Hoa Nguyen: I think you have to think about long-term relationships and, in the beginning, we did attend so many and I think you have to get yourself. You have to get out there and you have to let people know what you’re doing. Tim is one of the most authentic and genuine people I’ve ever met.
Sincerely believe he’s coming from a position of giving and that means a lot. You’re going to make huge progress.
Tim Mai: Welcome everybody to today’s capital raising show. I’m your host Tim Mai. And today I have a very special guest speaker on. I’m so super excited to interview her today because number one, she’s the first woman that I’m interviewing out of all of these guys I’ve been interviewing.
And number two, she’s Vietnamese. And that’s, I’m also Vietnamese. I’m super excited about that. Dr. Hoang Nguyen is an entrepreneur, author, and co-host of the Financial Freedom Show. She’s an eye doctor and also a real estate investor and syndicator. She is the CEO and co-founder of Black Steel Investment Group.
She has over 460 million assets under management in real estate and has invested over 6, 500 units, both as general partners as well as limited partners. across 23 appointment communities. She owns two successful eye practices in the DFW area named Eyepieces for over 10 years and co-founded a black steel investment group to help families and busy professionals invest passively in apartment communities.
She’s a mother of an eight-year-old daughter, Athena, and her husband also a business partner, Dr. Jaime Gonzalez. And her passion is to travel the world and immerse herself in different cultures, empower youth, empower women, and contribute back to the community and many non-profit organizations. So with that, let’s give Dr. Nguyen a big welcome, y’all. Woohoo!
Hoa Nguyen: Thank you so much, Tim. Hi, everyone. It’s nice to meet everyone. Yes.
Tim Mai: All right. I am super excited about this. Just quickly, thank you so much for doing this interview with me today. It’s, yeah it’s an honor to get to meet you and now get to interview you.
Hoa Nguyen: It’s an honor to be the first woman here.
Tim Mai: Yes, we do need more women on this show though for sure, but it just so happens that this week and then next week we have another woman on, all right. That’s perfect. Dr. Nguyen, if we can start, you can share with everybody, how did you go about getting into the growth, the investing space, especially the multifamily space?
Hoa Nguyen: So real estate investing, where I was a doctor for 16 years, but when my daughter was born eight years ago, we wanted to figure out a way to have more time freedom, because our practices I was working about 7080 hours a week hustling. And we knew real estate was the vehicle, but we didn’t know exactly how to get our foot in the door.
And so we went to listen to a lot of podcasts, read a bunch of books and a bunch of boot camps, and anybody who was hosting an event for real estate, we would go and so we learned different avenues of real estate. And so the first couple of years, we were doing some single-family buying land and doing those different avenues of real estate.
Learning and then just investing. And then we had a patient who was telling us about multifamily and talking about syndication. And so that’s when we started going into those types of conferences and meetups and then joined groups and learned about that avenue. And that was close to about five years ago.
And that’s when we started our multifamily journey.
Tim Mai: That’s awesome. And so did you start as a passive investor first?
Hoa Nguyen: I did. We started as passive investors in eight different deals in different markets with different sponsorship teams. And so we knew that the end goal was to go active. So we were extremely passive.
But we wanted to look at the financials, ask questions, and go visit the property. And so we were doing all of that, but we wanted to make sure that we felt comfortable with that before we started syndicating ourselves.
Tim Mai: And so when you started to syndicate yourself and went on I guess in your journey did you join any coaching group or did you just all learn from the deals?
Hoa Nguyen: No, we joined a mentorship program. We visited three or four different ones where we did separate boot camps, but then we signed up with a mentorship program through Brad some rock. And that was, and that’s where we joined. And then we built an ecosystem so we invested, we invested in making partnerships in that group but then we also did outside of the group because we wanted to learn how other people were doing it outside of the group as well.
Tim Mai: Okay. And how much would you say, both your team collectively and you have raised since you started in this business?
Hoa Nguyen: Yeah, so our team collectively has raised 138 million. And out of that 138 million, my husband and I personally raised about 33 million of that.
Tim Mai: Wow, very impressive.
At 30, even, even 33 million is a lot of money to raise. At one point, did you ever have the thought of hey, that, this is a lot of money? Or did you come in because of your background, being a doctor, did you have that confidence? Oh, I’ll be able to raise money. No big deal.
Hoa Nguyen: You know what doctors are the hardest investors. Yeah. Although they’re high-income earners, they’re very skeptical. And I speak from my own experience because that was my mindset coming in when I was learning about this avenue of real estate. And so even though there’s money. You would think that would be an easy pitch per se, or no, it’s harder getting investors from doctors.
Although the bulk of mine have been doctors, it took time in building and educating. And it was a huge court and they watched my journey before they jumped in. Yeah, so doctors are not. As easy as you would think, I was nervous at the beginning. We were very active in building our database, even as passives.
We were educating, learning, and talking to people about what we were doing so that when we did get our first opportunity. We would feel comfortable saying, Hey, I think I can raise X, Y, and Z, but you never know when it’s your first deal and someone asks you, what do you think you can raise? Honestly, you don’t know how many of those people who you talk to will convert to actual investors, but you just.
Just keep talking and building that relationship and say, Hey, if I have a deal, would you be ready? And how much would you invest? And so I’d always keep that in the back of my mind. And that’s, so when I did have that first opportunity, I felt pretty okay saying, I think I can bring in that much and we did.
Tim Mai: Okay. So how much did you raise in your first deal?
Hoa Nguyen: So my very first deal, I raised two and a half million.
Tim Mai: Wow. That’s impressive for the first deal. Cause I hear stories about people barely raising 200, 000 for their first deal. So that’s super impressive. You did a really, you must’ve done a really good job preparing all of your contacts for that.
Hoa Nguyen: I did. I was so diligent about Hey, if I have a deal are you ready? X, Y, and Z, this is our criteria. This is what we’re looking for. So I’d educate them and plant the seed and be like, Hey when it comes, are you in,
Tim Mai: That’s awesome. And what would you say is the percentage of your and not just your first deal, but the overall percentage of. Of your passive investors, those are doctors versus non-doctors.
Hoa Nguyen: I would say maybe 40%.
Tim Mai: Oh, okay. I was expecting much bigger, but okay. And who, what’s the profile for the others?
Hoa Nguyen: All walks of life. I have business owners who own hair salons. I have people who own restaurants. I have CEOs of big companies. I have designers who are like watch designers and those types of things. So more in the business world kind of people, athletes and then the rest of her are mixed kinds of doctors.
Tim Mai: Gotcha. Okay. Now, yeah, if you can share with everybody. I have a lot of engineers.
Hoa Nguyen: Okay. I have a lot in the IT space.
Tim Mai: Okay, gotcha. If you have to give it a percentage, what would you say?
Hoa Nguyen: Huh. And the text space is probably about 20, 25%. I have a good amount of text space.
Tim Mai: Okay, that’s good. That’s good to get to know that.
But you know what, why don’t you do this and share it with everybody? What would be your top three? Tips when it comes to raising capital.
Hoa Nguyen: Top three tips I would say is because we attend a lot of meetups and conferences. So what we always do is we intentionally select five to maybe max 10 people that we want to make a deeper connection to.
And then at that point, we make sure that we talk to them there. We follow up and follow through and continue those. And so because it can get overwhelming sometimes if you’re just passing out business cards. And so that’s not our strategy. We don’t try to hit as many people and talk to as many people.
We are just small, but 5 to 10 intentionally, if we know some of them. are going to be in advance. We know them online, but we know they’re going to be in an event. And those are the people we want to try to connect to in person. And if they’re new people, that’s okay too. But we try to focus on quality over quantity.
So that’s tip number one. And that’s worked out well for us because of the conversion rate that we’ve been able to get with that. Number two, what’s been beneficial for capital raising on a larger scale is being able to have a platform to speak, whether it’s on a live stage, whether it’s a virtual stage like this or whatnot, and just create value.
So nothing is sold, nothing is pitched at that point, it’s educating and then you give people a mobile code, and so that way they can connect with you, and it’s one too many. And so you’re able to connect with a lot more people and you’ll do the one-to-one after you get the one too many because if you can speak on stage, even if it’s 1520 minutes, give a code a mobile code out, and you can collect about 80 to 100 people.
Data and then go back and then, it’s streamlined. It’s automated mobile processes where they get them, then they get their website or your introduction and get to know who you are before you set up that one on one call with them. And so sometimes I’ll take that one-on-one call personally, or sometimes I’ll have my investor director.
The third tip I would say is a compilation book for credibility. And so if you can, if you have a book if you have your name on a book, and you get to know people, not only do they get to know that you’re part of a book, a compilation book you want to be in a book where there’s a lot of people. who are well known.
And so when they’re reading those people’s chapters, they’re also reading your chapter and you have your information and people get to know your story. And I think that there’s a personal side to that. And so people invest with people who they know, like in trust. And so having that is like I say, a book is today’s business card.
Because once somebody gets, even if it’s a short chapter that has been made tremendously, I give them away as marketing. And so if I speak at an event, or if I go somewhere, I can sign it, and give it to you as a gift. And that has been powerful as far as helping us raise capital.
Tim Mai: That’s awesome. So I’m going to ask you some questions about these three tips, but the one regarding the compilation book, are there a lot of groups out there that kind of lead the compilation books?
Hoa Nguyen: Yeah, there are. I’ve done four compilation books now, and so they’re different. It depends on what kind of book and what kind of story resonates with you. And so there are different groups. I’ve done one with Kyle Wilson. He was Jim Jim Brown’s business partner for 18 years. Okay. So he does a lot of compilation books.
Every few months he does one and he has a lot of well-known people there. His is a little bit pricier to do a chapter. So it can range from doing a compilation book where it’s free. To up to 3, 500, the average being maybe about within the five to 800 range. So the more well-known people, if there are celebrities in the book and things like that, you’re going to pay higher for that compilation book.
If it’s not going to be quite as well known but it’s still good content and things like that. And it’s still a book. That’s going to be published and it’s on Amazon and all of them are going to be under the number one Amazon bestseller type thing. But you don’t have to spend a whole lot just to at least get your story and get your content out there and people can connect.
I have people connecting from overseas and I was like, how’d you get my contact information? They’re like, from your book. I’m like, which book has a wide reach that I didn’t get?
Tim Mai: That is awesome. I like that. Okay. And then on your meetup page idea. Do you only, or do you mostly attend real estate-type meetups or also?
Hoa Nguyen: I’m glad you brought that up, Tim because I’m in a lot of other circles outside of real estate. Although I attend a tremendous amount of real estate conferences, there’s a lot like doctor conferences and business entrepreneurship. Conferences that I go to, and that is huge because they don’t know about the real estate syndication space.
And so that’s a whole nother avenue in a type of investor to be able to convert because and educate. Find that a lot of my investors also come from these outside masterminds or outside conferences that I attend and then once somebody, especially if you have an opportunity to be interviewed. Or speak, then it’ll open more doors to other professional groups where they’re like, Hey, can you come to speak to my group. I would love to learn more about real estate syndications because we don’t know what that entails.
Tim Mai: Okay what does your funnel process look like? For someone, especially who’s not in the real estate space. So how do you begin that education process from someone, let’s say they’re just a business owner in a business owner group that you went to? How do you take that person, what’s your process to where they are, what sends you the wire?
Hoa Nguyen: So the process, if it’s a cold lead and they just text it in, then my investor director, she goes through that process, sends them an introductory email and that introductory email will have our frequently asked questions, introduce who we are, our website, she’ll introduce who she is, and calendly link.
for them to schedule a call with her. Now, if they specifically want to speak to one of us because they met us at the event or by request, they would prefer to speak to us instead of her, then she will coordinate that so that we make sure that we get the personal call. Otherwise, it gets too many calls and we’re not going to be able to take all the calls.
And so she helps us filter through that process. There’s a questionnaire. Yeah. And then she sets up the call. And then at that point, we set up a 30-minute Zoom call. Sometimes she does the Zoom call. If they request us, we’ll do a 30-minute Zoom call, but that’s only touch point one. And so we like to do multiple touchpoints.
So it’s not okay, we made the one call. We’re good. So they get put into our database after we make our call, but. So we use MailChimp. And so once I’ve made, once Maria, or I, or Jaime has made the call with an investor, because most of ours are 506B, and then we put them into MailChimp.
And then from there, we have touch points via text message instead of email. We usually like to text message if we’re friends on Facebook, then I’ll do a Facebook message just to connect and see. Then let them know Hey, in our next webinar, we’re going to be talking about X, Y, and Z. And so their education content that we’ll do private webinars for people that we know want to learn more.
And then we’ll let them know the process. And then, Hey, if the next investment opportunity comes, if you’re a first-time investor and I know you’re new and I know you’re ready to go, I’ll put you on a VIP email list, which means that I’ll give you first dibs, usually a day before I send it out to the rest of my list.
Tim Mai: Gotcha. Okay. And then do you have a weekly or monthly newsletter type thing that you send to quarterly newsletters?
Hoa Nguyen: Okay, your quarterly newsletters and monthly kind of education content live Zoom.
Tim Mai: Gotcha. Okay. And then regarding speaking on stages, your tip number two is there. Now you have your financial freedom show.
Do you get more investors from your show, or from you being a guest on someone else’s guest on someone else’s stage?
Hoa Nguyen: Absolutely. Especially because I started about a year and a half ago the first time I started speaking on stage. I have the biggest fear of public speaking, but I think that was the biggest.
That was the biggest growth for us. It was the biggest challenge to overcome and push comfort zones, but speaking on stage, there is a level of association with the other speakers. And automatically, people will come up to you after you finish getting off that stage. And most of the time, if I’m there, I may not even give my information.
Automatically, there will be a line of people who are like, want to get to know you more. So it’s like the mystery of wait, you just told me a little bit, but how do I know more? How do I connect, and so the conversion of live speaking events is so much better?
Tim Mai: Okay, good.
Very good to know. All right. And in terms of, I know, you position yourself a lot around speaking around books. Any other ways that you position yourselves, such that you know it. Help gain their trust and that rapport process.
Hoa Nguyen: Yeah. At the beginning of my journey, honestly, Tim, when I was solo like I didn’t have an investor director and all this, we were doing this solo.
We would meet people in person like it wasn’t a Zoom unless they weren’t local. If they were local, then we would invite them out for lunch or dinner. And if they were out of town, they were coming in for a conference, then we would be intentional about setting up where we can have a coffee together.
But that one on one time, I think is super important. Being in person is the best way to earn trust over time. Now for us. The other multiplier that I would say is our existing, we call them raving fans or raving investors. And so your investors who are already investing with you, and especially if they’re repeat investors are the best people to refer to, and the referral, it’s like they already trust them.
And so we have built a lot of people. Really by referral as well from our existing base because they’ve already invested in multiple deals with us. We already have a good rapport and trust with them. And so they’re now sending us their friends and family for us to educate and then have the investment opportunities.
And I think that’s something that we want to make sure we don’t forget is the low-lying fruit like don’t forget those who are already there instead of just creating new ones, focus on the existing ones too.
Tim Mai: Do you have a process in place that asks for that referral?
Hoa Nguyen: I don’t ask out loud for your referral. We do have an email that my, we sent out one email before that has if you have any family or friends to refer to or whatnot.
But I think I’ll just casually mention it if I’m meeting someone in person, or if I know someone who’s been investing with us. I think they naturally just say hey my mom wants to invest or my brother wants to invest when you talk to them. And so what we do a lot is group Zoom, and so we’ll have the existing.
The ones that we already have as investors and the people that they’re introducing will do a small group Zoom of maybe five or six people where we want them to be on with the new people with them. And so that’s been extremely effective.
Tim Mai: Gotcha. Very good. Very good to know. So I know your deals or share them with everyone.
What type of deals do you go after, and do you do what class they are?
Hoa Nguyen: So we predominantly do A and B classes. 150 units to about 360 units. So Texas, we’re heavy. We live in Dallas here, so DFW and Houston are the main markets that we look for, but we are also in San Antonio and the Carolinas, and Phoenix, and we’d like to get into the Florida market this year as well.
Tim Mai: I see. Okay. Now those deals, they’re what would you say is the average purchase price on these deals?
Hoa Nguyen: So they range from 26 to 71 million. So I would say the average is going to be usually within more than 40 to 50 million range.
Tim Mai: Okay. So yeah, so pretty, pretty sizable deal for each deal you’re raising a lot of money. I’m curious as to your take on why you choose to use 506 C, 506 B only, and not 506 C.
Hoa Nguyen: Most of our teams have always just, personally, I like knowing who my investors are and then giving some of the opportunities to those who are not accredited to be able to invest. I like that, and I like pre-existing, where I know them already.
And someone’s referred to or, I just, most of my partners prefer doing a five Oh six B. I’m honestly not opposed to a five Oh six C. I’ve only done one five Oh six C in the past. And, some investors don’t like the accreditation process where they have to prove all the, and that is just one extra step.
Even though you have a third-party company doing that process, sometimes investors may not like it as much. But honestly, I’d be open to either one. It’s not like I’m, I was thinking in the future of doing a fund of funds. I’ve never done a fund of funds. And so maybe opening a 506 C to do something like that because sometimes we go and we have a lot of meetings and we go to events and people have money and they’re ready.
They’re like, here’s my money and I’m like, I don’t have a deal yet. And so we just got to wait and. And so I think having something where maybe having a 506c platform and creating a fund so that in the window of what we’re looking for, that might be an option for us. I say, Tim, if I may add a quick comment on that, I think one of the big advantages of creating a 506c B fund is once you hit 5 million, you can give 506 C deals to 506 B investors.
That’s a huge plus. Wait, say that again. If you do a 506 B fund and the fund hits 5 million in assets fund of funds. It hits 5 million in assets. You can even do five or six C deals. You can. Yeah. And expose them to five or six B investors. So I don’t want to break him. Tim will take me out of the room. Otherwise, no, I’m just, thanks.
Tim Mai: Yeah thank you for that. So have you had a deal with that? gone south that went bad. Yeah. Oh yeah. Share with us, what went wrong and how did you navigate through that?
Hoa Nguyen: This was not this, it didn’t go across the finish line. This was in my earlier stages.
We were looking at a 24-unit deal here in Grand Prairie and I had a few of my partners go in. We were planning to do a JV on it. We weren’t going to syndicate the deal. And so I had three other people and we had all the terms like we had the broker, it was 24 units. We put hard money into the deal.
And we had lenders give us terms and everything for the property. And then we did our due diligence and everything was looking like, okay, this is going to be fine. And this was before I was like, okay, maybe we could just get our feet wet. The zero-to-one is hard. And so after a while, I was like, man, I just want to maybe get my hands and.
Just get in there to get my first deal. And I think a small JV would be a great way to break the barrier because it was so hard for us to break to be on the co-GP. And so when we did that deal, what wound up happening was none of the lenders would lend on it because they said that for the agent, it had to be a bank loan. After all, none of the nonrecourse loans, because they were on three different parcels so it was a really weird thing.
How the buildings were set on different parcels. And so they said they wouldn’t lend on it and so we didn’t want to do it. A bank recourse loan at that time. And so we wound up just my partners. Two of my partners didn’t want to go through with it. And so we decided, you know what, let’s just go back and focus on doing bigger deals and doing syndication.
So that was one that we just, we lost, they gave us half of it back. So we lost a small amount of earnest money on that, but that was, yeah, at the beginning of our journey, trying to break and getting our first deal.
Tim Mai: That’s good. So other than that deal like you have been able to successfully raise and fund all of the other deals.
Hoa Nguyen: Yeah, all our other syndication deals have been fine. Those have gone smoothly. The only thing that I would say is not smooth, but it still ended up fine. We just had to do an extension.
It’s just more our last couple of deals because of the lender, the lenders retreading last minute. So we, it was a bad thing, but a good thing. Because we then had to go back to the seller to renegotiate the purchase price. And so in both of our last deals, we were able to get a 3 million discount from the seller because of the lender retreading at the last minute.
But it closed down, everything went smoothly, so it’s great, it was praised. So all of it was fine, but it was stressful at the time when all of this was happening with the lending situation.
Tim Mai: That’s awesome. What are some of your favorite tools that you use in your business?
Hoa Nguyen: Favorite tools and what’s that like?
Tim Mai: It could be software tools, it could be any kind of resources that you use in your business.
Hoa Nguyen: I think MailChimp has been easy. I know a lot of people use active campaigns. I’m not well-versed in that. I think MailChimp is very user-friendly for us and we’ve been able to do all our campaigns and newsletters and everything through that.
So we like that cashflow portal. We like that. For we’ve used all of the other ones to syndicate probe Juniper Square. But I think from both the GP and LP side, I find that the cash flow portal is not only less expensive. But they’re more user friendly and we know the co-founder Perry Zhang.
And so whenever we have any issues and because he has that background. So there’s there if there’s something that I find that’s hey. We don’t want our investors to have to start all over when there’s something wrong with the document. Can’t we just make an addendum and have an initial it? And so they did that within 24 hours because I’m like, yeah, I’m making my investors keep starting over. After all, I get frustrated when I have to keep doing that.
And so little things like that’s been a very good resource for us. And they also put it out in the marketplace so people can reach us. The third thing is, I think my biggest resource that I can’t share with anyone is our investor director like Maria adding someone to our team and taking so much off of our plate.
She coordinates everything like investor appreciation gifts right after, so for every deal, she sends out gifts to all our investors. She hosts dinners for our investors to do appreciation dinners. Then it gets people in and then helps us bring other people in. And so having one other person who’s strong on your team.
That’s been a big builder for us and a huge resource. I think the best reason for us so far.
Tim Mai: That’s awesome. So for those of us that want to hire someone like Maria, what’s her, what is her profile? Is she more? outgoing social butterfly type person, or, yeah, share with her, share with us some of the personality traits that make her so good at what she does.
Hoa Nguyen: Personality trait, like we’ve known her for over 25 years, she went to school with Jaime in college, but very outgoing, like she’s probably 10 times me. In the outgoing space. She’s very articulate. She’s very good at the camera and speaking. She’s very personal, very caring. And so she’s very organized, very detail-oriented, and tech-savvy.
But the best two things are that she connects well with people and her communication skills are excellent. I see everything else we could teach her. She didn’t know anything about real estate. We didn’t care. I was like, we can train that everything else like personality and just her level of care and follow up and follow through and detail orientation of what she does that is what has helped us a lot.
Processes like that are not my forte. I’m like, I’m not tech savvy. I hired everything that I didn’t want to do and I’m not as good as She’s good.
Tim Mai: That’s good. Good to know. Where do you see the market going, especially for classes A and B, coming up with all this craziness with the interest rate heights and all of that?
Hoa Nguyen: Yeah, I think the debt structure and the underwriting key right now, making sure that is. Buffered in lending and the environment of what’s going on, we stay in prime markets just because that’s what’s worked well for us in the A and B space. And then I think the biggest thing is the underwriting and to be as conservative as you can with that and having extra cash reserves on hand and making sure that you have enough cash flow, given whatever circumstances and whatever market we’re in.
And so the debt structure normally, even if we get approved for 75% now, we’re taking about 60 to 62%. We really, and if it underwrites and it pencils out, and especially if we get a deal that the broker is bringing to us, and they want our team to be able to close that deal. And if the numbers work and we can get a debt coverage, that’s low, that kind of protects us a bit for any type of future market situations.
Then that’s a green light for us. And so we lose out on a lot of deals because we don’t quit, we can’t bring the price to what things are, but we’re okay. We’re patient and we’ll go through the process.
Tim Mai: Okay. And are you doing any new development at all?
Hoa Nguyen: I haven’t gone into the new development space, Tim, but that’s our next chapter of what we would like to get into.
Tim Mai: Okay, very cool. So what would you share with the people listening that maybe they’re starting new and they’re not confident in their ability to raise, a significant let’s say even a million dollars for their first deal, what would you advise them or share with them,
Hoa Nguyen: I think you have to think long-term.
Thank you. Relationships and at the beginning, we did attend so many and I think you have to get yourself, you have to get out there, and you have to let people know what you’re doing in your immediate circle and when you’re going out to networking events. That first few minutes of engagement when you talk to someone.
You have to make it clear whether you want to, if your intention of talking to that person is to have a strategic partnership opportunity, then make that well known and what you bring to the table. If you’re looking for passive investors and investors are in the room, then that’s a conversation even if you’ve never raised it.
For and the biggest fear most people have is they’ve never raised money, and they don’t have experience yet right how to raise capital. And so I always say you are going to leverage the experience. of someone else. And so I always, and so when I passively invested, I had intentions to strategically partner with them as a co-GP one day.
And everyone that I have invested passively, at some point in my journey, I have co-GP’d with them because I intentionally made it and so I think you leverage them. And when you educate an interested investor, you’re going to say, it’s not just me, it’s my team. And then you leverage the experienced co-GP’s resume and their level of expertise and their track record and what potential history returns might have been.
Of course, it may not be, but those are things you want to educate people on what’s possible in that space. And in the returns, because most people have no idea. And don’t be afraid of just, and most people like me, when people tell me no, I’m not interested right now. I don’t consider that okay. I’m not going to talk to that person anymore.
I still keep going back to people and keep making that connection and relationship, because eventually a lot of those people might’ve waited a year or two on the sidelines, and then they finally came in and now they’re my investors, but it took time for them to feel comfortable enough to trust me to know that, Hey, she’s been now on the journey, but I make it very well known everywhere I go, what I do.
And so you have to let people know what you’re doing.
Tim Mai: That’s awesome. I like that. I like thinking long-term, right? So it could be a few years. So yeah, I love that. Yeah. So what’s your big goal?
Hoa Nguyen: My big goal It’s funny because I never thought that speaking would be one of the things that I would even enjoy doing.
And now it’s a thing I love to do. And if I want, I just want to create more international platforms. And, I did my first trip to Vietnam and a two-week mastermind around multifamily. The huge interest of international investors. And now I’ve got the attorneys over there.
I’ve got some big groups coming to Dallas to visit us. And I like it. I love traveling. And so it’s like I always said how do I incorporate my love of travels in different cultures, and then the real estate space like how do I do that and so now I’m, that’s my future big plan is to be able to travel to different countries and speak on it doesn’t have to just be real estate, it’s just living this living life on your terms.
Because real estate is a vehicle I say is like your freedom and impact. And so we do a lot of work too. And so that’s all in our wheelhouse. Now that we have more financial resources and time to do that, we can personally go and do those types of trips.
Tim Mai: Love it. And what are you teaching your daughter that perhaps you’re not many parents out there teaching their kids,
Hoa Nguyen: My daughter’s nickname is Ninja.
And she’s bigger than life and because we take her and, we teach her about. Just getting out there and not being fearful and she’s the one who taught me to not be so fearful because I’m always scared of everything. And so she was the one encouraging me more but she sees us.
She tours like she’s been to an apartment like she’s been on a lot of our apartment projects, and she goes to our practices. I mean she knows the entrepreneurial mindset she’s invested early on at a young age, her own money. And so she understands the concept of investing. She understands the concept of donations and volunteering and things like that and giving.
And so for me, I just want her to build confidence and get out there. And so she’s yeah, she’s a little Yeah, she’ll get out there and she’ll, she could probably pitch you a deal, Tim.
Tim Mai: We should do that. Have her come on here and pitch a deal to all of us here. That’s awesome. I love that. I love that. Dr.
Nguyen, if the listeners want to reach out to you, connect with you, invest with you, or do deals with you, where would you like to send them?
Hoa Nguyen: So they can go on our website. It’s passive wealth. The number 23.com or they can text the word passive to the number 26786. Awesome. It happens with that.
When I sent that text message, I was telling you about it. So you can create whatever you want to follow. And so we created a due diligence checklist. So for investors who want to passively invest, it’ll have a 50-point due diligence checklist on there. And then it’ll give us the website and things like that.
And then in the future, when we do like when we host webinars and things like that it’ll be streamlined where you get a link once you. Get to that. Once you text that, then you’re in the system.
Tim Mai: Gotcha. So your short code is 2, 5, 7, 8, 6.
Hoa Nguyen: Yeah, just text the word passive to that.
Tim Mai: Perfect. Perfect. Okay. All dr. Nguyen, thank you so much for doing this interview with me today. Yeah, I appreciate you. I enjoyed this interview a lot. So you share a ton of information. Thank you so much.
Hoa Nguyen: Thank you and appreciate everyone. Awesome.
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