
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


A failed motivational blog, a risky early move with retirement money, and a career setback all became part of the path that led Brandon Cobb into one of real estate’s most overlooked value-creation plays: land entitlement. In this conversation with Eugene Gershman, Brandon breaks down how raw land can be taken from a simple parcel to a 50-, 100-, or 200-home community, why builders often prefer buying finished lots instead of taking on development risk themselves, and what landowners should understand before selling too early and leaving serious money on the table.
Guest Bio
Brandon Cobb is a real estate entrepreneur focused on land development, paper development, affordable housing, and selling individual lots to builders. Eugene introduces him as someone who has completed more than 180 transactions. In the episode, Brandon shares how he moved from a successful career in medical device sales into entrepreneurship, then into flipping houses, building homes, and eventually developing land after national homebuilders began approaching him to buy projects he was working on.
Episode Highlights and Chapters
01:29 Eugene sets up the conversation around how value is actually created in land development, with a focus on paper development, affordable housing, and the real leverage behind entitlement work.
02:50 Brandon shares how losing his medical device sales job became the turning point that pushed him toward entrepreneurship and real estate.
05:44 After getting inspired by a Shark Tank pitch, Brandon experiments with several failed business ideas before discovering real estate, flipping his first house, and learning through costly mistakes.
21:33 Brandon explains the layered value creation in land deals, from entitlement to infrastructure to vertical construction, and why multiple exit strategies make the model so attractive.
24:16 The conversation turns to why national builders often prefer entitled or finished lots over raw land, especially when speed, timing, and return on capital matter more than taking development risk themselves.
26:31 Brandon breaks down what builders typically want in a project, why around 50 lots can be a meaningful threshold in his market, and how smaller communities can still work when they fit a builder’s pipeline.
28:25 One of Brandon’s biggest lessons for landowners is to understand what their land could be worth after entitlement, instead of selling as-is and potentially leaving major upside behind.
29:42 Eugene adds the owner’s perspective, explaining the tradeoff between certainty and upside, since developers often take on the work and risk but also delay the seller’s payoff until approvals are complete.
32:08 Brandon shares the two main ways people can work with him: education and coaching for people who want to learn land development, and passive investment opportunities for those who want exposure to the strategy without operating deals themselves.
Contact Information
Brandon Cobb
https://learnlanddevelopment.com
Interested in being a guest on our podcast? Contact us at:
https://giscompanies.co/podcast/
Download the Feasibility Study Checklist to assess your project’s potential
https://giscompanies.co/development/feasibility-study/
Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
By Eugene Gershman5
55 ratings
A failed motivational blog, a risky early move with retirement money, and a career setback all became part of the path that led Brandon Cobb into one of real estate’s most overlooked value-creation plays: land entitlement. In this conversation with Eugene Gershman, Brandon breaks down how raw land can be taken from a simple parcel to a 50-, 100-, or 200-home community, why builders often prefer buying finished lots instead of taking on development risk themselves, and what landowners should understand before selling too early and leaving serious money on the table.
Guest Bio
Brandon Cobb is a real estate entrepreneur focused on land development, paper development, affordable housing, and selling individual lots to builders. Eugene introduces him as someone who has completed more than 180 transactions. In the episode, Brandon shares how he moved from a successful career in medical device sales into entrepreneurship, then into flipping houses, building homes, and eventually developing land after national homebuilders began approaching him to buy projects he was working on.
Episode Highlights and Chapters
01:29 Eugene sets up the conversation around how value is actually created in land development, with a focus on paper development, affordable housing, and the real leverage behind entitlement work.
02:50 Brandon shares how losing his medical device sales job became the turning point that pushed him toward entrepreneurship and real estate.
05:44 After getting inspired by a Shark Tank pitch, Brandon experiments with several failed business ideas before discovering real estate, flipping his first house, and learning through costly mistakes.
21:33 Brandon explains the layered value creation in land deals, from entitlement to infrastructure to vertical construction, and why multiple exit strategies make the model so attractive.
24:16 The conversation turns to why national builders often prefer entitled or finished lots over raw land, especially when speed, timing, and return on capital matter more than taking development risk themselves.
26:31 Brandon breaks down what builders typically want in a project, why around 50 lots can be a meaningful threshold in his market, and how smaller communities can still work when they fit a builder’s pipeline.
28:25 One of Brandon’s biggest lessons for landowners is to understand what their land could be worth after entitlement, instead of selling as-is and potentially leaving major upside behind.
29:42 Eugene adds the owner’s perspective, explaining the tradeoff between certainty and upside, since developers often take on the work and risk but also delay the seller’s payoff until approvals are complete.
32:08 Brandon shares the two main ways people can work with him: education and coaching for people who want to learn land development, and passive investment opportunities for those who want exposure to the strategy without operating deals themselves.
Contact Information
Brandon Cobb
https://learnlanddevelopment.com
Interested in being a guest on our podcast? Contact us at:
https://giscompanies.co/podcast/
Download the Feasibility Study Checklist to assess your project’s potential
https://giscompanies.co/development/feasibility-study/
Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

47,718 Listeners