Andrew, when you told me you were hesitant about high-pressure tactics, it actually made my day. Know why?
That's not just refreshing—that's smart.
Here's What Makes Our Approach Different
Most house buyers operate on a simple formula: create urgency, pressure the signature, renegotiate later.
We flipped that entire model upside down.
You get the partnership agreement BEFORE we ask for any commitment.
Read it at your kitchen table. Show it to your attorney. Compare it to every other offer you get. Sleep on it for a week. Ask me 100 questions.
Because if our deal only works when you don't have time to think about it, it's not a deal worth doing.
How This Actually Works (In Plain English)
You mentioned going through some medical stuff. The last thing you need is someone adding stress to your life. So here's the reality:
But Here's The Part That Actually Matters
Your number doesn't change. Market crashes? We absorb it. Renovations cost more than expected? We cover it. House takes 6 months to sell? We carry it.
You got your money and moved on with your life weeks ago.
Why Most Buyers Won't Do This
Simple: their contracts are designed to lock you in while giving them every exit.
- Inspection contingencies that let them back out (but not you)
- Assignment clauses that let them flip your contract for a fee
- Vague language that gets "renegotiated" after you've committed
- Extension clauses that string you along while they find their buyer
Our contract? It's almost boring how straightforward it is. Here's your number, here's when you get paid, here's how profit splits work if there's any left over.
No fine print. No surprises. No "oops we need to talk about that number again."
🧮 See The Difference For Yourself
Let's run some quick numbers on what this actually means for you.
What You Should Actually Do
Andrew, here's my genuine advice—whether you work with us or not:
- Ask every buyer for their contract upfront. If they won't send it, that tells you everything.
- Read it slowly. Don't let anyone rush you with fake urgency.
- Show it to an attorney. Yes, it costs $200-500. Best money you'll spend.
- Compare the TERMS, not just the numbers. A $300k offer with 17 ways to renegotiate is worse than a $280k guarantee.
- Trust your gut. If something feels off, it probably is.
You mentioned wanting a partner who won't push you into something uncomfortable. That's exactly what we're offering.
Take the agreement. Review it. Compare it. Ask questions. And when you're ready—if you're ready—we'll move forward together.
And if you decide we're not the right fit? No hard feelings. At least you'll know what a transparent offer looks like.
One More Thing, Andrew
I know you've got medical stuff to deal with. That alone is stressful enough. The last thing you need is some house buyer making your life harder.
So here's what I'm committing to: zero pressure, maximum transparency, and absolute respect for your timeline.
Whether that means we move in 2 weeks or 2 months, we'll be here when you're ready.
Because that's how partnerships are supposed to work.
P.S. — The interactive calculator above is powered by the same tech we use to generate offers. Feel free to play with the numbers. And if you want to see how these numbers apply to your specific property, just shoot me the address and I'll run a full analysis.