Sometimes the best answer is no.
A real buyer-side education has to leave room for that. Not every deal deserves more time, more money, or another round of optimism.
We learned that lesson the expensive way. LearnTripleNet (LTN) is the course, toolkit, and optional Review Desk we wish someone had handed us before our first industrial property with a NNN lease.
If you are used to houses, rentals, or small multifamily, commercial and industrial NNN can feel familiar enough to be dangerous. We help you slow down, read the lease, understand the tenant, check the math, and know what to ask before your money is committed.
The goal is not to make you fearless. It is to help you see the deal clearly enough to know what deserves an offer conversation, what needs more work, and what may not be worth more time.
We do not broker deals, sell listings, or get paid if you buy a property.
There is plenty of free NNN content online, and some of it is useful. But a lot of it is attached to somebody else's business: a listing, a loan, a syndication, a closing.
We do not have a property to sell you. We are not trying to keep a deal moving. We are here for the buyer who wants to understand what is actually in the lease, what kind of tenant is paying the rent, and what can go wrong if the easy story turns out to be incomplete.
A real buyer-side education has to leave room for that. Not every deal deserves more time, more money, or another round of optimism.
The rent number is only the beginning. You still have to understand who pays for what, what happens when something breaks, and what the document actually says.
In residential investing, the asset often gets most of the attention. In NNN, the tenant's credit, business, obligations, and renewal risk can carry the deal.
You do not have to become a lawyer, lender, contractor, and broker. You do need to know enough to ask each of them the questions that matter.
That is part of the point. With single-tenant industrial and commercial property, the lease, the tenant, and the downside case usually matter more than whether the building photographs well.
We are a husband-and-wife team. Before NNN, we had owned and dealt with residential and multifamily property. We were not brand new to real estate. That may have been part of the problem.
Our first industrial deal was a Los Angeles building with a tenant already in place. On paper, it looked manageable. In real life, we learned that "tenant in place" does not mean "risk understood," and "triple net" does not mean "nothing left for the landlord to worry about."
We should have spent more time on the tenant's credit, the actual lease language, roof exposure, maintenance obligations, renewal risk, location, and how the building would function if things did not go according to plan. We also should have trusted our instinct to get the right help earlier.
The mistake was not that we failed to care. We cared a lot. The mistake was thinking general real estate experience would fill in NNN-specific gaps. It did not.
So we went back and rebuilt our understanding from the ground up. That work drew on more than 40 years of combined experience in risk management and adversarial analysis across careers in financial markets and government service. If that work taught us anything, it is that problems are cheapest when you find them early.
LTN is what we wish we had then: a practical course, working tools, and, if you want it, a place to send your work and hear what two careful people think you still need to check.
We teach you to slow the deal down before it starts pulling you along: read the lease, check the rent, understand the tenant, look at the building, test the debt, and write down the questions you need answered before your money is committed.
If you want to work on your own, you can. The lessons and tools are built for that. Paid members can also email educational questions about the materials as they go.
If you want us closer to the work, the Review Desk is there. You send the deal package and your underwriting. We send back a recorded educational critique that points out what we would investigate, what assumptions look thin, what information seems missing, and what should go to a licensed professional.
We are not here to make the call for you. We will not tell you to buy, sell, lease, finance, or invest. Our job is to help you understand the work in front of you well enough to have a serious conversation with the right people.
If you want to see the teaching style before you buy, open the actual excerpts below. Review the previews.
Separate what the broker gave you from what still needs to be verified.
Check rent, options, reimbursements, landlord duties, and what happens when something breaks.
Rebuild income and expenses, size debt, build a downside case, and make weak assumptions visible.
Turn what you found into a short decision memo for the professionals around the deal.
Six weeks is not a promise that a deal will close, finance, or turn out well. It is the working pace we use to help you move from "I have a deal package" to "I know what I still need to verify." Week 1 is for obvious deal-killers. Weeks 2 through 4 are for the lease, tenant, building, and math. Weeks 5 and 6 are for the review packet, downside case, professional questions, and short decision memo.
We are not your lawyer, CPA, broker, lender, inspector, or investment adviser. We are not here to bless the deal or make the decision for you. The review is educational feedback on the work in front of you: what looks thin, what needs support, and what should be taken to the right professional.
We review standard single-tenant and small multi-tenant NNN deals. We do not review group-investment structures such as DSTs, TICs, syndications, pooled investment deals, or any other securities offering.
It is not a teaser dressed up as education. It is part of the real course, and it shows how we look at an industrial NNN deal before price, yield, or the offering memo starts steering the conversation.
These are real pages, screens, and a short video excerpt from Module 08 and the toolkit files. You can see the level of detail for yourself: lease abstraction, verified net operating income (NOI), rent resets, loan sizing, downside cases, and re-leasing risk.
A 45-second excerpt from Module 08 showing the lesson style and how the course frames underwriting before summary numbers take over.
Short preview clip
Manual Page
A page on separating facts, assumptions, and weak inputs before anything goes into the model.
Click to read
Start Here Lesson
The opening lesson shows what to verify first, what can wait, and where a thin deal package can hide real risk.
Click to read
Workbook Page
Starts with the lease: actual rent, tenant-paid expenses, reserves, roof exposure, and other costs that can change NOI.
Click to read
Slide Deck Page
Turns the lesson into a checklist for base rent, increases, reimbursements, landlord-paid expenses, reserves, and roof duties.
Click to read
Interactive HTML
Local browser exercises ask whether rent, hidden costs, or escalation terms should change the underwriting.
Click to read
Deal Tool
A worksheet for rent, options, reimbursements, landlord obligations, tenant confirmations, estoppel issues, and renewal risk.
Click to read
Excel Model
Connects NOI, purchase price, all-in cost, cap rate, debt-service coverage (DSCR), loan sizing, equity, and an illustrative 10-year scenario worksheet.
Click to read
Deal Scorecard
A quick first pass through tenant strength, lease obligations, building function, and re-leasing risk before you spend time building the full underwriting.
Click to readUse findings from title, survey, environmental, lease, tenant confirmations, and property review to raise questions about credits, reserves, lease fixes, pricing, or whether the deal deserves more time.
Rebuild NOI from the lease, test rent against the market, size debt against debt-service coverage, and see what breaks in the downside case.
Write the investment memo after the numbers survive base, downside, and severe cases, not before.
By the time you finish the Blueprint path, you should have organized lease notes, a rebuilt income view, a downside case, loan questions, diligence questions, and a plain-English decision memo you can discuss with the professionals around the deal. The work is still yours, but you are not starting from a blank page.
When you send work to the Flagship Review Desk, the founders review it personally. We read the package, your underwriting, and your notes the way we wish someone had reviewed ours: carefully, skeptically, and with no interest in talking you into the deal.
We call it an accepted submission when the package is complete enough for us to do useful work: the deal materials, your underwriting, and the intake worksheet. If it is not ready yet, we tell you what is missing before the review clock starts.
Our target turnaround is 5 business days after a submission is accepted. If the queue ever gets heavy enough that we need more time, we tell you before you submit.
If we deliver a ready-for-review package after the standard in effect when you submitted, the late review is not counted against your annual ten and you receive one bonus review during the same review term.
There is one extra protection on your first submission. If your first ready-for-review package is submitted within 90 days of enrollment and we miss the standard, you can choose a full refund instead of the bonus review.
These protections apply only to our review-delivery standards. They do not guarantee diligence, financing, closing, tax, legal, or investment outcomes.
Every Flagship Review Desk critique is performed personally by the founders. We reserve capacity around the work itself: up to 25 members, up to ten accepted reviews each, and up to three founder review hours per accepted review. Support, intake, and administration sit outside that math.
The cap is simple: if we cannot do the work carefully, we should not sell the seat.
What the first 25 members keep:
Review access runs 12 months from enrollment, unused deal reviews expire when the term ends, and the renewal terms are summarized below and in the Terms. When the 25th seat fills, the founder price is no longer offered unless a seat reopens during the refund window.
What we ask in return: honest, structured feedback about the program and review process. We do not publish excerpts or details from submitted deal materials without separate written permission. If we use a testimonial, we disclose any founding-member discount or other material connection.
After the first group, enrollment opens only as seats recycle. Members who do not renew release their seats, usually around their renewal anniversary. That means new enrollment depends on real capacity opening up, not on a marketing calendar.
You do not have to buy the biggest thing first. Learn one topic, work through the full self-study program, or ask us to review your submitted deal work. Pick the amount of help that matches the decision in front of you.
Individual means one stuck point. Foundation means the full self-study course. Blueprint means a guided deal packet. Flagship means Blueprint plus founder review.
You have one part of the deal bothering you, and you want to understand it without buying the whole program.
You want the full course and working files, and you are comfortable applying them without founder review.
You want a guided path from messy deal package to organized questions and a decision memo.
You are serious enough about a deal that you want careful founder feedback before you keep spending time, money, and attention on it.
Only the Flagship Series has a term, because it is the only tier that uses founder review capacity. Review Desk access runs 12 months from enrollment and covers up to 10 accepted deal reviews. Unused reviews expire when the term ends. Nothing renews on its own. If renewals are offered and you choose another year, founder members renew at $15,000 and non-founder members renew at $20,000. Every other tier is a one-time purchase with lifetime access to the materials included with that purchase.
Lifetime access means access to the materials included in the tier you bought for as long as LTN continues to operate and support those materials. It does not automatically include new standalone products, services, or Review Desk terms unless we say so.
Take a full 30 days to evaluate the program. If it is not for you, for any reason or no reason at all, email us within 30 days and we refund 100 percent of the product price you paid. Downloading the tools does not cancel that right.
Work through the Blueprint and use the tools on one deal. If you honestly feel it did not help you see what to verify, rebuild the numbers from source documents, prepare a downside case, and organize your questions, email us by day 180 and we will refund your $2,497 Blueprint purchase price.
No submission. No argument. No second-guessing. This guarantee applies to standalone Blueprint purchases; the Flagship Series is governed by the 30-day refund policy and Review Desk service-standard protections.
The guarantees are about the education and the service, not the investment outcome. We can stand behind the materials, the tools, and the review process. We cannot promise that a property will perform, finance, lease, close, appreciate, or avoid trouble. The Blueprint is education and risk analysis, not legal, tax, accounting, brokerage, financial, investment, or fiduciary advice.
Read the free opener, choose the amount of help that fits where you are, and bring a steadier process to the next NNN deal you review.
See the optionsAsk a plain question about the lessons, tools, or deal review materials. I can point you to what LTN covers, but I cannot give legal, tax, lending, brokerage, or investment advice.
Stuck? Email [email protected].