Final Thoughts on Be in the Top 1% by Bob Helms
We’ve gone through all ten chapters of Bob Helms’ Be in the Top 1%, and I want to share my overall impressions and key takeaways.
We’ve gone through all ten chapters of Bob Helms’ Be in the Top 1%, and I want to share my overall impressions and key takeaways.
Previous: Contracts, Offers, and Sales Techniques
This is the second half of Chapter 10, and it shifts from deal mechanics to the business itself. How you build systems, get referrals, network effectively, and keep clients coming back. If the first half was about winning individual deals, this half is about building a career that compounds.
Previous: Preparing to Become a Successful Agent
Chapter 10 is the longest chapter in Bob Helms’ book, and for good reason. It covers the habits that separate top agents from everyone else. This first part focuses on something most agents get wrong: how to write offers that actually win.
Previous: Using IRAs to Buy Real Estate
Chapter 9 of Bob Helms’ book is all about preparing yourself before the opportunities show up. Because here’s the thing: being ready when the right deal appears is what separates agents who close from agents who watch.
Previous: Should You Take On Partners?
This is a book retelling of “Be in the Top 1%” by Bob Helms (Chapter 8). I’m sharing the key ideas in my own words, with my own commentary mixed in.
Previous: How to Build and Manage a Real Estate Portfolio
This is a book retelling of “Be in the Top 1%” by Bob Helms (Chapter 7). I’m breaking down the key ideas in my own words, adding my own thoughts where it makes sense.
Previous: Tax Benefits of Owning Real Estate
Chapter Six of Be in the Top 1% is about going from owning a property to owning a portfolio. Bob Helms doesn’t sugarcoat it. He starts by basically saying that “make me wealthy” is not a plan. It’s a wish. And wishes don’t build real estate empires.
Previous: How to Value Investment Properties
Chapter Five of Be in the Top 1% is where Bob Helms talks about taxes. And honestly, it might be the most important chapter in the whole book if you care about actually keeping the money you make.
Previous: Understanding Investment Properties
Chapter 4 opens with a quote that Helms borrows from his colleague Russell Gray: “Do the math and the math will tell you what to do.” The funny part? Gray actually hated math growing up. He avoided it until he realized that math gets a lot more interesting when the numbers have dollar signs in front of them.
Previous: A Rookie Agent’s First Deal
Here’s a wild thing Bob Helms points out in Chapter 3. Real estate investors have basically had to figure everything out by themselves. For years, almost nobody in the agent world was actually helping them find performing properties, analyze deals, or think through tax strategies. Investors were just out there winging it.
Previous: Why Most Real Estate Agents Ignore the Most Profitable Niche
Chapter 2 is where Bob Helms tells the story of his very first deal as an agent. And it’s a good one, because it includes a rookie mistake so bad it nearly ended his career before it started.
Chapter 1 of Bob Helms’ book opens with a stat that should make every real estate agent sit up straight. According to the California Association of Realtors, which has about 500,000 members, only 5% of agents will be involved in more than one investment property transaction in their entire career. That’s 1 out of every 20 agents.
I just finished reading Be in the Top 1% by Bob Helms, and I want to walk through it with you chapter by chapter. This isn’t a dry book report. It’s more like me telling you what I found interesting, what surprised me, and what actually seems useful.