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Archive for October, 2008

Credit Restoration No to Yes

Thursday, October 23rd, 2008

“No.” “ Sorry.” “Denied.” “ Can’t.” – These are all words that everyone hates to hear when applying for anything, especially credit. You want to hear the “yes”, and see the big red “Approved” stamp on your application. Just the sound of that stamp is so invigorating. But what if your credit is bad and hearing that booming approval hit the papers is so far out of sight you can’t even dream of it? What do you do then? Do you save up cash and use it as a lifeline during emergencies or “big buys”? Is all hope of hearing positive words towards your application lost? Or maybe you “don’t need credit” and you want to rent apartments for the rest of your life. Come on… GET REAL! The American dream is to have a family and own, and I repeat… OWN, your very own house! Don’t you want your children to have a backyard to play in? Wouldn’t you love it if your wife had her marble kitchen countertops, her gorgeous wood floors, and her 150 sq. ft. walk in closet, while you enjoyed your upstairs game room with your 60 inch plasma TV to watch hi-def football with “the boys” on game days? Of course you would… and this is how you can make that possible.

So you think it will take years upon years to get your credit score remotely close to where it needs to be? Not true, my friends…not true. There are certain steps you can take and strategic moves you can make to raise your credit scores. First, you need to humble yourself, admit you have credit challenges, and realize that you need healthy lines of credit in your life. Admitting to something and looking for help is always a good first step towards getting out of any negative moment in your life. Second, save up some money and set it aside until you are ready to make the most important step in raising your credit scores, hiring a credit restoration company to professionally do everything they can, legally, to bring your scores up to par. I will tell you upfront and straight forward… the best time is now, not later.

Of course, you can spend your money and time searching how to dispute to the bureaus and creditors yourself, but beware, the results could be insufficient, time consuming, and distant. For example, you can change your own oil, you can cook your own steaks, and you can represent yourself in a court of law; but there is no guarantee that, afterwards, your car is going to run correctly, your steaks are going to be tender and juicy, or that you are going to win the court case. You can dispute your negative line items on your credit reports yourself, but there is no guarantee that you will have used your time and money wisely. Hiring a credit restoration company, full time professionals, is the best route to take.

Many people say that credit repair is a “scam”, and “there is no such thing.” These are the “credit uneducated” people who accept defeat and don’t think outside the box. These are the ones who see the life preserver while they are drowning, but don’t grab a hold of it because they don’t like the color. These are the close-minded consumers who have never had to deal with bad credit, read a couple of articles written by others, just like them, and decided to sway toward the “popular vote” because it was published in a newspaper, and therefore it is correct. President Richard Nixon was impeached out of office for being a key member of The Watergate Scandal, a scam on America, but did the United States never elect a President ever again? Of course not. My point here is simply this: Just because there are scams and unethical companies and people in the world, does not mean at all that ethical, reputable companies do not exist. Do the research, weigh your options, and make a wise and educated decision with the company you choose to go with for credit restoration.

There is hope for the “less than perfect credit” consumers. There is a light at the end of the tunnel, and it is blinding. Do not let the public negativity, the pessimists, and the close-minded people influence your decisions in life and concerning your credit. Healthy credit is vital and very obtainable, so keep your chin up and your eyes open, and let the best credit restoration company show you how to go from “no to yes”, and introduce you to your new backyard, walk-in closet, and game room.

By line: Kyle Gilbert is the Client Services Director at Global Advantage Credit Solutions. He can be reached at 877.337.2673 ext. 1008 for more information.

Lacking sufficient credit history?

Thursday, October 23rd, 2008

It is difficult to obtain trust from banks, credit card companies, and loan providers without adequate credit history. There is a chance that you qualify for credit cards or car loans, but at the high interest rates that are set up for people with bad or no credit history.

Credit card companies, banks, and creditors in general look at your lack of credit history as a high risk factor. Think about it this way, the first time you rode a roller coaster, and how uncertain you were about the height, speed, and reliability of the machine. It was a risk you weren’t really sure you wanted to take. This is the way a creditor looks at a first time credit applicant.

Creditors are forced to make it harder for first time applicants to apply for a line of credit simply because they cannot trust these applicants based on their lack of credit history versus an applicant who has a lengthy credit history.

There are in fact ways to establish good credit early, but you’ve got to completely comprehend the way the system works for first time applicants before you apply for anything. There are four core reasons why this happens but there are ways to build your scores as you go.

You’ve got no or low scores!!!

Lenders use credit scores and your credit history as a main factor in their decision to give you credit. Your credit score is based on five factors, payment history, amounts owed, length of history, new credit and types of credit in use. If you’re missing any one of these factors, your scores will be lower versus someone with all of the factors. A good way to start is by opening a secured credit card. How to do this? Start by going to trustworthy bank and ask them to extend you a secured line of credit. They’ll qualify you for your credit limit but you have to put down the given amount up front. This, is what makes it secure.

You may be a candidate for an unsecured line of credit but,

You’ve walked into your favorite clothing store, searched and rummaged for that perfect outfit for the weekend. Once you’ve reached the check-out counter the sales associate asks if you’d like to open up a credit card with them to save you 10% on your current purchase. WAIT! Do you qualify? What is your credit history? Take them up on their offer. Credit cards to department stores and retail stores are considered unsecured cards. You’ll more than likely be approved for an unsecured card through retail stores but at a much higher interest rate compared to those with credit history. This is ok. Your credit limit won’t be very high (generally $ 200.00 - $ 300.00) but you’re building your credit history and you really don’t need a much higher credit limit, considering it is to ONE retail store. You should never start with a high credit limit because you want to show how reliable you are in making payments on time. Just because you can afford $ 650.00 per month, doesn’t mean you have to spend that much.

Lenders don’t like to take risks

It’s a well known fact that people with no credit are treated a lot different than those with credit history. High down payments, high interest rates, and low credit limits. I know I sound like a broken record, but it’s very important to understand what is going on. Lenders are likely to extend credit out to new applicants only if it benefits them in the long run. That way, if you start to default, it’s more of an “I told you “ than an “I’m sorry about your loss.” These high interest rate cards are ok to have as long as you don’t default. Use 30% of the limit each month and pay it down by the due date. As long as you don’t carry a balance to the next month the interest rates will not affect you.

Lenders have a hard time processing your application without credit history

A lot of creditors process loan applications via processing equipment. Once they run the scores and reports, they automatically come up with the amount to extend to you and the interest rate. If you are a ‘ghost’ with no scores or history, lenders will choose to automatically decline you rather than physically take the time to process your loan by hand. An easy way to get around this is to become an authorized user on an existing credit card, preferably a parent, guardian, or spouse. In doing this you will be able to use an established credit card with history but, this will not reflect in your scores unless you or the primary account holder default on a payment. Once you’ve had ‘practice’ as an authorized user, the next step is to become a joint account holder or co-applicant. This way the creditor reports you to the bureaus and this will help your scores as long as you’re making payments on time and keeping the balances low. In conclusion, these are the key ingredients to obtaining an average credit score that you can grow as soon as you establish your first credit card or loan. Once you’ve understood these factors they will help in your pursue for an excellent credit score from day one.

In conclusion, these are the key ingredients to obtaining an average that you can grow as soon as you establish your first credit card or loan. Once you’ve understood these factors they will help in your pursue for an excellent credit score from day one.

If your credit isn’t up to par and you’re considering credit repair and credit restoration services, please call me to discuss the possibilities. Melissa Kissinger, Client Services 1.877.337.2673 ext. 1002.

What Is Identity Theft and Identity Fraud?

Thursday, October 16th, 2008

The short answer is that identity theft is a crime.  Identity theft and identity fraud are terms used to refer to all types of crime in which someone wrongfully obtains and uses another person’s personal data in some way that involves fraud or deception, typically for economic gain.  This article is intended to explain why you need to take precautions to protect yourself from identity theft.
Unlike your fingerprints, which are unique to you and cannot be given to someone else for their use; your personal data, especially your Social Security number, your bank account or credit card number, your telephone calling card number, and other valuable identifying data can be used, if they fall into the wrong hands, to personally profit at your expense. In the United States and Canada; for example, many people have reported that unauthorized persons have taken funds out of their bank or financial accounts, or; in the worst cases, taken over their identities altogether, running up vast debts and committing crimes while using the victims’ names. In many cases, a victim’s losses may include not only out-of-pocket financial losses, but substantial additional financial costs associated with trying to restore his reputation in the community and correcting erroneous information for which the criminal is responsible.
In one notorious case of identity theft; the criminal, a convicted felon, not only incurred more than $100,000 of credit card debt, obtained a federal home loan, and bought homes, motorcycles, and handguns in the victim’s name, but called his victim to taunt him — saying that he could continue to pose as the victim for as long as he wanted because identity theft was not a federal crime at that time — before filing for bankruptcy, also in the victim’s name. While the victim and his wife spent more than four years and more than $15,000 of their own money to restore their credit and reputation, the criminal served a brief sentence for making a false statement to procure a firearm, but made no restitution to his victim for any of the harm he had caused. This case, and others like it, prompted Congress in 1998 to create a new federal offense of identity theft.

What Are The Most Common Ways To Commit Identity Theft Or Fraud?


Many people do not realize how easily criminals can obtain our personal data without having to break into our homes. In public places; for example, criminals may engage in “shoulder surfing” watching you from a nearby location as you punch in your telephone calling card number or credit card number or listen in on your conversation if you give your credit-card number over the telephone to a hotel or rental car company.
Even the area near your home or office may not be secure. Some criminals engage in “dumpster diving”; going through your garbage cans or a communal dumpster or trash bin — to obtain copies of your checks, credit card or bank statements, or other records that typically bear your name, address, and even your telephone number. These types of records make it easier for criminals to get control over accounts in your name and assume your identity.
If you receive applications for “pre-approved” credit cards in the mail, but discard them without tearing up the enclosed materials, criminals may retrieve them and try to activate the cards for their use without your knowledge. (Some credit card companies, when sending credit cards, have adopted security measures that allow a card recipient to activate the card only from his or her home telephone number but this is not yet a universal practice.) Also, if your mail is delivered to a place where others have ready access to it, criminals may simply intercept and redirect your mail to another location.
In recent years, the Internet has become an appealing place for criminals to obtain identifying data, such as passwords or even banking information. In their haste to explore the exciting features of the Internet, many people respond to “spam” unsolicited E-mail that promises them some benefit but requests identifying data, without realizing that in many cases, the requester has no intention of keeping his promise. In some cases, criminals reportedly have used computer technology to obtain large amounts of personal data.
With enough identifying information about an individual, a criminal can take over that individual’s identity to conduct a wide range of crimes: for example, false applications for loans and credit cards, fraudulent withdrawals from bank accounts, fraudulent use of telephone calling cards, or obtaining other goods or privileges which the criminal might be denied if he were to use his real name. If the criminal takes steps to ensure that bills for the falsely obtained credit cards, or bank statements showing the unauthorized withdrawals, are sent to an address other than the victim’s, the victim may not become aware of what is happing until the criminal has already inflicted substantial damage on the victim’s assets, credit, and reputation.

Many people do not realize how easily criminals can obtain our personal data without having to break into our homes. In public places, for example, criminals may engage in “shoulder surfing” watching you from a nearby location as you punch in your telephone calling card number or credit card number or listen in on your conversation if you give your credit-card number over the telephone to a hotel or rental car company.
Even the area near your home or office may not be secure. Some criminals engage in “dumpster diving” going through your garbage cans or a communal dumpster or trash bin — to obtain copies of your checks, credit card or bank statements, or other records that typically bear your name, address, and even your telephone number. These types of records make it easier for criminals to get control over accounts in your name and assume your identity.
If you receive applications for “pre-approved” credit cards in the mail, but discard them without tearing up the enclosed materials, criminals may retrieve them and try to activate the cards for their use without your knowledge. (Some credit card companies, when sending credit cards, have adopted security measures that allow a card recipient to activate the card only from his or her home telephone number but this is not yet a universal practice.) Also, if your mail is delivered to a place where others have ready access to it, criminals may simply intercept and redirect your mail to another location.
In recent years, the Internet has become an appealing place for criminals to obtain identifying data, such as passwords or even banking information. In their haste to explore the exciting features of the Internet, many people respond to “spam” unsolicited E-mail that promises them some benefit but requests identifying data, without realizing that in many cases, the requester has no intention of keeping his promise. In some cases, criminals reportedly have used computer technology to obtain large amounts of personal data.
With enough identifying information about an individual, a criminal can take over that individual’s identity to conduct a wide range of crimes: for example, false applications for loans and credit cards, fraudulent withdrawals from bank accounts, fraudulent use of telephone calling cards, or obtaining other goods or privileges which the criminal might be denied if he were to use his real name. If the criminal takes steps to ensure that bills for the falsely obtained credit cards, or bank statements showing the unauthorized withdrawals, are sent to an address other than the victim’s, the victim may not become aware of what is happing until the criminal has already inflicted substantial damage on the victim’s assets, credit, and reputation.

What’s The Department Of Justice Doing About Identity Theft And Fraud?

The Department of Justice prosecutes cases of identity theft and fraud under a variety of federal statutes. In fall of 1998; for example, Congress passed the Identity Theft and Assumption Deterrence Act. This legislation created a new offense of identity theft, which prohibits knowingly transfer [ring] or us[ing], without lawful authority, a means of identification of another person with the intent to commit, or to aid or abet, any unlawful activity that constitutes a violation of Federal law, or that constitutes a felony under any applicable State or local law.
18 U.S.C. | 1028(a) (7). This offense, in most circumstances, carries a maximum term of 15 years’ imprisonment, a fine, and criminal forfeiture of any personal property used or intended to be used to commit the offense.
Schemes to commit identity theft or fraud may also involve violations of other statutes such as identification fraud (18 U.S.C. | 1028), credit card fraud (18 U.S.C. | 1029), computer fraud (18 U.S.C. | 1030), mail fraud (18 U.S.C. | 1341), wire fraud (18 U.S.C. | 1343), or financial institution fraud (18 U.S.C. | 1344). Each of these federal offenses are felonies that carry substantial penalties in some cases, as high as 30 years’ imprisonment, fines, and criminal forfeiture.
Federal prosecutors work with federal investigative agencies such as the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the United States Secret Service, and the United States Postal Inspection Service to prosecute identity theft and fraud cases.The Department of Justice prosecutes cases of identity theft and fraud under a variety of federal statutes. In the fall of 1998, for example, Congress passed the Identity Theft and Assumption Deterrence Act. This legislation created a new offense of identity theft, which prohibits knowingly transfer[ring] or us[ing], without lawful authority, a means of identification of another person with the intent to commit, or to aid or abet, any unlawful activity that constitutes a violation of Federal law, or that constitutes a felony under any applicable State or local law.
18 U.S.C. | 1028(a)(7). This offense, in most circumstances, carries a maximum term of 15 years’ imprisonment, a fine, and criminal forfeiture of any personal property used or intended to be used to commit the offense.
Schemes to commit identity theft or fraud may also involve violations of other statutes such as identification fraud (18 U.S.C. | 1028), credit card fraud (18 U.S.C. | 1029), computer fraud (18 U.S.C. | 1030), mail fraud (18 U.S.C. | 1341), wire fraud (18 U.S.C. | 1343), or financial institution fraud (18 U.S.C. | 1344). Each of these federal offenses are felonies that carry substantial penalties in some cases, as high as 30 years’ imprisonment, fines, and criminal forfeiture.
Federal prosecutors work with federal investigative agencies such as the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the United States Secret Service, and the United States Postal Inspection Service to prosecute identity theft and fraud cases.

What Can I Do About Identity Theft And Fraud?

To victims of identity theft and fraud, the task of correcting incorrect information about their financial or personal status, and trying to restore their good names and reputations, may seem as daunting as trying to solve a puzzle in which some of the pieces are missing and other pieces no longer fit as they once did. Unfortunately, the damage that criminals do in stealing another person’s identity and using it to commit fraud often takes far longer to undo than it took the criminal to commit the crimes.
Be cognizant about giving out your personal information to others unless you have a reason to trust them, regardless of where you are:

At Home

1. Start by adopting a “need to know” approach to your personal data. Your credit card company may need to know your mother’s maiden name, so that it can verify your identity when you call to inquire about your account. A person who calls you and says he’s from your bank, however, doesn’t need to know that information if it’s already on file with your bank; the only purpose of such a call is to acquire that information for that person’s personal benefit. Also, the more information that you have printed on your personal bank checks — such as your Social Security number or home telephone number — the more personal data you are routinely handing out to people who may not need that information.  Currently, banks will also print driver’s license numbers on checks which can also subject consumers to identify theft.
 

2. If someone you don’t know calls you on the telephone and offers you the chance to receive a “major” credit card, a prize, or other valuable item, but asks you for personal data — such as your Social Security number, credit card number or expiration date, or mother’s maiden name — ask them to send you a written application form.  Beware of solicitors who call and ask for your banking information; such as, your routing and account number.  They use tactics such as; I will send you $500 in coupons; however, I need your banking information so we can bill you after your free trial.  

3. If they won’t do it, tell them you’re not interested and hang up.  

4. If they will, review the application carefully when you receive it and make sure it’s going to a company or financial institution that’s well-known and reputable. The Better Business Bureau can give you information about businesses that have been the subject of complaints.

On Travel

1. If you’re traveling, have your mail held at your local post office, or ask someone you know well and trust — another family member, a friend, or a neighbor — to collect and hold your mail while you’re away.

2. If you have to telephone someone while you’re traveling, and need to pass on personal financial information to the person you’re calling, don’t do it at an open telephone booth where passersby’s can listen in on what you’re saying; use a telephone booth where you can close the door, or wait until you’re at a less public location to call.
Check your financial information regularly, and look for what should be there and what shouldn’t:

What Should Be There

1. If you have bank or credit card accounts, you should be receiving monthly statements that list transactions for the most recent month or reporting period.

2. If you’re not receiving monthly statements for the accounts you know you have, call the financial institution or credit card company immediately and ask about it.

3. If you’re told that your statements are being mailed to another address that you haven’t authorized, tell the financial institution or credit card representative immediately that you did not authorize the change of address and that someone may be improperly using your accounts. In that situation, you should also ask for copies of all statements and debit or charge transactions that have occurred since the last statement you received. Obtaining those copies will help you to work with the financial institution or credit card company in determining whether some or all of those debit or charge transactions were fraudulent.  You can also set up a password that requires the financial institution to prompt you for this self-selected password each time you call in. 

What Shouldn’t Be There

1. If someone has gotten your financial data and made unauthorized debits or charges against your financial accounts, checking your monthly statements carefully may be the quickest way for you to find out. Too many of us give those statements, or the enclosed checks or credit transactions, only a quick glance, and don’t review them closely to make sure there are no unauthorized withdrawals or charges.

2. If someone has managed to get access to your mail or other personal data, and opened any credit cards in your name or taken any funds from your bank account, contact your financial institution or credit card company immediately to report those transactions and to request further action.
Ask periodically for a copy of your credit report.
Your credit report should list all bank and financial accounts under your name, and will provide other indications of whether someone has wrongfully opened or used any accounts in your name.
Maintain careful records of your banking and financial accounts.
Even though financial institutions are required to maintain copies of your checks, debit transactions, and similar transactions for five years, you should retain your monthly statements and checks for at least one year, if not more. If you need to dispute a particular check or transaction — especially if they purport to bear your signatures — your original records will be more immediately accessible and useful to the institutions that you have contacted.
Even if you take all of these steps, however, it’s still possible that you can become a victim of identity theft. Records containing your personal data — credit-card receipts or car-rental agreements, for example — may be found by or shared with someone who decides to use your data for fraudulent purposes.

What Should You Do If You Have Become A Victim Of Identity Theft?

If you think you’ve become a victim of identity theft or fraud, act immediately to minimize the damage to your personal funds and financial accounts, as well as your reputation. Here’s a list — based in part on a checklist prepared by the California Public Interest Research Group (CalPIRG) and the Privacy Rights Clearinghouse — of some actions that you should take right away:

1. Contact the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) to report the situation, whether –

2. Online,

3. By telephone toll-free at 1-877-ID THEFT (877-438-4338) or TDD at 202-326-2502, or

4. By mail; to Consumer Response Center, FTC, 600 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W., Washington, DC 20580.

Under the Identity Theft and Assumption Deterrence Act , the Federal Trade Commission is responsible for receiving and processing complaints from people who believe they may be victims of identity theft, providing informational materials to those people, and referring those complaints to appropriate entities, including the major credit reporting agencies and law enforcement agencies. For further information, please check the FTC’s identity theft Web pages. You can also call your local office of the FBI or the U.S. Secret Service to report crimes relating to identity theft and fraud.
You may also need to contact other agencies for other types of identity theft:

1. Your local office of the Postal Inspection Service if you suspect that an identity thief has submitted a change-of-address form with the Post Office to redirect your mail, or has used the mail to commit frauds involving your identity;

2. The Social Security Administration if you suspect that your Social Security number is being fraudulently used (call 800-269-0271 to report the fraud);

3. The Internal Revenue Service if you suspect the improper use of identification information in connection with tax violations (call 1-800-829-0433 to report the violations).
Call the fraud units of the three principal credit reporting companies:

Equifax:

1. To report fraud, call (800) 525-6285 or write to P.O. Box 740250, Atlanta, GA 30374-0250.

2. To order a copy of your credit report ($8 in most states), write to P.O. Box 740241, Atlanta, GA 30374-0241, or call (800) 685-1111.

3. To dispute information in your report, call the phone number provided on your credit report.

4. To opt out of pre-approved offers of credit, call (888) 567-8688 or write to Equifax Options, P.O. Box 740123, Atlanta GA 30374-0123.

Experian

1. To report fraud, call (888) EXPERIAN or (888) 397-3742, fax to (800) 301-7196, or write to P.O. Box 1017, Allen, TX 75013.

2. To order a copy of your credit report ($8 in most states): P.O. Box 2104, Allen TX 75013, or call (888) EXPERIAN.

3. To dispute information in your report, call the phone number provided on your credit report.

4. To opt out of pre-approved offers of credit and marketing lists, call (800) 353-0809 or (888) 5OPTOUT or write to P.O. Box 919, Allen, TX 75013.

Trans Union

1. To report fraud, call (800) 680-7289 or write to P.O. Box 6790, Fullerton, CA 92634.

2. To order a copy of your credit report ($8 in most states), write to P.O. Box 390, Springfield, PA 19064 or call: (800) 888-4213.

3. To dispute information in your report, call the phone number provided on your credit report.

4. To opt out of pre-approved offers of credit and marketing lists, call (800) 680-7293 or (888)

5. OPTOUT or write to P.O Box 97328, Jackson, MS 39238.  

Contact all creditors with whom your name or identifying data have been fraudulently used. For example, you may need to contact your long-distance telephone company if your long-distance calling card has been stolen or you find fraudulent charges on your bill.
Contact all financial institutions where you have accounts that an identity thief has taken over or that have been created in your name but without your knowledge. You may need to cancel those accounts, place stop-payment orders on any outstanding checks that may not have cleared, and change your Automated Teller Machine (ATM) card, account, and Personal Identification Number (PIN).
Contact the major check verification companies if you’ve had checks stolen or bank accounts set up by an identity thief. In particular, if you know that a particular merchant has received a check stolen from you, contact the verification company that the merchant uses:

1. CheckRite — (800) 766-2748

2. ChexSystems — (800) 428-9623 (closed checking accounts)

3. CrossCheck — (800) 552-1900

4. Equifax — (800) 437-5120

5. National Processing Co. (NPC) — (800) 526-5380

6. SCAN — (800) 262-7771

7. TeleCheck — (800) 710-9898  

 

It’s Not For Everyone

Thursday, October 16th, 2008

How many times have you been turned down and denied lines of credit? If you have credit challenges, then the answer is probably more than once. Quite frankly, the myth that bad credit simply goes away in time is just that,¦ a myth. Sure, if you have the time to wait years upon years for your credit to"disappear," then be my guest; but keep in mind that your scores will never be what they potentially could be. Credit restoration is a program that can be helpful for many, but definitely not for everyone.

I am not going to"sugar coat" what needs to happen. I am not going to sympathize or be sincere and personable and tell you that everything is going to be okay. This simply is not the case. You have to WANT to change your life, your habits, and your financial stability. In order to repair your credit, there are a few changes you have to make. The old ways of procrastination and irresponsible habits have to go. You would be surprised at how many people enter a credit repair program because it sounds appealing and magical, but are not willing to put forth their efforts in trying to resolve the problems in which they caused to begin with. We are simply coaches, mentors, and a helping hand to guide you in the right direction and help you become"credit worthy" once again. Now, don’t get me wrong. If I could make all of your troubles and credit challenges vanish before your eyes with the snap of my fingers while you sat back and watched, then I would be the first one to step foot on that train. However, that is not reality, nor will it ever be.

You must realize that there is a significant paradigm shift that you have to make in your mind and in your life. We’ll take the lead and guide you, but for this to work, you have to follow. I see too many consumers come into our credit repair program, claiming they have full knowledge and understanding of what has been spoken of in the full consultation, and three to six months down the road, they, unfortunately, tend to reestablish their"bad credit habits", negating the entire program, and throwing away valuable money. Now, you must be aware that our consultation is a full credit evaluation. It is thirty minutes of hardcore coaching and guidance, from how your scores are built to every specific detail of your credit reports and how it affects you. We describe SPECIFICALLY the blueprints of how we intend on getting derogatory items deleted, how it will help, and WHAT YOU NEED TO DO TO HELP. That’s right,¦you DO need to help. We call it"getting it." You have to"get it." You have to"get" that paying your bills on time, paying your credit cards down, listening to our coaching, and opening brand new positive trade lines will help you in the long run, and we are not miracle workers who can delete anything and everything from your reports and get you a credit score of 850 in a week. Not in the least. We can help the ones who truly want to be helped. We can help those who are sincere about our program, about their credit, and about their financial stability.

In conclusion, I hope you consider and react positively towards what I have said. Yes, I have been straight forward, but only to help you realize the importance of your credit scores and raising them to their full potential, and to push you to"get it" and to make that change in your life,¦ that paradigm shift. I truly hope that credit repair will soon be greatly beneficial to everyone who needs it, so that we can make one more move towards escaping this economic and housing crisis.

By line: Kyle Gilbert is the Client Services Director at Global Advantage Credit Solutions. He can be reached at 877.337.2673 ext. 1008 for more information.

Back to the Credit Basics

Thursday, October 9th, 2008

We are about to dissect the confusing and complicated credit system, and the cycle in which it entails.
The credit reporting system consists of three different factors. First, there are consumers, then credit bureaus, and finally the financial companies or creditors. Detailed specifications about loans, credit cards, and derogatory line items are reported electronically to the three credit bureaus Equifax, Experian and TransUnion by each lender or creditor once a month. The bureaus store all of this information, as each piece plays a part in determining the resulting scores.
The three bureaus, surprisingly to consumers, have no relation to each other in any way. The only common factor they share is the role they play on borrowers’ credit scores. Some trade lines and derogatory items, while reporting to only one bureau, may not report to the other two.
Financial businesses look at your credit data on your reports to decide the level of risk in lending to a particular consumer. If the scores are lower, the risk is higher, and vice versa. The higher the risk, obviously the less likely the potential borrower is to get approved for the loan.
However, businesses do not necessarily have to report your information to the bureaus. Although federal credit laws state that what they report must be accurate, it is not a requirement to report all information. Surprisingly, over 80% of American consumers have at least one piece of information reporting negatively or inaccurately on their credit reports.
Along with your credit card and loan account records, your name, address, employer, and recent applications are recorded in your credit files. Public records such as bankruptcies, tax liens, and judgments can also appear on your reports. Information about your income, race, checking accounts, gender, age, religion, or health is not included on credit reports. Most information expires from your credit reports after 7-10 years. If there is something inaccurate on your credit reports you can file a dispute to have it removed from your record.
There is a vital importance to keeping your credit report information correct. Each piece of data, even the smallest, has an effect on your scores, which will ultimately result in the application approval or declination of a loan, credit card, or annual percentage rate.
Keeping a good mix of credit will keep it healthy if the consumer is smart and responsible in regards to usage. Credit cards should be used at least once a month and paid down at each billing cycle. Finally, having, and keeping, good credit will save the consumer thousands of dollars on interest rates, and even more as he progresses in opening new trade lines, building on to a "good" history, and making wise decisions financially.


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