Taking Your VA From Entry-Level Tasks to Deal Finding

Having a trained virtual assistant (VA) can be a game-changer for your business. This article will walk you through exactly how to do it.

Blogs

Apr 19, 2025

As a flipper, your highest-value activities are:

  • Analyzing deals

  • Managing renovations

  • Raising capital

  • Closing transactions

What isn’t your highest-value activity? Spending 5 hours a day clicking through Zillow or driving neighborhoods.

That’s where a trained virtual assistant (VA) can be a game-changer.

If you train them right, a VA can:

  • Feed you qualified leads daily

  • Build and manage a pipeline of potential flips

  • Run repeatable systems so you don’t miss a deal

  • Save you 10–20+ hours per week

This article will walk you through exactly how to do it.

Step 1: Define the Type of Flip You’re Looking For

You need to start with yourself before you train someone else.

Ask yourself:

  • What price range do you want to stay in?

  • What areas or ZIP codes are you targeting?

  • What exit strategies will you consider (e.g., resale, rental, novation)?

  • How big of a rehab are you comfortable with?

Create a one-page criteria sheet. Include:

  • Buy box (max price, min ARV spread, ideal bedrooms/sqft)

  • Target ZIP codes or neighborhoods

  • Red flags to avoid (e.g., flood zones, busy roads)

  • Your preferred acquisition types (MLS, off-market, wholesalers, etc.)

Give this to your VA as their "hunting guide."

Step 2: Choose Their Main Hunting Grounds

Where should your VA look?

Here are the most effective platforms VAs can scan for flip deals:

  • Zillow, especially FSBOs, old listings, and fixer-uppers

  • Realtor.com, to spot price reductions and stale listings

  • Craigslist, for FSBO and rental leads

  • Facebook Marketplace, for distressed owners posting “as-is”

  • BatchLeads or PropStream, for absentee owner lists, pre-foreclosures

  • County or city code enforcement websites, public record violations

  • Wholesaler lists or Facebook groups, deal trades and assignments

  • Google Maps, for spotting visible distress through Street View

Your VA should build a system of daily scanning, lead tracking, and reporting.

Step 3: Teach Them What a Good Flip Looks Like

You can’t expect your VA to spot flip gold if they’ve never seen it.

Here’s how to train them fast:

  • Show them 5–10 past flips you’ve done. Point out what made each a deal.

  • Highlight typical features: outdated kitchens, vinyl windows, roof age, etc.

  • Explain why cosmetic distress is often better than structural problems.

  • Walk them through how to calculate:

    • ARV (After Repair Value)

    • Rehab budget (basic vs. full gut)

    • Your MAO (Maximum Allowable Offer)

Pro Tip: Create a folder of screenshots titled “Yes Deals” and another titled “No Deals.” This visual training tool helps them learn judgment faster.

Step 4: Build a Deal Intake Sheet

You need a consistent format to evaluate the leads they bring in.

Your VA should fill out a basic spreadsheet or Airtable form with:

  • Address

  • Link to listing or data source

  • Price

  • Estimated ARV

  • Estimated repair cost (if possible)

  • Listing date

  • Days on market

  • Seller contact info (if available)

  • Notes (e.g., “seller says roof is new,” “tenant-occupied”)

This makes it easy for you to:

  • Sort and prioritize

  • Filter by neighborhood or urgency

  • Decide what to offer and when

Step 5: Create Message Templates

If you want your VA to do outreach (which you should), create scripts they can follow.

Here are a few starter templates:

FSBO Initial Message (Craigslist/Facebook):

Hi [Seller], I saw your listing for the property at [Address]. Is it still available? I’m an investor looking to purchase in the area and can close quickly.

Follow-Up Message (if they reply):

Thanks for the quick response. Just curious, any repairs needed? Also, are you open to a cash offer with a quick close?

Wholesaler List Inquiry:

Hey [Wholesaler], do you have anything available that meets this criteria?

  • Price under $200k

  • Needs light to moderate rehab

  • Strong comps in the area
    Happy to move fast if it fits!

Make it easy. Tell the VA exactly when to use each message.

Step 6: Use the Right Tools for Tracking

Let your VA plug everything into one of the following:

  • Google Sheets, simple, accessible, and easy to share

  • Airtable, cleaner UX with automation potential

  • Trello, good for visual pipelines (e.g., “New Lead,” “Contacted,” “Hot”)

  • REsimpli or Podio, if you have a full CRM

Use conditional formatting to highlight:

  • Leads with 60+ days on market

  • Properties priced under 70% of the estimated ARV

  • Properties with clear signs of distress

Step 7: Set Clear Daily and Weekly Tasks

A successful VA doesn’t just work, they work on the right things.

Daily Tasks:

  • Search [3–5] platforms for new listings

  • Fill out the intake sheet for any leads

  • Send [X] outreach messages (Craigslist, Facebook, etc.)

  • Flag urgent responses for your review

Weekly Tasks:

  • Update the status of all leads in the tracker

  • Follow up on older FSBOs

  • Track price drops on properties they’ve already entered

  • Log all responses and flag for next steps

Give your VA a checklist so they can self-manage.

Step 8: Set Expectations Around Lead Quality

Every VA makes mistakes early on, wrong ARV, too big of a rehab, etc.

The key is feedback. After each batch of leads:

  • Give quick yes/no feedback with short explanations

    • “Yes, great comp set.”

    • “No, rehab is too high for our buy box.”

    • “Maybe, run by me if you get the seller on the phone.”

    • Praise good judgment, so they double down on it

    • Ask for clarity if they missed something obvious (e.g., “Was there a photo of the kitchen?”)

Your feedback loop turns a generic VA into a deal-sourcing machine.

Step 9: Build Automations to Save Their Time

You don’t want your VA doing 100% of the work manually.

Once you’re confident in their workflow, layer in automations:

  • Use Zapier to auto-add Zillow FSBOs to their spreadsheet

  • Have Craigslist search alerts emailed to them daily

  • Set up keyword alerts on Facebook Marketplace

  • Use tools like DealMachine’s AI to suggest hot leads based on past activity

This creates leverage: they do less clicking, more qualifying.

Step 10: Train for Growth (Not Just Tasks)

A rockstar VA doesn’t just follow orders; they take initiative.

Once they’re comfortable, train them to:

  • Spot patterns, “We’re getting better leads in ZIP 78240 than 78250”

  • Proactively add to the SOP if something works

  • Notify you when something feels “off” about a lead or seller

  • Ask questions that show they’re thinking critically about the market

Consider offering bonuses or raises tied to deals that close from their leads.

Optional: Hire More Than One

As your business grows, you can divide VA responsibilities like this:

  • Lead Sourcer VA. Focuses on finding and logging deals

  • Outreach VA. Messages sellers and wholesalers

  • Follow-Up VA. Manages the CRM and updates leads

  • Analyst VA. Starts running quick MAO/ARV checks to prioritize

You don’t need all of this at once. But knowing the future structure helps you train today’s VA in a scalable way.

Red Flags to Watch Out For

When managing a VA for flip lead sourcing, watch for:

  • Copy-paste spam that gets flagged on Facebook

  • Submitting leads without verifying recency or contact status

  • Failing to check comps or neighborhood value before flagging as a deal

  • Lack of curiosity or learning from feedback

  • Not tracking outreach (you’ll get duplicate convos and wasted time)

Always audit their first few weeks closely, then reduce check-ins once they prove consistency.

Real Example: What a Great VA Can Deliver

Let’s say you have a VA spending 3 hours a day sourcing leads.

In one week, they might:

  • Scan 7 platforms

  • Log 15–20 properties

  • Contact 10–12 sellers or wholesalers

  • Deliver 3–5 properties that meet your criteria

  • Flag 1–2 for immediate analysis

That’s a pipeline you didn’t have to build yourself, and a compounding effect over time.

Multiply Your Time, Multiply Your Deals

Hiring a VA isn’t about saving money. It’s about multiplying your most valuable asset: time.

The flippers who scale to 10+ deals a year?

They don’t find every property themselves. They:

  • Build systems

  • Train talent

  • Let go of low-value work

Start small. Hire one VA. Show them how to find the kinds of flips you would buy.

Then, step back, and let the leads come to you.

Written By:

Austin Beveridge

Chief Operating Officer

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Discover

Join Thousands Of Satisfied Operators

Discover why top teams rely on Goliath to find motivated sellers. Get everything you need to prospect, nurture, and close more deals.

679

Live Users

$
23
M

Closed Deals

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%

Satisfaction Rating

11
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Markets Live