Real estate investors have more access to
foreclosure data than ever before.
- You can pull county records.
- You can buy lists.
- You can use data platforms.
- You can scrape auction sites.
- You can subscribe to public record feeds.
But here is the problem:
Foreclosure data is not the same thing as a real opportunity.
A spreadsheet full of names, addresses, auction dates, and case numbers might look valuable at first. But if those records are outdated, unverified, duplicated, or attached to homeowners who have no intention of talking, that data quickly becomes another time-consuming task instead of a real deal source.
For investors looking for homes facing foreclosure,
the product should not be “more data.”
The product should be:
Qualified foreclosure leads
that are ready for a phone call.
Real estate investors have more access to
foreclosure data than ever before.
- You can pull county records.
- You can buy lists.
- You can use data platforms.
- You can scrape auction sites.
- You can subscribe to public record feeds.
But here is the problem:
Foreclosure data is not the same thing as a real opportunity.
A spreadsheet full of names, addresses, auction dates, and case numbers might look valuable at first. But if those records are outdated, unverified, duplicated, or attached to homeowners who have no intention of talking, that data quickly becomes another time-consuming task instead of a real deal source.
For investors looking for homes facing foreclosure,
the product should not be “more data.”
The product should be:
Qualified foreclosure leads
that are ready for a phone call.