- Real Estate Investing Quick Tips
- Posts
- Want to Invest Remotely? Start Here
Want to Invest Remotely? Start Here
A Private Circle for High-Net-Worth Peers
Long Angle is a private, vetted community for high-net-worth entrepreneurs, executives, and professionals across multiple industries. No membership fees.
Connect with primarily self-made, 30-55-year-olds ($5M-$100M net worth) in confidential discussions, peer advisory groups, and live meetups.
Access curated alternative investments like private equity and private credit. With $100M+ invested annually, leverage collective expertise and scale to capture unique opportunities.

4 Tools That Make Remote Investing Doable
Investing remotely sounds like freedom—laptop, coffee shop, passive income.
But in reality, it’s harder than it looks—unless you have the right tools. You’re not just managing properties—you’re managing people, projects, and chaos from a distance.
Here are 4 tools that make it actually work:
🧱 1. Project Management App (Like Buildertrend, Notion, or Trello)
You need a central hub for scope of work, timelines, photos, and contractor updates. Texts and email chains won’t cut it.
✅ Look for: task assignments, photo uploads, progress logs.
📸 2. Virtual Walkthrough Tech (or Just a Trusted Phone + Tripod)
Regular video walk-throughs from your contractor or boots-on-ground partner are essential. Live is best. Recorded is fine. Anything is better than silence.
✅ Bonus: Google Duo, FaceTime, and Loom all work great.
Dropbox, Google Drive, OneDrive—whatever you choose, put everything in one place: contracts, receipts, permits, inspection reports. If someone disappears, the paper trail won’t.
✅ Pro tip: Make folders per project with clear file names and dates.
💬 4. Real-Time Communication Platform (Slack, Voxer, WhatsApp)
Group threads with your GC, PM, and key vendors = less chaos, faster updates. Set expectations: daily check-ins, status photos, and no disappearing acts.
✅ Use voice notes if your team hates typing. (Contractors usually do.)
Bottom Line:
Remote investing is absolutely doable—but not if you're winging it from your inbox. Set up the tech, train your team, and run your projects like a business, not a hobby. The tools are out there—use them before you need them.

