Born in Walnut Creek, California, she now splits the year between Oahu, Hawaii and Tulsa,
Oklahoma, and has spent time all around the world in between. Which seems fitting given that Kate
is best known these days as a leader in the short-term rental space.
Kate started running marketing for a medical device company in San Francisco but decided to trade
in a safe career for a more adventurous life. So, she picked up and left for Waikiki in 2013. She
found a home to rent in a quiet neighborhood three blocks from the beach and got permission from
her landlord to sublet it. “I ended up making enough from that house to put a down payment on a
condo,” she says. From there, her burgeoning Airbnb business was off to the races. In the half-
decade since, she’s bought and operated short-term rental properties in Vietnam, Hawaii, Austin,
and Tulsa.
Kate, who’s now married with two “fur babies,” founded Property Protect in 2017. Her startup
offers automated, affordable insurance for short-term property owners. It’s a tool to give peace of
mind and security to a class of landlord who desperately needs it. Like all successful founders, Kate
used her experience to find a hole in the market and then filled it.
When she heard about Fund.me, Kate was impressed by the way Manly and Josh had found a fix for
another crack in the short-term rental market. For entrepreneurial short-term landlords like Kate,
bank loans are difficult to secure. She was drawn to Fund.me because they offered hard-money
options specifically crafted for hustlers like her: tech savvy and fast-moving, with innovative ideas
about real-estate investment.
“My whole mantra in life is: figure out who is the most digitally focused. I want the whole entire
journey to be a hundred percent online,” she says. “The great thing about Fund.me and their hard-
money loan is it’s helping to educate people on this other avenue to take as a short-term rental
owner. It allows them to start to formulate the short-term rentals as a business. A lot of people still
think of this as a side hustle.”
Before buying a new property, Kate dives into recon mode. For real-estate investors like her — with
three, five, or even ten short-term rental properties — it stops being a gig; it’s a business. Unlike a
long-term rental landlord, Kate has to factor in occupancy rate, cost of utilities, and even the
possibility of regulatory changes. It’s no coincidence that the meticulous founder has been extremely
successful in the space. “Make sure your numbers are accurate and don’t exaggerate,” she says. “Be
very realistic and do a lot of research.”
Not everyone can head a successful startup while owning a fleet of short-term rentals. But anyone
who knows Kate — via her writing , her Investor Underground Facebook group, or in person —knows she has some great advice for how to take the leap into the real-estate market. “Find a way to
house-hack a property. Find a duplex, or triplex, or even quadplex to buy and, you’re going to live in
it, so you can get a loan that is for an owner-occupant. Then you can rent out the unit and that’ll
help pay off the mortgage.” she says. “Fix it up while you live there, and then you can take out
equity and buy another place. The way to do this is to start very humbly and let other people pay
your mortgage.”
Kate can give you the roadmap to owning in today’s tricky real-estate market. Fund.me can give you
the hard-money loan to get you there.
Fund.me. It’s not a side hustle; it’s a career.
[Add button: “Find the Loan That’s Right for You”]
QUOTE [which will run on the front page beside a photo of Kate]
“My whole mantra in life is figure out who is the most digitally focused. I want the whole entire journey to be
a hundred percent online. The great thing about Fund.me and their hard-money loan is it’s helping to educate
people on this other avenue to take as a short-term rental owner. It allows them to start to formulate the
short-term rentals as a business. A lot of people still think of this as a side hustle.”