Building wealth in real estate requires more than finding a discounted property. Pierre Mason and Mahmoud Faisal Elkhatib discuss how investors can identify the strategy that fits their strengths, learn from experienced professionals, build relationships with lenders and advisers, and prepare before an opportunity appears. They also examine collaborative acquisitions, transitional housing, tax liens, distressed properties, community ownership, and why long term success comes from combining education, consistent action, legal structure, and a clear reason for investing.
Many new investors begin by asking which strategy makes the most money. Pierre Mason begins with a different question. Which strategy fits the way the investor thinks, communicates, solves problems, and manages risk?
Wholesaling may work for someone who enjoys prospecting, negotiating, and speaking with property owners. Renovation may appeal to someone who enjoys design, construction, and rebuilding. Transitional housing may fit an investor who wants to work closely with nonprofit organizations and residents who need specialized housing.
Every real estate strategy can work, but no single strategy works equally well for every investor.
Partnerships, operating agreements, private financing, collaborative acquisitions, and distressed properties create obligations that should be addressed before funds are committed. EV Häs helps Chicagoland investors understand the ownership, contract, title, and closing issues connected to the opportunity.
Mahmoud Faisal Elkhatib is a Chicagoland real estate and foreclosure attorney, investor, entrepreneur, and former real estate broker. His work includes transactions, foreclosure matters, building code cases, title disputes, distressed properties, and complicated ownership issues.
Through The Bow Tie Edge, Mahmoud brings together professionals who can explain how business strategy, legal structure, community development, and practical real estate experience connect.
Pierre Mason is a real estate investor, educator, and community builder who operates the King Dominion University Real Estate Mastermind. His community includes new investors, experienced operators, developers, lenders, brokers, and professionals working across several areas of real estate.
Pierre teaches investors how to understand their strengths, select an appropriate investment strategy, structure entities and partnerships, evaluate financing, and prepare for their first transaction. His work also emphasizes collaboration, community ownership, and learning from subject matter experts.
Pierre uses mastermind sessions and educational events to help people become prepared buyers. The training covers investor mindset, entity structure, financing, operating agreements, collaborative acquisitions, tax liens, tax deeds, and different exit strategies.
The goal is not simply to provide information. Participants continue through a structured program where they can receive guidance, identify the type of investment they want to pursue, and begin applying the material to actual opportunities.
This approach creates investors who are more capable of understanding a property, communicating with lenders, and recognizing when professional legal or financial guidance is required.
An opportunity becomes more valuable when the investor already understands how to evaluate and structure it.
A new investor may not have perfect credit, substantial savings, construction experience, or the ability to complete every part of a transaction alone. Pierre encourages investors to examine the relationships surrounding them instead of treating every missing resource as a permanent barrier.
An investor may locate the opportunity while another person contributes capital, credit, construction knowledge, management experience, or access to a professional network. The parties can then evaluate whether a partnership or collaborative acquisition makes sense.
Those relationships must be structured carefully. The agreement should identify ownership, capital contributions, responsibilities, management authority, profit distribution, losses, exit rights, and what happens when the parties disagree.
Relationships can expand capacity, but unclear relationships can also create the largest risk in the deal.
Pierre teaches investors to define an investor identity before pursuing every opportunity that appears. A person who dislikes constant prospecting may struggle with wholesaling. Someone who does not want construction risk may be poorly suited for a major renovation.
Other investors may prefer long term rentals, co living, independent living, transitional housing, tax lien investing, or properties connected to nonprofit housing programs.
The right choice depends on available time, personality, capital, experience, preferred level of involvement, and tolerance for uncertainty.
A strategy that looks profitable on social media may become exhausting when it conflicts with the investor’s actual strengths and responsibilities.
Pierre describes professionals who appeared to become successful immediately after entering the public eye. In reality, many had already spent years wholesaling, networking, studying transactions, building relationships, and making mistakes before receiving wider recognition.
The same pattern appears in athletics and business. The public sees the successful transaction, completed renovation, or growing portfolio. It does not see the repeated practice, failed offers, difficult conversations, and preparation that made the result possible.
Pierre shares an example of a student who purchased a property, invested in the renovation, and later completed a profitable resale. The result was meaningful, but it came from education, deal analysis, funding, construction, and active guidance rather than luck alone.
Preparation allows the investor to recognize an opening and act while someone else is still trying to understand the opportunity.
The conversation connects real estate investing with the history of housing discrimination, redlining, restrictive covenants, unequal lending, appraisal bias, disinvestment, and the loss of ownership inside Black and other marginalized communities.
Pierre and Mahmoud argue that investors should understand this history because distressed properties do not appear in isolation. Vacant buildings, demolition, title problems, tax delinquency, deferred maintenance, and limited access to capital can reflect decades of layered policies and economic pressure.
Investors from the community have an opportunity to purchase, restore, and operate those properties instead of allowing every asset to be acquired by people with no connection to the residents or the neighborhood.
Community ownership allows the financial value created by redevelopment to remain connected to the people who helped sustain the neighborhood.
Tax liens, foreclosure, probate, municipal violations, demolition cases, vacant buildings, and unclear ownership can prevent a promising property from reaching closing. EV Häs helps investors identify the legal obstacles and determine what must be resolved before the asset can be restored.
Pierre describes relationships as one of the strongest forms of business currency. His educational community grows through referrals, shared audiences, industry partners, guest educators, lenders, contractors, brokers, attorneys, and investors who contribute specialized knowledge.
This model challenges the belief that every professional must protect one small group of opportunities from everyone else. When several trusted people combine resources, knowledge, capital, and audiences, they may create more opportunities than any participant could generate independently.
The same principle applies to distressed neighborhoods. One investor may locate a property. Another may understand construction. A lender may provide capital. An attorney may resolve the title. A community organization may identify the housing need.
Building wealth does not require ignoring individual profit. It requires understanding that cooperation can produce a larger and more durable result than scarcity driven competition.
An investor identity is the combination of goals, strengths, preferred activities, available resources, risk tolerance, and lifestyle considerations that helps determine which real estate strategy may fit the individual.
Potentially. Investors may work with lenders, partners, private capital, or other collaborators. The opportunity, financial terms, ownership, responsibilities, risks, and exit rights should be documented before money is contributed.
A collaborative acquisition involves two or more parties combining resources to purchase or operate a property. One party may provide capital while another contributes the deal, credit, management, construction experience, or another service.
A distressed property may involve foreclosure, unpaid taxes, municipal liens, probate, disputed ownership, demolition proceedings, or other claims. These issues can prevent the buyer from receiving clear and insurable ownership unless they are properly resolved.
A mastermind can provide education, accountability, professional relationships, examples from active investors, and access to people with specialized experience. The investor should still independently evaluate the program, cost, instructor experience, and promises before participating.