Posts Tagged ‘best’

Is this financial crisis partly our fault

October 12th, 2008

Everywhere you turn you see the news talking of a plunging stock market, business bail outs and record number foreclosures.

Initially my thoughts are “What has this financial system done to us?” but on second thought, are we not intelligent enough as a society to have avoided financial collapse?

Just because a greedy bank tells you that you qualify for a mortgage ,did we not have enough sense of our own to know it was outside our budget? Did we consider the monthly payment for 30 years and factor in a slow economy or job loss?

These are the questions that one cant help but ask as it proves even more, now than ever- that we as a society are so undereducated in finances.  Financial literacy should be at the top of the governments list of things to do yesterday. If you cannot teach a person to be responsible with their finances then you should expect disaster.

Remember the term “Buyer beware? “That should not only go to avoiding scams, but the buyer also need be- aware. Aware of your finances, your family structure, your ability to manage your debt, retirement, your credit reports. Consumers often close their eyes and hope for the best and the result can be disastrous.

While it is the american dream to own a home, unfortunately, not everyone is capable of doing so. There is a huge responsibility that comes with homeownership that goes far beyond the application approval. We as consumers should have known better. We should have seen this collapse coming because of the sheer volume of sub prime loans that were being handed out to literally every Tom, Dick, and Harry. Default was inevitable. Couple that with an unstable economy and disaster was at our doorstep.

Now was must reap was we sow and work our way through this financial collapse. I have no doubt in the spirit of Americans and we will survive- but maybe this time around we will take responsibility for our own finances and not leave it in the hands of Wall Street and greedy lenders.

We need to take responsibility for our own future. Manage our jobs, our retirement, our credit reports, our debt. We cannot expect the government to take 100% of the blame in this financial mess. If it had turned out good, would we blame them then? If your home’s equity were up 10% would you be shaking your fist at the greedy bankers?

Did big brother charge up your credit cards and remodel your home for you? Did big brother tell you to buy two gas guzzling SUVs and eat out all the time? We all know there is a lot of blame to go around. No one got into this alone. People were in a feeding frenzy with easy loans and easy credit.

We helped  to get ourself into this mess and now we must help to get out. We cannot sit back and wait for handouts or for the market to fix itself. We need to start fresh and take inventory of our financial fitness and begin anew. Sure, we’ll see challenges all along the way but a slow and steady focus on the problem will win in the end.

How this credit crisis will affect you

September 21st, 2008

I’m a credit expert by trade, so needless to say, I have pretty good credit. I’ve worked hard to build great credit and maintain it. No matter what happens with my finances, I’ve always made my credit a priority.

If someone told you, what you did today was going to affect you for the next seven years, would you think twice before doing it? I know I would but many people just don’t think of their credit in this way. They think about “now” and not “later”. Well, later is here!

With the recent credit crisis in the country, even those with really good credit are going to feel the pinch. Banks are tightening up their purse strings and for good reason. Major financial institutions are collapsing all around us. NINJA loans have ruined our economy and deregulation of big banks has collapsed the finance industry.

Just when we thought it had gotten as bad as it could with record breaking foreclosures, it got worse. Much worse. If you thought those feeling the pinch were people who got themselves into mortgage trouble and you were safe, think again.

People with good credit, even great credit are going to be affected by this downturn. Reports this week claim that getting even simple loans whether secured or unsecured is going to be much harder. Now, more than ever, you need to start thinking about the state of your credit. Even if you’ve always had pretty good credit, now you must shine.

This is especially true if you’ve got credit card debt. It wont be so easy to transfer balances to other lower rate credit cards to save some money. Lenders are going to proceed with great caution and that’s going to affect you personally.  Those with poor credit are really going to be in a bind. Even a simple payday loan wont be so simple. People are going to find there are few resources to turn to for their lending needs.

Now is the time to do an audit of your credit. Make sure you’re ready when the time comes to apply for a much needed loan, line of credit or refi.  The credit repair field is going to be booming! While the FTC gives us some great tips to fix our credit, unfortunately people don’t bother until they need credit. Now is the time to clean up your credit so it’s ready to roll when you need it.

Get your credit reports, grab a cup of coffee and start that audit. Look over all three credit reports and highlight any problems you see. Make a plan to send investigation letters to these questionable items and by all means, don’t apply for needless loans. Those hard inquiry’s will only lower your credit score further. Wait until you are in a good position before you apply for a loan. Don’t waste the inquiry, especially now.

Clean up your credit the best you can then make a solid plan to refi, get out of debt or purchase a big ticket item.

Need a job? Get into the best paying field in the industry right now

September 19th, 2008

And what is that industry you ask? Debt collectors. While the economy is whirling with bank collapses, record foreclosures and high gas prices, one thing remains solid. The debt collection industry. Even the IRS is advertising collection jobs on Google. Paid ads!

With over 969 billion in credit card debt across the country, the debt collectors are filling a supply and demand of bad debts.  A debt collector can earn up to 100k a year in salary and bonus. Think of the demand that’s out there right now.

80 million people are paying off medical debts, students can’t pay their credit card bills, and complaints about bill collectors are on the rise.

Everybody is affected by this looming recession and someone’s got to go after the debts. Banks are writing off record numbers of failed loans and with a tighter bankruptcy law, it isn’t so easy to escape your debts. With new bankruptcy provisions, debtors have to complete a debtors education course, prove they cannot pay their debts back and overall, go through a lengthy process. This causes pause with consumers, so they wait it out.

Eventually the debt collector comes knocking and you will be found. Just yesterday I had a friend call me and tell me her father, who is 70, received a note from his neighbor. The note said to call back Mr. Jones at ABC collection agency. She asked me if this was legal and if it violated his privacy. I explained to her that using a Haines Criss Cross guide to find a debtors “nearby” is a common tactic of debt collectors and isn’t illegal as long as the debt collector doesn’t reveal the nature of the call. In other words, the debt collector cannot discuss the debt with the neighbor but is allowed to leave a message. Humiliating in deed but affective. He was mortified and embarrassed and will probably now return their call to avoid further contact with his neighbors.

Debt collectors know this is a ripe time to cash in on all of our bad luck with this crushing economy and make a fortune in commission and bonuses. What’s frightening is that just about anyone can be a debt collector, and thus, be privy to your financial information. Take a look in your local classified ads. There are offers everyday for highly motivated people with no experience to make a career in debt collections. Imagine someone having access to your credit reports and checking account information along with your home address. I’m surprised there isn’t more identity theft in this field than there is.

Lots of debt collectors are shady characters to say the least. Sure, there are many professional debt collectors with a college education who decided to go into this recession proof industry, but there are also a lot of really bad people taking on jobs to collect debts and those people will stop at nothing to make a fortune off collecting debts.

I know this firsthand, being a debt collector myself for 10 years. I worked with some really shady characters when I took on jobs at local collection agencies. These people would harass debtors nonstop and some went as far as taking the debtors phone number home with them to continue the harassment after work!

There’s very little internal regulation of these actions because debt collection firms roll employees in and out at a constant pace and cannot control what a debt collector does after hours or in private. To someone like me, who knows how some of these employees operate, it’s a frightening scenario.

Now with a failing economy we are going to see a sharp rise in complaints about debt collectors to the Federal Trade Commission and local Attorney General offices. I’m sure there are many lawsuits on the horizon.

If you plan to go into debt collections, remember, these debtors are people just like you and me who have fallen on hard times. I think a diplomatic approach with sensitivity is a much stronger practice to follow while collecting debts. I know it worked for me.

The majority of people not paying their bills aren’t doing so simply because they’re deadbeats. They can barely fill their gas tanks, buy groceries and pay their mortgage. We are all impacted by this economy so I hope collection agencies are enforcing stricter practices and offering good solid education to their debt collectors on how to collect debts in a legal, ethical manner.

If you do find that you’re being harassed, you need to take action quick to stop it. I’ll talk more about that in my next post.

Do it yourself credit repair | Easier than you think and cheap!

September 16th, 2008

You can improve your creditworthiness and get legitimate resources for low or no-cost help.

 

You may get calls from telemarketers offering credit repair services.  The Scam, companies’ nationwide, appeal to consumers with poor credit histories and who are desperate. They promise, for a fee, to clean up your credit report so you can get a car loan, a home mortgage, insurance, or even a job. Desperate consumers fall prey to this scam. Remember, if it sounds too good to be true. It is.

 

Some credit repair services get sleazy when they promise to do a job that’s just not possible. Unlimited credit report disputes, corrections, and removals with Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion and guaranteed deletions are just some of the promises you hear.

 

An ethical firm (usually reputable lawyers, not shysters) will not tout miracles, charge you in advance or make false promises. if they do, sooner or later the FTC will find them.

 

Just this past week, a credit repair company was shut down and fined by the FTC for making promises it couldn’t possibly keep, by assuring buyers that they could remove negative accounts even if accurate and for collecting money in advance for work yet to be performed.

 

That’s a key word. Accurate. The foundation of credit repair isn’t an industry trade secret. It’s using the law with your customized disputes to garner the best possible results. Period. 

 

By using existing state and federal laws, you CAN remove negative information from your credit reports. The fundamentals aren’t whether the item is negative or positive. It’s is it accurate.  The FCRA is quite clear on this issue. If it isn’t verifiable or accurate, it cannot remain.

 

It doesn’t matter what your history, background, or credit record is, you’ll be amazed at how simple correction can be. You’ve probably been told that your credit history will stick with you forever, or it takes years to clean up. 

 

While no one can guarantee you a spotless credit record, real credit repair is a worthwhile investment, and if the bureaus, collection agencies, and creditors were doing their job, credit report repair wouldn’t be the top search online.

 

People are desperate because credit reports DO contain lots of errors. Nearly every consumer has an error in at least one credit report from one of the major credit bureaus. Credit bureaus generate your report they receive from your creditors; they don’t verify it… Unless you ask.

 

The simple truth is that the credit bureaus and even furnishers of information must comply with federal law. Doing so isn’t so easy for them. You need to leverage that. It will take time, but it’s a very worthwhile investment.

 

 

Don’t despair.  It’s never too late to become credit worthy – just get started, and remember that it won’t happen overnight and you must commit to doing the work. Doing the work can be justified in how much money you are going to save if you don’t have to hire someone AND in rates if you do have an improved credit report.

 

While I can certainly understand the FTC warning us all to avoid credit repair and scams, what I don’t understand is why they don’t focus a campaign on just how difficult the credit system makes fixing your credit. The bureaus don’t work for us, they make billions and our disputes are a kink in there rhythm. They sort of help us because they have to, not because they want to.

 

So, what ends up happening, is the consumer gets frustrated and seeks out a service to fix their credit for them, and often, it’s a scam.  The FTC moves in, shuts them down, and reminds us that we can do this ourselves. Trouble is, people get lost in the process and the FTC doesn’t tell us that communication with the credit bureaus, debt collectors, and furnishers of information can be a vicious cycle.

 

That’s why it’s important to educate yourself and if you are going to do the work, do some research online. You’ll quickly find there are only a handful a really good , reputable DIY sites and credit repair lawyers.  

 

The highly effective letters that we offer have been proven to WORK in correcting negative items on your credit that may be outdated, obsolete, or inaccurate (unverifiable). When you combine the right letters to cut through the bureaucracy of the credit system, you’ll garner much better results, save money and avoid mistakes that can cause you more trouble and more time. Not to mention, you’ll understand the dangers of dealing with bill collectors without proper knowledge.

Credit repair website shut down by FTC

September 12th, 2008

FTC Obtains Court Order Against Husband-Wife Credit Repair Team

Here’s a perfect example of why you should never believe when someone tells you that they can guarantee you to remove anything and charge advanced fees for removal of negative items.

The Federal Trade Commission charged two credit repair marketers with violating federal law by collecting advance payment for credit repair services and falsely promising to remove derogatory information from consumers’ credit reports – even if the information is accurate and not obsolete. At the Commission’s request, a federal court halted the defendants’ allegedly unlawful business practices and froze their assets pending further litigation. The FTC seeks to bar the defendants from further violations and make them forfeit their ill-gotten gains.

According to the FTC’s complaint, the defendants marketed their “services” to consumers throughout the nation via an Internet Web site, www.lhcreditrepair.com, classified ads in USA Today, Thrifty Nickel, Common Cents, and www.americanclassifieds.com, and online listings such as www.kellysearch.com and www.aboutus.org. Statements on their Web site include, “Have you had a bankruptcy? We will repair your credit so that this past event does not haunt your future.” Consumers who called the defendants in response to their ads were told, “Anything that hurts you, we’re going to get it off of [your credit report].”

The complaint states that the defendants often led consumers to believe that accurate information on their credit reports might somehow be considered inaccurate and subject to removal. Even when consumers told them that the information was accurate, the defendants led consumers to believe that it could be removed. The defendants allegedly claimed they had special knowledge and expertise that enabled them to permanently remove negative information, including late payments, charge-offs, Collections, tax liens, repossessions, foreclosures, bankruptcies, and judgments, even when the information was accurate and not outdated.

According to the complaint, the defendants offer four levels of service ranging from $250 to $1,150 per person. They require an advance fee they call a deposit, which varies in amount, depending upon the program selected. On their Web site’s home page they claim, without qualification, that “[a]fter we have cleared your files we will stay with you for life, at no additional charge, to catch any other bad files that might show up.” Subsequent Web pages indicate, however, that only one of the four service levels includes the “for life” feature.

The defendants are Rudolph Joseph Strobel, a/k/a Lee Harrison, and Leanna Ruth Harrison, both doing business as Lee Harrison Credit Restoration, Credit Restoration, and Lee Harrison Associates Credit Restoration (LHCR), all located in Naples, Texas. They are charged with violating the credit repair Organizations Act (CROA) and the FTC Act by falsely representing that they can improve consumers’ credit reports by permanently removing negative information, even when the information is accurate and not obsolete. The defendants are also charged with violating the CROA by requiring advance payment for credit repair services; and by failing to provide, before contracts are signed, the written “Consumer Credit File Rights Under State and Federal Law.” In addition, they are charged with violating the CROA by failing to include in their consumer contract a full and detailed description of the services to be performed, including all guarantees of performance and an estimate of the date by which the services will be performed; and failing to include a conspicuous statement about the consumer’s right to cancel the contract without penalty or obligation within three business days after the contract is signed.

The Commission vote to authorize staff to file the complaint was 4-0. The complaint was filed in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Texas, Marshall Division.

Additional credit repair information is available in “Credit Repair: Self-Help May Be Best,” at www.ftc.gov/bcp/conline/pubs/credit/repair.shtm. The FTC advises that only time, a conscious effort, and a personal debt repayment plan can improve your credit report. The first step is to learn what information is in your credit report. If you find errors or mistakes, federal law gives you the right to have them corrected – free of charge. Federal law requires that the nationwide consumer reporting companies – Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion – provide you with a free copy of your credit report once every 12 months, if you ask for it. To order your free report, visit annualcreditreport.com, call 1-877-322-8228, or complete and mail the Annual Credit Report Request Form.

NOTE: The Commission files a complaint when it has “reason to believe” that the law has been
or is being violated, and it appears to the Commission that a proceeding is in the public interest.
The complaint is not a finding or ruling that the defendant has actually violated the law.

The Federal Trade Commission works for consumers to prevent fraudulent, deceptive, and unfair business practices and to provide information to help spot, stop, and avoid them. To file a complaint in English or Spanish, visit the FTC’s online Complaint Assistant or call 1-877-FTC-HELP (1-877-382-4357). The FTC enters complaints into Consumer Sentinel, a secure, online database available to more than 1,500 civil and criminal law enforcement agencies in the U.S. and abroad. The FTC’s Web site provides free information on a variety of consumer topics.

MEDIA CONTACT:
Frank Dorman,
Office of Public Affairs
202-326-2674
STAFF CONTACT:
Anne D. Lejeune
FTC’s Southwest Region
214-979-9371
(Lee Harrison Credit Restoration)
(FTC File No. 0823141)

Do it yourself credit repair including debt settlements

August 28th, 2008

Credit repair can be a very dirty word. Especially on the credit industry front. Credit repair companies are under siege for marketing and targeting people in serious trouble and for good reason. There are so many credit repair companies on line that claim to be able to increase your credit score or guarantee you perfect results.

It’s simply not true. You cannot guarantee what you cant control and thats the credit bureaus and collection agencies. You cannot promise a consumer that you can work magic on their credit, collect the money up front and then not deliver. That’s fraud.

What you can do is do the work yourself to bring your credit up to the best possible status. No one has better interest in your credit reports than you do.

There are good credit repair companies but I honestly only trust Lexington if you prefer to hire someone. I’ve already told you before, its the only credit repair company we promote and for good reason. They are lawyers who really do focus on nothing but credit repair and debt settlement. Their entire firm focus is credit repair so they do nothing but credit repair all the time. When you do something that much, you get really good at it.

If the do it yourself method is for you then I urge you to educate yourself with the process before you delve in. You can avoid costly mistakes by learning how the system works and how to use it to your benefit. By just taking  little time to educate yourself about the topic, you can make great headway.

First, order your credit reports and review each one. Once you identify the negative items then start a strategy to target the items. Determine if you plan on disputing an old paid off debt thats negative or plan to attack one that still has a balance due. Both have very different strategies.

If the debt is negative but paid then you can start by sending your investigation to the credit bureaus and wait for their reply. The bureaus have 30 days to complete your investigation and send you the results. If the bureau is unable to confirm the items accuracy, the item will be removed. If they confirm it as accurate then you move on to the furnisher of information and ask that they provide you with the proof they provided the credit bureaus. They must be able to show you proof or the item will be removed.

If the debt still has a balance then understand that disputing it to the credit bureaus may wake sleeping dogs. The bureau will send the dispute onto the furnisher of information who will realize you are out there. that may cause them to start pursuing you very aggressively. But if you know the debt is not accurate or has been sold several times to collection agencies then you may stand a very good chance of having the item removed. Finding those records will not be so easy.

This is a solid strategy against debts that have gone to third party debt collectors and you should always try to remove anything thats being reporting from  a collection agency because the rating is always negative. A paid collection account still looks bad so your purpose should be to question negative paid off collection accounts and collection accounts that still have a balance. The difference is you will move onto the collection agency reporting the item if the bureau verifies it as accurate. 

More often than not the item will have some inconsistencies in it that will result in a deletion. If by chance the item is 100% verifiable then consider debt settlements to pay the agency in exchange for total removal. They do it all the time and its actually quite simple.  Be sure they provide the agreement to delete IN WRITING!! If you don’t, kiss your money goodbye and your credit rating.

for more tips on deleting items from your credit reports visit our credit library.

Hot tip

debt snowball method, you put as much cash as you can toward eliminating your smallest debt, while paying the minimum on all other debts. When the first debt is paid off, you roll the amount of that payment to the next smallest debt, creating a “snowball” of increasingly larger payments on a decreasing number of bills. The reward? A feeling of accomplishment that many practitioners say helps them stay on track to pay off all their debt.

Credit scoring: what you need to know

August 3rd, 2008

What is a credit score?

A credit score is a number that reflects your credit risk level, typically with a higher number indicating lower risk. It is generated through statistical models using elements from your credit report; however, your score is not physically stored as part of your credit history on the credit file. Rather, it is typically generated at the time a lender requests your credit report, and is then included as part of the report. Your credit score is a fluid number, and it changes as the elements in your credit report change. For example, payment updates or a new account could cause your score to fluctuate. There are many different credit scores used in the financial service industry. Your score may be different from lender to lender (or from car loan to mortgage loan), depending on the type of credit scoring model that was used.

Why are credit scores used?

Before credit scores, lenders physically looked over each applicant’s credit report to determine whether to grant credit. A lender might deny credit based on a subjective judgment that a consumer already held too much debt, or had too many recent late payments. Not only was this time consuming, but human judgment was prone to mistakes and bias. Lenders used personal opinion to make a decision about an applicant that may have had little bearing on the applicant’s ability to repay debt. Credit scores help lenders assess risk more fairly because they are consistent and objective. Consumers also benefit from this method. No matter who you are as a person, your credit score only reflects your likelihood to repay debt responsibly, based on your past credit history and current credit status.

Who uses credit scores and how are they used?

Banks, credit card companies, auto dealers, retail stores, and most other lenders use scores to quickly summarize a consumer’s credit history, saving the need to manually review an applicant’s credit report and provide a better, faster risk decision. Although many additional factors are used in determining risk, such as an applicant’s income vs. the size of the loan, a credit score is a leading indicator of one’s basic creditworthiness.

What information impacts my credit score?

The information that impacts a credit score varies depending on the score being used. Generally, credit scores are affected by elements in your credit report, such as:

  •  Number and severity of late payments
  •  Type, number and age of accounts
  •  Total debt
  •  Recent inquiries

Credit bureau-based scores, like those generated by Experian, cannot use demographics prohibited under the Equal Credit Opportunity Act, such as race, color, religion, national origin, gender, age, marital status, receipt of public assistance or exercise of rights under Consumer Credit Protection Act. Scores used by individual lenders may use such elements as income, occupation, and type of residence in determining their own custom credit score.

Credit scoring 101

History of credit scores

Credit scores became widely used in the 1980′s. Long before credit scores, human judgment was the sole factor in deciding who received credit. Lenders used their past experience at observing consumer credit behavior as the basis for judging new consumers. Not only was this a slow process, but it was also unreliable because of human error. Lenders eventually began to standardize how they made credit decisions by using a point system that scored the different variables on a consumer’s credit report. This point system helped to eliminate much of the bias that previously existed; however, it was still tied to intuitive measures of credit worthiness and was not based on actual consumer behavior. Credit granting took a huge leap forward when statistical models were built that considered numerous variables and combinations of variables. These models were built using payment information from thousands of actual consumers, which made scores highly effective in predicting consumer credit behavior. When combined with computer applications, scoring models have made the credit granting process extremely fast, efficient and objective, facilitating commerce and helping consumers quickly get the credit they need.

The credit modeling process

Designers of credit scoring models review a set of consumers – often over a million – who opened loans at the same time, and determine who paid their loan and who did not. The credit profiles of the consumers who defaulted on the loans are examined to identify common variables they exhibited at the time they applied for the loan. The designers then build statistical models that assign weights to each variable, and these variables are combined to create a credit score. Models for specific types of loans, such as auto or home, more closely consider consumer payment statistics related to these loans. Model builders strive to identify the best set of variables from a consumer’s past credit history that most effectively predict future credit behavior.

Risk categories

In determining credit scores, lenders place you in a risk category that compares you to a large number of consumers with similar credit histories. This allows lenders to compare “apples to apples,” ensuring that your credit behavior is judged in a context that is relevant and fair. For example, consumers with brief credit histories and only a few accounts are not compared to consumers with long-established credit histories. Rather, these consumers will be compared to other consumers who also have brief credit histories. Keep in mind that the attributes of your risk category (i.e. number of accounts, total debt, etc.) may not have the same impact to a credit score for consumers in another risk category.

What are score factors?

Score factors are the elements from your credit report that drive your credit score. For example, such elements as your total debt, types of accounts, number of late payments and age of accounts are what determine the outcome of your credit score. Score factors can have a positive or negative affect on your credit score. Lenders must provide consumers with the most significant score factors when they are declined credit.

Your credit score

How can I see my credit score?

Lenders, especially mortgage lenders, often make credit scores available to consumers during the loan process, although they are under no obligation to do so. However, there is a good possibility that consumers will soon have the benefit of new disclosure laws concerning credit scores. For example, the state of California recently passed a law that will obligate mortgage lenders to reveal credit scores to loan applicants beginning in July 2001. Industry analysts expect other states to follow suit. To get access to your PLUS score, credit report and other membership benefits right now, sign up for Experian Credit Manager.

Why don’t I have a credit score? Credit scoring models cannot generate a score without sufficient credit information. If you have little or no credit history, you will probably not have a credit score available.

How often does my credit score change?

Your credit score is a fluid number that changes as your credit report changes. Therefore, any change to your credit report could impact your score.

How do my spouse or other family members affect my credit?

If you hold a joint credit account, have co-signed a loan or have authorized use of another person’s credit, these items could affect your score if they appear on your credit report. It’s important that joint account holders or authorized users understand that their credit behavior does affect the other joint account holder or main account holder. A credit account held solely in the name of your spouse, child or any other family member cannot impact your credit score. However, in community property states, all debt acquired during a marriage is considered a joint debt, regardless if the account is joint or in the name of an individual spouse.

Learn more from source

Affordable credit repair solutions

June 16th, 2008

Consumers are often overwhelmed by credit repair. The words alone send some consumers into denial. Most are afraid they’ll make their credit worse or they assume hiring someone to do it for them costs too much money.

That’s not always the case. With the advent of technology, streamlining credit repair is getting faster and better for consumers. About 10 years ago, it was a tedious process getting your credit reports to a credit repair agency and waiting for results.

Nowadays, it can be as easy as signing up online and sitting back waiting for the results. Don’t get me wrong, I think a lot of people have what it takes to do the task themselves but if you’re one of millions who find it overwhelming or simply don’t understand or have the time to fix your credit, then hiring a pro can be beneficial.

As always, as with any service, know who you are hiring. When seeking a credit repair company always look to their policy of refunds or guarantees. Make sure the company has a clean and clear BBB record (Better Business Bureau) and make a list of questions to ask before you sign up.

Once you’ve decided who you’ll hire then you can get on the road to better credit. Critics often say that credit repair is impossible. I don’t buy that at all. I’ve repaired many many credit reports. It’s possible and fortunately for us consumers, the bureaus and creditors make lots of mistakes.

I say make your credit the absolute best you can. Once you get there, keep it pristine.

A good source of FAQ about credit repair is DSI. Click here to read their FAQ on credit repair procedures, guarantees and more.

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