Some women think real estate investing requires more time, more money, or a totally different life stage. Amanda Ginther’s story proves the opposite: you can build a family real estate business in the middle of homeschooling, homesteading, fostering, and ordinary life when you stay consistent and take brave steps.
In this episode of Without Fear of Her Future, Amanda shares how one $17 masterclass turned into a growing investing journey, a household-wide business rhythm, and a new vision for legacy. Her story is especially encouraging for Christian women who want practical strategies without losing sight of stewardship, family, and purpose. You’ll hear how she moved from self-doubt to action, from learning to leading, and from “I don’t belong here” to “my whole family can do this.”
Homestead To Investing
Amanda’s starting point was not a polished investor brand. She was a homeschooling mom of five, homesteading, milking cows, raising animals, and living a full family life when she first encountered WREIN. That matters, because many women delay investing until life feels calmer, and that calmer season never really arrives. Her story shows that women in real estate investing do not need a perfect backdrop; they need a clear next step and a willingness to learn.
What stands out most is how ordinary her “yes” looked. She signed up for the masterclass after a text from her husband while she was collecting eggs in the chicken coop, then listened with her family during travel and road trips. That kind of momentum is a powerful reminder that small windows of time can become real progress. For women juggling a lot, the path forward is often not more free time, but better focus and a stronger decision to begin.
Amanda also talked honestly about feeling unworthy and unequipped when she attended Rain Live. That vulnerability gives the episode strong E-E-A-T value because it reflects lived experience, not theory. She did not wait to feel ready. She kept showing up, and that steady action created confidence.
Building Deal Flow
One of the most practical parts of the episode is Amanda’s deal activity. She described starting with 20 offers a day, then scaling to 30 to 40 offers a day, five days a week, because consistency increased the odds of a yes. That is the kind of wholesaling offers strategy many listeners need: simple, repeatable, and volume-driven. It is not flashy, but it works because it creates conversations, follow-up, and opportunities.
Her first deal was a foreclosure auction purchase in Granbury, and her second was a lakefront property bought from a wholesaler. The numbers show disciplined execution: she bought at 195, put in about 100,000, and saw an appraisal at 450, which created room for a cash-out refinance and reinvestment. For women learning to invest, this is the lesson: know your numbers, know your exit, and use each deal to fund the next one.
Amanda also shared a useful mindset shift. At first, she did not want to answer calls from agents. Later, she became the person eager for those calls because she understood the business side better. That change illustrates how confidence grows through repetition. The more she practiced, the less fear controlled her decisions.
Mindset And Family
Amanda’s story is not just about profit. It is about a real estate mindset that makes space for family participation, skill-building, and legacy. Her daughter wants a real estate license, her older sons are wholesaling, and her husband helps close deals and manage email follow-up during lunch breaks. That is what a family real estate business can look like when everyone has a role and the home becomes a training ground instead of a limitation.
The episode also highlights a key truth for Christian women: identity matters. Amanda said she felt like “just a homeschool mom” at first, but the environment helped her see that she belonged among other investors. That shift from insecurity to stewardship is huge. It reminds listeners that God often grows our capacity after we say yes, not before.
A particularly inspiring detail is how Amanda’s boys viewed video games and real estate offers as competing uses of time. They chose to learn how to make money by making offers, and one of her sons secured their first yes on an offer. That is a beautiful example of training children in responsibility, initiative, and entrepreneurial thinking. It also shows how wealth-building can become a family culture rather than a private adult hobby.
Faith And Stewardship
Amanda’s faith shows up in the way she talks about opportunity, generosity, and influence. She described investing as opening more doors to serve others, help distressed homeowners, and support people in hard seasons. That fits a biblical stewardship framework: resources are meant to be managed wisely and used to bless others, not hoarded. Scriptures such as Proverbs 3:9-10, Matthew 25:14-30, and 1 Peter 4:10 reinforce the idea that faithfulness with what we have now prepares us for more responsibility later.
This episode also connects clearly to the broader WREIN mission of helping women build wealth, confidence, and security through real estate. Amanda’s story shows that faith and business do not compete when the goal is stewardship. Instead, business can become a channel for generosity, family stability, and kingdom impact. That is especially powerful for women who want wealth without guilt.
Amanda’s words about territory expansion are memorable. As they served others and stayed faithful with what they had, their business expanded into new markets and new relationships. That is a strong takeaway for Christian investors: obedience often grows capacity. The point is not just bigger income, but broader impact.
Next Steps
For listeners who want to apply Amanda’s story, the next step is to start small and stay consistent. You do not need a full-time real estate identity to build traction; you need a weekly rhythm and a willingness to learn.
Practical actions from this episode include:
- Send more offers, especially to older listings that need motivation.
- Track your follow-up so no lead disappears.
- Involve your spouse or kids where appropriate so the business supports your household.
- Use training and mentorship to shorten your learning curve.
- Treat every yes as a lesson and every no as market data.
- Ask what kind of legacy your current habits are building.
- Keep your focus on stewardship, not comparison.
Key Takeaways
- A family real estate business can grow from ordinary daily life, not just from ideal conditions.
- Consistency creates deal flow.
- Volume matters in wholesaling.
- Confidence comes after action.
- Family participation can build both skills and legacy.
- Self-doubt does not disqualify you from investing.
- Mentorship shortens the learning curve.
- Stewardship turns profit into purpose.
- Small brave steps can lead to major momentum.
- Real estate can become a family mission, not just a personal side hustle.
FAQ
What is family real estate business?
It is a way for spouses, children, or other family members to work together in real estate. In this episode, Amanda shows how wholesaling, training, and shared goals can become a true family effort.
How does wholesaling offers work in this episode?
Amanda and her family sent daily offers to motivated sellers and older listings. Their consistency created more conversations, more follow-up, and more chances to get a yes.
Why is faithful stewardship important for investors?
Faithful stewardship helps investors use money, time, and skills with wisdom and purpose. Amanda’s story shows how real estate can become a tool for generosity, stability, and kingdom impact.
What mindset shift helped Amanda the most?
She moved from feeling unworthy to taking action anyway. That shift helped her grow confidence, make offers, and lead her family into investing.
How can Christian women start in real estate?
Start with education, community, and one small brave step. Amanda’s story shows that learning, mentorship, and consistent action matter more than perfection.

