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I am a MBA Educated, Associate Broker in Tucson, Arizonawho has been consistently ranked among the top 5 in the commercial division. I am also an elite Real Estate Professional and Personal Investor who performs with a Free Enterprise Business philosophy. Educating my clients on the process of a real estate transaction is my #1 concern. Confidential relationships in Commercial and Investment real estate transactions is a required tool to financial success. I am the First Certified Residential Income Specialist for Long Realty Company. A Realtor is someone to trust to be part of your life's team and should be ranked among the top four professionals (Lawyer, CPA, Doctor, Realtor) that affect your life. I will insist that you participate in your real estate transaction. My success in selling real estate is the marketing program that is tailored to each property by examining the financial health of the property. Then, explain to you in detail the three keys to selling real estate, Price, Condition and Marketing. My success in buying real estate is examining the financial health of the investment property. Then, explain to you in detail the four keys to buying real estate, Price, Condition, Terms, and Exit Strategy
About the Tucson Area: I serve Pima County and the Greater Tucson Area, including Tucson, Catalina, Green Valley, Marana, Oro Valley, Oracle, South Tucson, and Vail. Tucson loves to celebrate its rich medley of cultures, architecture, and peoples. The community places an emphasis on preserving its colorful heritage and on maintaining a casual attitude despite fresh growth. Tucson also is ranked ninth in the "12 Best Walking Cities in the U.S." list by Prevention Magazine; criteria includes low crime rates, mass transit, air quality, and the number of historic sites, museums, parks and gyms each city has. The largest city in southern Arizona and one of the fastest growing urban areas in the Southwest, Tucson is both a bustling center of business and a laid-back university and resort town. Nicknamed "The Old Pueblo" after the Spanish meaning for town or village, the name Tucson comes from the O'odham tribe and was pronounced chuk-shon, meaning "spring at the foot of a black mountain." Tucson is ranked the third most Creative City in the U.S among medium-sized cities in the Washington Monthly. The Creativity Index ranks cities in terms of percent of employees working in creative and high tech fields, percent of high-tech industry within the local economy, innovation and diversity (measuring an area's openness to different kinds of people and ideas). Tucson also is ranked Number Two nationwide in the Top 10 digital cities by the Center for Digital Government, rating how cities use technology to increase public access to local government and improve the delivery of services to their citizens. Land is abundant in the Tucson Metropolitan Area and, although Tucsonans treasure their pristine desert surroundings, new housing starts are consistently higher than the national average and prices are generally less than in other major metropolitan areas. Despite Tucson's growth, housing and land costs are still well below the norm and the recent boom in real estate investing and construction is expected to continue. Diverse housing options range from 100 year-old haciendas to trendy downtown lofts, adobe estates designed by architect Josias Joesler, Santa Fe and Territorial designs, contemporary California Ranch styles, and environmentally-friendly solar and strawbale construction. The arts contribute significantly to Tucson's prosperity and represent a total economic impact of $96.8 million by eight major organizations: Arizona Opera, Arizona Theatre Company, Tucson Museum of Art, Tucson Symphony Orchestra, UA Presents, the University of Arizona Center for Creative Photography, the University of Arizona College of Fine Arts and the University of Arizona Museum of Fine Art. The film, video and production industry contributes to the local economy, and the Tucson Film Office aggressively markets Tucson to the film and commercial production industry. The city has been named one of "America's 100 Best Retirement Towns" and Money Magazine ranks Tucson in the Top Six places to retire in the country. MSN.com recently chose Tucson as the fifth best place in America to live, rating 331 cities on cost of living, crime rate, education, home prices and weather. |
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