits, cost-wise and in other ways, too.

Blue Label Properties, LLC Can Help You Sell Your House Fast in Los Angeles

Take for instance the question of finances. The longer your house is on the market, the longer you need to hold off your retirement plans.  Instead, you can quickly lower your living expenses and move into a more suitable house, post-retirement, by selling off the current one. In the usual case, scouting the market for suitable selling opportunities takes a lot of time and effort.  But when you have Blue Label Properties, LLC  in the picture, we take care of everything. While we are looking for a house to buy, you are looking to sell yours.  This makes it a mutually win-win situation.  By working with Blue Label Properties, LLC you can usually trust that the transaction will be fair to both the buyer and the seller. When people ask, “Can I sell a house fast because of retirement?” the answer is typically, “yes!”  We are ready to buy houses in most situations, thus saving you from worries.

Is Your Retirement Stalled Due To Needed Home Repairs?

Your house does not need to be in a perfect condition for us to buy it. To you, a house in need of repairs is a liability. You know that it would benefit from a major overhaul, but perhaps you cannot afford the repairs. Sometimes, you may simply wish to let the house go without trouble. A house like this is called a “fixer-upper” in real estate parlance. To Blue Label Properties, LLC your house is a great opportunity for investment. Blue Label Properties, LLC then buys the house from you/the owner, makes the necessary fixes, and may put it on the market right after or chose to keep it. You need not spend money on a house you no longer have any use for. You can speedily and safely dispose of your house, get some money in the process, and freely move on with your retirement plans.

Call Blue Label Properties, LLC Real Estate Investment and Development Company Today To Put Your Retirement Back On Track

The role of Blue Label Properties, LLC is to look out for suitable buying opportunities. If your query is on the lines of “Can I sell my Los Angeles house fast because of retirement?” we can help you do just that. Blue Label Properties, LLC utilizes a house in a profitable manner, perhaps by fixing it and selling it off, using it for private rentals or in some other way. Thus, smart investing also turns a house that’s a liability into an asset.
You may reach us @ 213-293-9509.
Let us help get you get your retirement back on track!

It's Been At Least 22 Years Since I Was 22

It's Been At Least 22 Years Since I Was 22

Pictures posted here, messages and comments posted there, thanks to my slight, but admitted, addiction to social media it's hard not to see or read about my friends' children graduating after their four years away (or locally) at college. As I am wishing nothing but the best for all of those new "now-it's-time-to-get-to-work" college graduates, I find myself trying to recall what it felt like for me to be a new college graduate oh-so many years ago. Frankly, it's been at least (a-hem!) 22 years since I was the age of 22.

Before beginning to write this article, I posed a question to friends on Facebook, asking what advice they would give to a young college graduate entering the working world today at age 22. I got a couple of very honest, very thoughtful answers. One was from a friend in my same age group. She wrote, "Hmmmmm! Things are so different now!"

Truthfully, yes, things ARE very different now! Way back when I first entered the working world as a medical secretary/transcriptionist/office manager, the tools of my trade were the now archaic-sounding pegboard bookkeeping system and the foot pedal driven Dictaphone transcription machine. All medical secretaries/transcriptionists used carbon paper, sometimes multiple layerings, and pink wheeled erasers with whiskery green brushes to sweep the erasure crumbs away (away from multiple layerings, eek!). Because there were no Xerox machines (yes, all photocopying machines will always be known as Xerox machines to me ... and most of my generation) in every office, I remember the excitement of the delivery of my office suite's first very own photocopying machine, a toner-filled "treasure chest" of sorts that would keep me me from having to make bi-monthly trips to the office supply store, lugging that big metal bin, to run photocopies of ledger cards that I would eventually fold and stuff into special perfectly-sized windowed envelopes as patient invoices. Nowadays, "fancy" computerized bookkeeping software like Quickbooks has replaced the paper-filled pegboard bookkeeping system that I had initially relied upon...and computers that keep getting smaller and smaller and faster and faster, plus all types of ink-filled printers...have removed the need for carbon paper, erasers, ledger cards in big metal bins, and even most of the needs for Xerox machines. Fax machines and scanners....?! Yes, things ARE so different now.

Not every graduate graduates knowing exactly what they want to do with the degree they have just earned. Being asked to offer some words of advice to a new college graduate venturing out into the working world today, I would most want those 22-year-olds of today to know that they should always be ready and willing to attempt several completely different things. Don't just head down one path. Branch out! Find out what makes you happy and find a way to make it your job/work. Take me for instance, in all the days of my working life, I have never been one to say "that's not in my job description." I have always (even though at times not in my own best interest) taken on many new tasks, always wanting to remain busy and to learn new skills, using the extra work as a good learning opportunity. What better way to find out what I really did and did not like than by doing it all? If I didn't excel at something, I would either have to learn how to better achieve it or would use the experience as a learning tool that had shown me what was not my forte.

In all the many years of my working life, I can truthfully say that I have experienced fewer than 10 days that I honestly didn't "love my job." I feel very fortunate that I have always been able to find work, using the fine set of skills that I possess, at enjoyable work places, working with "good" people.

So...go forth, always be willing to branch out and do more than what is your job, take on that extra work and use it as a learning tool, find out what makes you happy and find a way to make that your job/work, make sure to always learn how to use all the newest "gadgets" (can't imagine what the future will bring!) ... and may you, too, be able to one day say, "I love my job and the people I work with!"

Congratulations to the Graduating Class of 2014!