It is possible to build a substantial portfolio of rental properties while keeping your W-2 job. But that doesn’t mean everything is easy, especially if you’re going through the syndication route. To keep your investors interested, you have to have a solid grasp on your market and numbers. That is essentially what Sterling Chapman has been through in his real estate journey. In the space of five years, he went from zero to having a portfolio of about 50 single family rental properties and tens of duplexes and fourplexes. It’s hard to believe that he started in his backyard market with one to four units, and in a market like South Louisiana. Tune in to this conversation and learn how Sterling was able to build his impressive portfolio and the lessons he has learned over the years.
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Creating Wealth Through Single Family And Multi Family Rental Properties With Sterling Chapman
In this episode, we have a special guest. We have Sterling Chapman from Crestworth Capital. Sterling, how are you? I’m doing good, Chris. Thank you so much for having me. No problem. Sterling has been in real estate for a couple of years, went to LSU, got a Bachelor’s in Finance and MBA and worked a W-2 job, which he’s still working on but has been able to build a very impressive real estate portfolio. We’re going to talk about him building that portfolio, how he’s built it, how he’s raised money because that’s something people are always interested in and go through some of the lessons learned over the last couple of years. Sterling, thanks for having us. Do you mind sharing with us what your portfolio looks like? If we did a snapshot of what it looks like because it’s always changing, I have around 80 rental properties. I have about 50 single-family rental properties and then the rest of those 80 are duplexes and fourplexes. 1 to 4 units in my local backyard market are 80 rental properties. We’re in the process of ten different houses that we’re flipping. We have 3 under contract to sell, 3 under contract to buy and in the renovation process. We have 5 apartment syndications that we’re general partners on and 3 of them are smaller projects. One is $54,000, $45,000 and $70,000. I’m very actively involved in all of the management and decisions on those projects. I’ve worked with a little bit looser affiliation and on some much larger projects with some much bigger groups where I’ve focused a lot on capital raising, marketing and stuff like that. We’re also in the process of taking a property management company and taking on other people’s properties to manage. That’s a big focus of our office. You started in 2018, is that correct? Yes. It’s funny because you asked the story backwards. I’ve told the story on 100 shows and I always do it in chronological order. You messed me up. You’re like, “Where are you now?” I like to start with where you’re at and then dive into what you’ve built in a couple of years for this portfolio. I’m intrigued and people are intrigued like, “How did you do all of this in a couple of years?” You’re flipping, starting a management company and managing assets. How did you do it? What’s your team look like? Let’s pull back. How did you start? I’m moving up fast in this telecom company. My whole goal in life was to be a big corporate guy or a CFO. As a kid, my dad was a vice president at some big company. He wore suits to work every day and traveled. That’s what I visualized success to look like and romanticized the life I wanted. I was moving up fast and that was the life I had. A few different things happened around the end of 2017 and the beginning of 2018 that changed my trajectory. I’d gotten promoted. I was making over six figures for the first time in my life and I went to my dad all excited, “I’m making over six figures.” He was like, “Great. You need to go read some personal finance books. A lot of people have made a lot of money and ended up broke. They looked dumber than the guys that never made me money.” I started with Dave Ramsey. I told my girlfriend at the time, now my wife, “We’re never going to have any debt or credit cards.” She’s like, “Okay, whatever.” The next week I read Rich Dad Poor Dad. I was like, “Scratch that. We’re going to get as much debt as we can.” She’s like, “Okay, whatever. Leave me alone.” I ended up reading a bunch of Rich Dad Poor Dad advisor books, Tom Wheelwright’s tax book, Garrett Sutton’s law book and all that stuff. I stumbled on the BiggerPockets. I was training for a triathlon so I was always on the road biking or running. I listened to every BiggerPockets episode and audiobook. I read Rich Dad Poor Dad in February of 2018. By the summer, I’d started buying a couple of rental properties. At that same time, my boss had gotten a surplus around the end of 2017. He had been with the company for fifteen years winning award trips and going on accolades. They had a down quarter and were like, “You don’t have a job anymore.” I also was doing my MBA and taking entrepreneurship classes. I’d love to be in charge and do something on my own. All of that was going on at the same time and that was when I decided I needed some secondary income to save me. I had this terrible vision of being in my 40s with 3 kids in private school. In South Louisiana, you had to send your kids to private school because it’s too dangerous in public school. Also, car notes and home mortgage. I’d given 80 hours of my week every week for all these years and they surplus me. That’s the stuff they make movies about. I didn’t want to give that much control to anybody else. I was like, “I need backup income.” I spent every penny I had saving up down payments for those first two rental properties in the summer of 2018. I was out of money and was like, “It’s going to take me another 2 years to save up for another 2 rental properties.” I then discovered more creative strategies. We started doing seller-finance deals. We started doing BRRRR houses. I borrow money, buy a distressed house, fix it up, do a cash-out refinance with the bank and put a tenant in it. That was how I built up that single-family portfolio. I was recycling the same cash over and over again. That was what 2018, 2019 and 2020 looked like. We bought our first apartment syndication in February 2021 and another one in February 2022. We did another three throughout 2022. Also, at the beginning of 2022, I realized I had all these construction workers who had been doing nothing but my project. They had worked purely for me for years. We had started my podcast years before we had started and met up. Everybody in town knows that I do these deals. I’m very public on social media with it. I was getting the deal flow and I had people doing construction work. I was like, “Why don’t I start flipping too?” I was building out this infrastructure and investing in people, marketing, systems and processes. The extra cash from the flips helped build out that infrastructure because the payouts from the apartment complexes are half a decade removed a lot of times. What we look like is we have about 23 field guys that do all of our construction work in our 10 flips. In the office, I have a property manager, project manager and marketing director. We’re in the process of hiring an office manager/assistant property manager. We’re supposed to have one start on Monday but she no-showed. Now, we’re back to the interview process. You mentioned the seller finance route because capital is always sometimes challenging. Many people aren’t outgoing and usually, a lot of people who are number crunchers and so forth aren’t the best at presentation skills. I’m an engineer so we joke with my partner, Lauren. “I crunch your numbers. Let me hang out in my basement and you do your thing.” She’s great at sales and investor relations. On that seller financing front, were these deals on MLS or are these off-market deals? How did you approach and find these seller-financing deals? I’ve got a lot of seller financing deals from the same individuals. He had a duplex or fourplex listed on MLS so I reached out to him. He had a little comment in the listing, “We’ll consider seller finance.” I called him and was like, “Let’s go to lunch and talk.” I went to lunch and said, “I don’t want that building because it’s in a terrible area. Do you have other ones?” It turned out he had 30 or 40 other ones in areas I did want and he didn’t want the cash for it. He was 75 years old and had been doing 1030-ing these properties for 40 years. He deferred all these capital gains and all these taxes for 40 years. If I had turned around and paid him outright cash like a normal transaction, he would have a huge tax liability. What we did was worked out this model. It was a small down payment and all he wanted was income for his retirement. For the first couple of deals, we did 10% down. He did seller finance the rest. In the next few deals, he did a few at 5% down and a few at 0%. It was good for me at the time for the way I was trying to build my business because I had a bigger vision about going into multifamily, raising capital and such. Early on, for me it was almost like a marketing game where I wanted to ramp up the number of doors I had, my credibility and that stuff so I bought all this stuff. As it turns out financially, it wasn’t a great decision if you look at it in that backend. If somebody’s willing to seller finance it, typically what I’ve found or my experience is they want more if it’s a normal outright sale. You’re paying a premium for the seller financing. With most of these properties, they were in bad shape and I’ve spent hundreds of thousands of dollars fixing them up over the last couple of years. It worked out for me in that they did their job early on and gave me enough credibility to build off of but financially, if you look at those actual assets and how it showed how much money I poured into versus how much money I got out, it wasn’t that great of an investment. You’ve got the deal flow. Are you primarily staying in one market in your area with most of your properties or have you broadened your portfolio? We approach markets more intentionally than we approach individual properties I feel sometimes. I don’t buy large multifamily properties where I live in South Louisiana for a number of reasons. If you’ve studied any type of market research data, Louisiana and Mississippi are the worst places on earth. When you’re buying multimillion-dollar assets, especially with other people’s money, you want to be very intentional about setting yourself up for success and putting yourself in the line of growth. You look for markets where you’ve got job growth and population growth like people are moving and creating jobs there. Also, there’s job diversity. When you're buying multimillion-dollar assets, especially with other people's money, you want to be very intentional about setting yourself up for success and putting yourself in the line of growth. Share on X You don’t want to be in Michigan before the auto industry goes overseas. You don’t want to be in Lafayette, Louisiana when oil goes bust. You don’t want these markets that are overly dependent on 1 industry or 1 company because that could devastate the local economy and cause your vacancy to skyrocket overnight. We look at crime, poverty and supply and demand. If you go down the gauntlet of all the things you want to look for in a decent market, we don’t check any of those boxes. I won’t buy an apartment complex in Baton Rouge. With that being said, I’ve got $8 million worth of single-family houses, duplexes and fourplexes because, A) It’s all my money and, B) It’s my backyard so I know it well. People can make money in any market. You’re going to pay a premium for a highly-demanded market versus a lower market. This is a lower market where I can manage flipping houses and making money in this market because it’s a short time window. I can manage rentals in this market because I analyze the numbers. I got to buy low in fixed straight debt but a five-year business plan on a $10 million asset, give me Atlanta, Georgia, Houston, Texas or Charlotte, North Carolina. To answer your original question, that’s where our multifamily assets are. We’ve got a 54-unit in Newnan, Georgia, which is Atlanta. It’s 28 minutes from the Atlanta Airport. We’ve got a 70-unit in Rock Hill, South Carolina, which is essentially, Charlotte. It’s 33 minutes from Charlotte Airport. We’ve got a 45-unit in Hampton, Virginia where there are a lot of government infrastructures. That economy’s not going anywhere anytime soon. We’ve got two deals in Houston. Houston is diverse, big and all those things. Also, Atlanta. Your local area is where you have some the single-families. Also, diversity in numbers, it’s not 1 building with 50 units that everything has relied on that 1 building and that 1 market in that 1 area that could have new development or something happened in that area. If you’re spread throughout an area, everybody wants to diversify that portfolio so that’s always a benefit. Your multifamily properties are in Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina and Texas. You’ve done your research because if you look at any map, where are people moving to? People are moving from the upper corners of the United States and making that V either coming down the East Coast or over to Texas. You’re seeing a lot of people move. Those areas are diverse and have that population growth. You see that on BiggerPockets a lot. “Where should I invest?” You can invest anywhere but you want to invest in an area where there’s population and job growth. You’re not all in one market.
Rental Properties: You want to invest in an area where there’s population growth and job growth.

Rental Properties: The most instrumental part of the real estate business is the networking and the people.
Important Links
- Crestworth Capital
- Rich Dad Poor Dad
- BiggerPockets
- Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon
- The Rent Roll Radio Show
- Entrepreneurial Operating System
- DLP Capital
- Building An Elite Organization
- Best Ever Apartment Syndication Book
- The Book on Rental Property Investing
- Sterling@CrestworthCapital.com
- Facebook – Crestworth Capital
- Instagram – Sterling Chapman
- TikTok – Sterling Chapman
- YouTube – Sterling Chapman
About Sterling Chapman
Sterling is a proud family man with a bachelor’s degree in Finance and an MBA from Louisiana State University. He spent his early career in the financial services industry focusing on retirement and insurance planning before eventually transitioning to the Telcom industry.
Through his successful corporate career in Telcom, Sterling has mastered the art and science of sales, funnel management, marketing, account management, strategic business planning and financial forecasting. He began his real estate investing journey in early 2018 purchasing single-family houses and quickly moved up to duplexes and fourplexes, flipping houses and eventually large multifamily.
Sterling has over $26.5M in Assets under management and his portfolio now consists of 82 single family or small multifamily rental units, a 53 unit apartment complex in Newnan, GA and a 70 unit complex in Rock Hill, SC. Self-managing and overseeing the renovations personally for the first few years has taught Sterling a ton about the industry. In addition to founding Crestworth Capital, he is also the Host of The Rent Roll Radio Show, Co-host of the Red Stick REIA and has been featured as an industry expert on dozens of other real estate podcasts.







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