The Collective Genius Podcast
In this CG Live episode recorded at the Collective Genius Q2 event in Oceanside, California, the host sits down with Kelli Garrett, one of the standout new members entering the community through CG Legacy, the commercial mastermind founded by Tim Bratz that recently came under the CG umbrella. Kelli is a Charleston-based lender and investor with nearly 27 years in the business, and she's about as respected as they come. Multiple members had already gone out of their way during the event to name her as one of their favorite people, and it's easy to hear why within the first few minutes. Kelli's story is a full circle one. She started in lending as a mortgage broker, used that knowledge to build a portfolio of around 400 units, sold nearly all of it in 2018, and split the proceeds into two buckets: one for private lending and one for passive LP investing. Today she's CEO and co-founder of Rehab Wallet, running a debt fund of roughly $130 to $135 million and having raised over $250 million across her career. This conversation moves from her days as the all-time leading scorer at the College of Charleston to hard-won lessons on raising capital, protecting investors, and why she may play a little defense for the first time in her life. If you're an investor trying to raise capital or build the kind of reputation that makes people trust you with their money, this one is required listening. Timeline Summary [0:22] – The host sets the scene at the CG Q2 event and introduces CG Legacy joining the Collective Genius umbrella [1:29] – Why so many members named Kelli one of their favorite people the moment she walked in [2:09] – Kelli explains her business and how she came to join Tim Bratz's Legacy mastermind [2:34] – Her "I'll date you before I invest" philosophy on vetting operators before becoming an LP or GP [3:06] – Nearly 27 years in business, starting in lending and building a 400-unit portfolio [4:12] – Selling almost everything in 2018 and splitting the proceeds into lending and passive investing [4:32] – Inside Rehab Wallet: short-term fix and flip, ground-up construction, and how the debt fund works [5:42] – The keynote she delivered on consistency, time, and staying the course [6:03] – The lesson from her father: pick one thing and get good at it [8:14] – The three avatars who thrive in real estate: former athletes, military, and engineers [9:00] – How being the all-time leading scorer at College of Charleston shaped her view of teamwork [9:37] – Why she paid for all her teammates to attend her Hall of Fame induction [11:34] – Her advice for investors who want to raise capital but don't know where to start [12:19] – The yellow-notebook method: writing to everyone you know and asking for help [14:39] – Walking the walk once you raise capital, and why everything you do is now measured [16:31] – What she's most excited about in 2026 and why culture drives results [17:11] – Weighing whether to grow the fund or play defense in an uncertain market [18:07] – Who Rehab Wallet lends to, why they stay in the Southeast, and how to reach her 5 Key Takeaways 1. Date the operator before you invest — Kelli spent real time getting to know Tim Bratz and watching how he treated people before committing capital, and she coaches investors to do the same rather than rushing into a deal. 2. Raising capital starts with people you already know — Her first move was writing to 300 or 400 names in a yellow notebook, telling them what she was doing and directly asking for help, because a few early wins generate referrals that make every future raise easier. 3. Your job is to protect investor capital — Kelli tells her team they work for their investors, and she treats protecting their capital as the single focal point of the business, especially in an uncertain market where she's willing to play defense for the first time. 4. Once you raise money, everything you do is measured — Using Caitlin Clark as the analogy, Kelli notes that raising over $250 million means people watch how you carry yourself everywhere, so professionalism and walking the walk are non-negotiable. 5. Sports build the exact skills real estate rewards — As the all-time leading scorer at College of Charleston, Kelli credits sports for teaching her time management, dependence on teammates, and the humility to recognize the people picking and rebounding behind the scenes. Links & Resources * Rehab Wallet: https://rehabwallet.com [https://rehabwallet.com] * Kelli Garrett email: kelli@rehabwallet.com [kelli@rehabwallet.com] * Rehab Wallet general inquiries: info@rehabwallet.com * Tim Bratz / CG Legacy commercial mastermind (referenced in episode) * Collective Genius Community: https://explorecg.com [https://explorecg.com] Kelli's line that hard work will eat pressure alive is the kind of thing that sticks with you, and it runs through everything she shared, from her keynote on consistency to the way she still credits the teammates who created space for her decades ago. Whether you're just starting to raise capital or you're scaling a fund and figuring out when to grow and when to protect, her approach is a masterclass in doing the simple things consistently and treating investor trust as the whole job. If you want to be in the room with investors like Kelli, whether you're a single-family investor, wholesaler, flipper, or commercial operator in multifamily, self-storage, or RV parks, head to ExploreCG.com to learn more and apply.
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