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Dealmaker Catalyst

Podcast by Jason Seward & Jim Ingersoll

English

Business

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About Dealmaker Catalyst

Join the Dealmaker Catalyst Podcast for real conversations with real estate investors and entrepreneurs. Learn how they approach deals, solve problems, and build their businesses. Every episode gives practical takeaways to help you make smarter moves in real estate.

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10 episodes

episode Why Mobile Home Parks Are the Most Recession-Resistant Asset Most Investors Won't Touch | Major Hillard artwork

Why Mobile Home Parks Are the Most Recession-Resistant Asset Most Investors Won't Touch | Major Hillard

In this episode, host Jason Seward sits down with Major Hillard — founder of MH Estates and one of the most operationally experienced mobile home park investors in the country. Starting with just $1,500 and a dusty book found in his father's attic, Major built a $50 million-plus portfolio across 1,026 lots, sold 523 homes, and closed over $70 million in combined transactions. Major's story runs from crawling under frozen pipes at 2am as a kid watching his father burn out on residential rentals, to flipping mobile homes out of desperation, to deliberately targeting the ugliest parks nobody else wanted. His competitive edge was intentional: mastering the three financing linchpins that kill most mobile home park deals — vacancy, deferred maintenance, and park-owned homes — because becoming a specialist in what others avoided gave him his pick of the best opportunities. This episode covers creative deal structuring, niche specialization, fund investing, and why when the deal is good enough, the money will always find you. What You'll Learn in This Episode * How Major went from $1,500 and three jobs to $3,000 a month in cash flow within 90 days — and what that first mobile home flip actually looked like * Why mobile home parks are the most recession-resistant asset in affordable housing — and why supply keeps shrinking while demand grows * The three financing linchpins that kill most mobile home park deals — and why mastering them gave Major his pick of the best opportunities * How to structure creative deals with no money down: seller financing, substitution of collateral, and the clam boat story that closed a $1.3M deal * What separates a legitimate fund operator from a fee bandit — and the red flags to watch before putting your money anywhere Timeline Highlights [1:03] – Introducing Major Hillard: $50M portfolio, 1,026 lots, and a $1,500 origin story [3:26] – Growing up on job sites with his father — and the 2am frozen pipe moment that made him say never again [4:25] – The Wall Street movie and why Major decided commercial real estate was the answer [5:08] – Starting as a commercial broker in 2008 — the worst possible timing — and managing a 126-unit Section 8 complex at 23 [6:16] – Three jobs, living at his parents' house, getting fired everywhere — and finding Deals on Wheels in a dusty attic box [8:16] – First mobile home flip: $1,500 in, sold in two weeks on installment sale, $3K/month cash flow within 90 days [9:00] – Why do one at a time when you can buy the whole park? The pivot that changed everything [10:14] – First park: listed at $750K, negotiated to $220K with seller financing and substitution of collateral [13:57] – No mentors, no community — mobile home parks were the black sheep of real estate in 2012 [14:25] – Why he deliberately targeted ugly parks: vacancy, deferred maintenance, and park-owned homes as a competitive advantage [21:30] – The clam boat story: four months of persistence, one in-person meeting, and uncovering the real motivation [23:34] – When the deal is good enough, the money will find you — and why big numbers are just an extra comma [29:14] – How knocking on 1,500 doors in commercial brokerage built the confidence that drives every deal today [33:06] – Why he tried multifamily, industrial, and residential before going all in on mobile home parks [34:45] – Affordable housing demand rises every year while supply shrinks — why that makes parks recession resistant [35:04] – All in or not in at all: why he sold everything after buying his first park [42:10] – How MH Estates Fund works: stabilized parks, predictable cash flow, and investor transparency [43:38] – Fee bandits: how to spot fund operators who collect fees and disappear when deals go sideways [44:26] – Why Major won't call a park stabilized until it's somewhere he'd live with his family [49:30] – Rapid fire: burn the ships, Unscripted, and why your current support system won't be there when you make it Rapid Fire Highlights * Favorite quotes: "Burn the ships." "You're either all in or you're not in at all." "If you want your life to change, you have to change things in your life." * Dangerous early belief: That his current friends would still be there when he succeeded — many turned their backs when the wins came * What he would not do again: Waste time not being confident — walk into every meeting ready to close, no matter what * Key books: Deals on Wheels by Lonnie Scruggs, Unscripted by MJ DeMarco, Never Split the Difference by Chris Voss * Red flag for any fund: If they're pushing courses and promotions hard, they're probably not doing well enough on deals Resources Mentioned * Elite Dealmakers community discounts: elitedealmakers.com/discount * 608B Capital Funding — fix and flip, BRRRR, and value add lending plus a passive income debt fund for accredited investors: 608bcapital.com * MH Estates Fund — Major Hillard's mobile home park investment fund (link in show notes) * Deals on Wheels by Lonnie Scruggs * Unscripted by MJ DeMarco * Never Split the Difference by Chris Voss * CCIM Institute — commercial real estate education Major recommends for anyone entering the space Connect and Subscribe If this episode sparked something for you, subscribe, leave a review, and share it with someone who's serious about building their real estate legacy. New episodes every week. Dealmaker Catalyst is rooted in the culture built by Jim Ingersoll and the nationwide Dealmaker community.

21 May 2026 - 57 min
episode Building a Business That Fits Your Life, Not the Other Way Around | Alie Murphy artwork

Building a Business That Fits Your Life, Not the Other Way Around | Alie Murphy

In this episode, host Jason Seward sits down with Alie Murphy — business operations strategist, consultant, and founder of Let's Talk Business — for a practical deep dive into the bottlenecks that stall most growing businesses and the systems that break them open. Alie helps founders turn chaos into clean, scalable operations. Her background spans healthcare administration, real estate, and high-growth startups, and her no-nonsense approach to CRMs, delegation, and execution has helped business owners scale without burning out or resenting what they built. She and her husband Corey live proof of the model — traveling the country following their daughter's rodeo career while their business runs cleanly behind them. This episode covers the most common bottlenecks founders face, why ego is the biggest obstacle to delegation, how to do a time audit that clears 50% of your calendar, and what it actually means to build a business to sell — even if you never plan to. Alie also opens up about letting go of profitable businesses that didn't fit the life she wanted, and why shrinking her business made it more successful and set her free. What You'll Learn in This Episode * The two most common bottlenecks that stall growing businesses — and the simple levers to pull to get unstuck * Why most entrepreneurs are using their CRM as a storage facility — and what they're missing by not going deeper * How to do a time audit that identifies exactly what to delegate first — and why it can free up 50% of your calendar * Why ego is the hidden reason most founders refuse to delegate — and how to know when you're finally ready to move past it * Why you should build every business to sell, even if you never will — and what that discipline does for your systems and your freedom Timeline Highlights [1:03] – Introducing Alie Murphy and her background in operations and business consulting [3:52] – How Alie and her husband built their life around systems — traveling for their daughter's rodeo career while the business runs without them [4:16] – Why documenting everything from day one changes what you can hand off later [8:05] – The two biggest bottlenecks: doing everything yourself and not setting boundaries [9:13] – Why most entrepreneurs use their CRM as a storage facility — and what they're leaving on the table [10:19] – Shiny object syndrome: why jumping platforms is often just expensive procrastination [11:34] – How to think about the ROI of hiring help before you feel like you can afford it [13:23] – Hunt rabbits, don't cook them: the mindset shift that unlocks your first real delegation decision [15:21] – The fear of hiring: what happens when your failure starts affecting someone else's livelihood [18:00] – Step-by-step task handoff: how to document a process so completely that anyone can run it [21:51] – The time audit: two weeks, every 15 minutes — and how it cleared 50% of one founder's calendar [23:49] – Why most entrepreneurs grind without a clear vision of what they're actually building toward [26:08] – Building businesses that didn't fit her life — and letting them go to build something she could actually live [28:54] – Why scaling back revenue sometimes is the step forward no one talks about [30:20] – Going deeper on your why: what "my family is my why" actually means — and when it becomes a cop out [35:41] – How ego shows up in every founder's journey — and why people who aren't ready to let go can't be helped yet [37:35] – When to hire a consultant versus an employee — and why assistants should never be outsourced [39:33] – Rapid fire: holy discipline is the highest form of self-respect [40:00] – Dangerous early belief: working harder is the answer. It's not. [40:34] – What she gave up: clients and relationships that didn't fit — and how releasing them unlocked her growth [42:14] – What she would not do again: scaling before the systems were ready [43:51] – Defining failure: scaling something that wasn't ready — the pressure, inconsistency, and constant fires that stole her peace Rapid Fire Highlights * Favorite quote: "Holy discipline is the highest form of self-respect." * Dangerous early belief: That working harder would make everything work out — it won't. Smart work and hard work have to go together * What she gave up: Clients and relationships that weren't a fit — holding on to them stunted her growth and theirs * What she would not do again: Scale fast without systems in place first * Defining failure: Scaling something that wasn't ready — looked like growth from the outside, felt like chaos from the inside Resources Mentioned * Elite Dealmakers community discounts: elitedealmakers.com/discount * 608B Capital Funding — fix and flip, BRRRR, and value add lending plus a passive income debt fund for accredited investors: 608bcapital.com * Let's Talk Business — Alie's consulting and strategy platform: letstalkbusinessvip.com * Let's Talk Business — The Collective: free Facebook group for business owners * The Vault — Alie's mastermind and founder circle: seven steps to structure and scale * Burning the Ships Podcast — Alie's previous guest appearance (link in show notes) Connect and Subscribe If this episode sparked something for you, subscribe, leave a review, and share it with someone who's serious about building their real estate legacy. New episodes every week. Dealmaker Catalyst is rooted in the culture built by Jim Ingersoll and the nationwide Dealmaker community.

14 May 2026 - 48 min
episode Building a Real Estate Empire with a Mission Bigger Than Money | Tom Olson artwork

Building a Real Estate Empire with a Mission Bigger Than Money | Tom Olson

In this episode, host Jason Seward sits down with Tom Olson — licensed general contractor, investor, developer, and founder of multiple real estate businesses operating out of Gary, Indiana. With over 2,000 transactions, 1,200-plus flips, 700 investor rentals, and 45 mid-term rentals under management, Tom has built one of the most vertically integrated real estate operations in the Midwest — and he did it with a mission at the center: flip the city of Gary, Indiana, and make it a place people move to instead of from. Tom's story starts at 12 years old swinging hammers, runs through the 2008 crash that took him from $120K to $20K in income overnight, and culminates in a multi-company empire guided by clear core values, business operating systems, and asset leaders running each vertical. This episode covers business structure, goal setting, knowing your numbers, the danger of scaling too fast, and why most real estate investors are solopreneurs masquerading as business owners. What You'll Learn in This Episode * How Tom built a vertically integrated real estate business from construction roots — and why he never let go of the contracting side * The two reasons most real estate businesses fail: not knowing their numbers and scaling faster than their systems can handle * How to structure a multi-company operation using asset leaders, core values, and quarterly goal reviews * Why your business is not an asset unless it operates without you — and how to close that gap * What Tom means by "flip the city of Gary" and how a God-given vision shapes every business decision he makes Timeline Highlights [1:03] – Introducing Tom Olson: 2,000+ transactions, 1,200 flips, and a mission to transform Gary, Indiana [3:13] – How Tom and Jim Ingersoll met on an IRA cruise — and discovered they were both from Jamestown, New York [9:04] – Starting in construction at 12 years old and why he never wanted to let it go [9:48] – How Rich Dad Poor Dad introduced him to the idea of cash machines — and sparked his investing journey [12:01] – The 2008 crash: going from $120K to $20K overnight and making cold calls for the first time [12:35] – The investor who told him he was the first contractor in 30 years to show up on time, quote on the spot, and finish on budget [14:54] – Wholesaling 1,300 to 1,400 homes between 2009 and 2015 with a partner [15:12] – How the partnership split led to building every vertical himself: construction, property management, brokerage, and lending [18:31] – Why not everyone should have 11 businesses and 43 employees — and why that's okay [19:41] – Scaling Up and Traction: the two books that changed how Tom ran his companies [21:26] – Which businesses are actually sellable assets and which are just jobs with an LLC [24:06] – Moving his family to Gary, Indiana during the crash — and the moment God gave him the vision to flip the city [26:24] – Why every business decision must fit inside two goals: give to missions and transform Gary [29:05] – SMART goals, quarterly rocks, and why you should never reach all your goals [33:43] – Core values as a hiring filter: charity, stewardship, community, growth — and the 20-minute onboarding video that weeds people out [37:05] – The three departments every business has: sales, operations, and admin — and why sales is always most important [39:59] – Why payroll over 50% of gross profit is a warning sign you cannot ignore [43:42] – The two reasons businesses fail: not knowing numbers and scaling too fast [49:52] – Why scaling too fast turns businesses into Ponzi schemes — and how to know when to hit the brakes [54:11] – What real profit actually means: you've been paid back, the business pays you a salary, and it's consistently profitable quarter after quarter Rapid Fire Highlights * Show up, do what you say, answer the phone: Tom's formula for winning 80% of sales without marketing * Vision drives everything: every business must fit inside giving to missions and flipping Gary, Indiana — if it doesn't fit, let it go * Biggest failure red flags: not knowing your numbers weekly and scaling before your systems, people, and processes are ready * Core value litmus test: if you're a lone wolf, a know-it-all, or unwilling to be held accountable, you won't last in Tom's companies * Real business vs. solopreneur: if the business stops when you stop, you don't own a business — you own a job Resources Mentioned * Elite Dealmakers community discounts: elitedealmakers.com/discount * This episode is sponsored by 608B Capital: https://608bcapital.com/ [https://608bcapital.com/] * Gary Dealmaker National Conference — October 1–3, 2026 (garydealmakerevent.com) * Active Turnkey Podcast — Tom's podcast on buying rentals the right way * Conduit Capital — Tom's hard money lending fund for accredited investors * Good Success — Tom's real estate and consulting platform: goodsuccess.com * Traction by Gino Wickman * Scaling Up by Verne Harnish * The One Thing by Gary Keller * Good to Great by Jim Collins * It's Okay to Be the Boss by Bruce Tulgan Connect and Subscribe If this episode sparked something for you, subscribe, leave a review, and share it with someone who's serious about building their real estate legacy. New episodes every week. Dealmaker Catalyst is rooted in the culture built by Jim Ingersoll and the nationwide Dealmaker community.

30 Apr 2026 - 1 h 1 min
episode Why Earning More Isn't the Same as Being Free | David Phelps artwork

Why Earning More Isn't the Same as Being Free | David Phelps

In this episode, host Jason Seward sits down with Dr. David Phelps — dentist turned real estate investor and founder of Freedom Founders — for a conversation about what it really takes to break free from a high-income career that's quietly running your life. David's story starts in 1980 when, as a broke first-year dental student, he convinced his father to co-invest in a rental property at a 30.5% mortgage rate. That deal split $50,000 four years later and planted a seed that grew alongside his dental career for two decades — until his daughter's health crisis forced the question: do I have enough passive income to step away? He did. That moment is at the heart of everything he now teaches through Freedom Founders, a mastermind built specifically for dentists, doctors, lawyers, and other professionals trapped in what he calls the golden handcuffs. Jason and David cover the mindset shift from Wall Street defaults to self-directed investing, how to evaluate masterminds without getting burned, how to vet passive investments without losing all oversight, and why patience and liquidity matter more right now than chasing the next deal. What You'll Learn in This Episode * Why high-income professionals are uniquely vulnerable to the golden handcuffs trap — and the mindset shift required to escape it * What separates a legitimate mastermind from an expensive networking club * How to vet passive investment opportunities — and why the best operators always lead with risk, not upside * Why David is counseling more caution right now: liquidity, the K-shaped economy, and location risk * How Freedom Founders helps professionals move from earned income dependence to true financial freedom Timeline Highlights [1:03] – Introducing Dr. David Phelps and his path from dentistry to financial freedom [4:51] – Why real estate was on his radar before dental school — reading investing books in college [6:18] – The golden handcuffs: why high-income professions feel like security but demand everything [7:30] – His first deal in 1980 at 30.5% interest — and the $50,000 gain that changed his thinking [11:26] – The golden handcuffs defined: earning well while trapped on a hamster wheel [12:20] – Would he do it differently today? What he'd tell an 18-year-old about college and credentials [15:29] – The shift from hands-on investing to passive — and what you give up in each direction [16:28] – His daughter's health crisis: the moment that forced the question of whether he had enough [17:14] – Why time eventually becomes the most valuable commodity — and how assets buy it back [19:43] – The first step for a high-earning professional: slow down before going tactical [23:02] – What separates a real mastermind from a glorified networking club [27:28] – How Freedom Founders helps members vet passive deals: checklists, community review, shared due diligence [30:35] – How to evaluate any investment operator: the best ones lead with the nightmare scenario first [31:30] – David's take on the current environment: liquidity, patience, and waiting for better opportunities [33:09] – The K-shaped economy and why W-2 earners are falling further behind asset holders [35:19] – Why location matters more than ever: landlord laws, political environment, and where he won't invest [37:43] – What Freedom Founders looks like: live events, business succession frameworks, and next-generation planning Rapid Fire Highlights * First deal lesson: 30.5% mortgage rate, no money, a JV with his father — and a $50,000 split four years later * The golden handcuffs: high income without freedom is just a well-paid trap * Exit trigger: His daughter's health crisis forced him to check if he had enough. He did — and left dentistry * On masterminds: Look for a wide spectrum of experience and multiple market cycles in the room — not just one strategy that worked recently * On the current market: Hold more liquidity, know where opportunities are coming before deploying capital, and be careful which states you invest in Resources Mentioned * Elite Dealmakers community discounts: elitedealmakers.com/discount * This episode is sponsored by 608B Capital: https://608bcapital.com/ [https://608bcapital.com/] * Freedom Founders mastermind: freedomfounders.com * David Phelps books — 7 to 8 titles on financial freedom and real estate for professionals (links in show notes) Connect and Subscribe If this episode sparked something for you, subscribe, leave a review, and share it with someone who's serious about building their real estate legacy. New episodes every week. Dealmaker Catalyst is rooted in the culture built by Jim Ingersoll and the nationwide Dealmaker community.

23 Apr 2026 - 44 min
episode 45 Years of Note Investing and Why the Landlord Always Gets Paid Last | Eddie Speed artwork

45 Years of Note Investing and Why the Landlord Always Gets Paid Last | Eddie Speed

In this episode, host Jason Seward sits down with Eddie Speed — founder of Note School and one of the most experienced note investors in the country — for a high-level introduction to a corner of real estate that most investors have heard of but few fully understand. Eddie has been buying mortgage notes for over 45 years, has been involved in more than 50,000 note transactions, and built an entire educational platform to help investors learn what he learned the hard way starting in 1980 as a broke cowboy in Mississippi mentored by the man who would become his father-in-law. The premise of this episode is simple but powerful: the landlord gets paid last. After the bank, the insurance company, the tax authority, the plumber, the roofer, and the property manager all take their cut, the landlord nets whatever is left. The note investor gets paid first — every month, without tenants, without toilets, and without the management overhead that slowly erodes rental margins. In a market where fix and flip margins are shrinking, multifamily is under pressure, and inflation has cut rental cash flow nearly in half for many investors, Eddie makes a compelling case that now may be the best time in decades to be the bank instead of the landlord. Jason and Eddie walk through how notes work, how to source and underwrite them, how to finance note purchases without needing all the capital yourself, what happens when borrowers default and why a cushion factor makes it manageable, and why using a licensed loan servicer removes most of the administrative burden entirely. This episode won't make you a note investor overnight, but it will open a door most investors didn't know existed — and point you directly toward the resources to walk through it. What You'll Learn in This Episode * What note investing is, how it works mechanically, and why the note investor gets paid first while the landlord gets paid last * The three things Eddie looks for when underwriting a note: quality property, quality neighborhood, and high confidence the borrower will continue to pay * How to finance note purchases without needing the full capital yourself — and why the same leverage principles that apply to real estate apply to notes * What happens when a borrower defaults, why the cushion factor protects you, and how a licensed loan servicer handles the heavy lifting * Where to start if note investing has your attention — and the free resource Eddie built specifically for the Dealmaker Catalyst audience Timeline Highlights [1:04] – Introducing Eddie Speed and his 45-year career in note investing [2:50] – How Eddie accidentally got started: a fireman father-in-law in Mississippi who figured out notes beat rentals during inflation [5:03] – Defining note investing in its simplest form: becoming the bank [6:39] – Why market timing makes notes compelling right now — multifamily, flipping, and rentals are all under pressure [9:22] – The landlord gets paid last — the note investor gets the first money every month [10:06] – How Eddie sources notes: 45 years of brand, marketplace relationships, and 22,000-plus portfolios purchased [11:48] – The Lexus pre-owned checklist: how Eddie's due diligence framework removes the biggest barrier for new note investors [13:36] – Mechanics of buying a note at a discount: what you paid doesn't change what you're legally entitled to collect [15:25] – Why burnout landlords are flooding into note school — and how seller financing can increase net income 2.5x on the same house [17:43] – How to fund note purchases: you don't need the money in your checking account [19:44] – Using other people's money, retirement accounts, and fund structures to scale note investing [20:41] – What happens when borrowers default: why the cushion factor means you're usually okay [23:28] – Why every note Eddie sells goes to a licensed loan servicer — and why you should not service it yourself [25:43] – How note investing compares to owning rentals with a property manager: you're involved in a tenth of the decisions [27:14] – What to expect from Note School: the podcast, YouTube channel, and the free starter series built for Dealmaker listeners [30:21] – Jason's parallel: how getting curious about lending led him down the path to running a fund [30:45] – Rapid fire questions begin [31:07] – Favorite principle: compound interest — the eighth wonder of the world [31:37] – The dangerous early belief: that he couldn't buy notes because he was broke [32:00] – What success cost him: growing faster than his infrastructure could handle [32:38] – What he would refuse to waste time on again: not knowing who to spend time with — he now knows exactly how to find the right people [33:23] – The mistake that still shapes how he underwrites risk: junk property. Good people will default on a bad neighborhood to protect their family. [34:29] – What most investors misunderstand about money: earning interest — run the math and it changes everything Rapid Fire Highlights * Favorite principle: Compound interest — the eighth wonder of the world. Once you understand what it means to earn interest at scale, you start thinking about money completely differently * Dangerous early belief: That he couldn't buy notes because he was broke. Once he figured out that was wrong, the game was on * What success cost him: Growing before his structure and accounting were ready — his caution flag is don't try to scale too fast * What he would not waste time on again: Experimenting with the wrong people. He now knows exactly who to spend time with and how to find them fast * Risk lesson that never left him: Junk property. Good, honest people will default on a loan to protect their family from a bad neighborhood. Quality property and quality neighborhoods are non-negotiable Resources Mentioned * Elite Dealmakers community discounts: elitedealmakers.com/discount * Note School — Eddie Speed's education platform: noteschool.com * Free Starter Series for Dealmaker Catalyst listeners: noteschool.com/catalyst * Note School TV — YouTube channel and podcast featuring real student stories Connect and Subscribe If this episode sparked something for you, subscribe, leave a review, and share it with someone who's serious about building their real estate legacy. New episodes every week. Dealmaker Catalyst is rooted in the culture built by Jim Ingersoll and the nationwide Dealmaker community.

16 Apr 2026 - 36 min
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En fantastisk app med et enormt stort udvalg af spændende podcasts. Podimo formår virkelig at lave godt indhold, der takler de lidt mere svære emner. At der så også er lydbøger oveni til en billig pris, gør at det er blevet min favorit app.
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