Real operator. Not a guru.
I didn't get into real estate to do webinars. I got in to build a business. After 10 years and $3.5M+ in rent collected, the business runs — but I had to build every system myself. No mentor for my situation. No playbook for the small operator who manages his own rooming house and still answers his own maintenance calls at 10pm on a Sunday.
My background is construction. I've done the demo, the framing, the electrical, the plumbing. I know what a realistic renovation budget looks like because I've blown one. I know what a bad tenant placement costs because I've made that mistake. I'm not a real estate investor who also writes about real estate. I'm a real estate operator who learned to systemize it.
The gap I kept running into
Every major real estate education targets one of two people: the syndicator raising capital for 50+ unit deals, or the fix-and-flip wholesaler looking for their next deal. The person in the middle — the operator doing 5 to 30 units, self-managing, trying to build systems — doesn't fit into either playbook. That's the person I built StackUnits for.
Most advice is either too small ("just find good tenants and screen them well") or too institutional ("here's how to raise a $5M fund"). The actual work — dealing with a non-paying tenant, scoping a renovation, deciding whether to cash-out refi or hold, building a maintenance routing system — nobody talks about that in any course I've seen.
What I actually do
Strategy sessions — 90 minutes, direct with me. Bring a deal you're analyzing, a portfolio problem you're stuck on, or a question you've been sitting on for weeks. We'll work through it in real time. Not theory. Applied to your actual situation.
No fluff, no pitch. I've been doing this long enough to give you a direct answer rather than a framework you've already heard. If your deal is bad, I'll tell you. If your strategy is sound, I'll tell you that too. The goal is for you to walk away with an actual decision you can act on.