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If you had access to a tool that offered you an opportunity to improve your mortgage and your credit would you subscribe to such a service? Would you buy the book? Attend the seminar? OR would you just do the same as everybody else and try to ignore the problem?

I am trying to find out the level of interest that would be out there for my system. If it is worth marketing locally or farther out

2007-06-19 03:04:30 · 6 answers · asked by Nichole O 2 in Business & Finance Credit

6 answers

I personally have no need for this type of program, but I am sure there are tons of other people out there that would.

2007-06-19 03:11:47 · answer #1 · answered by ? 7 · 0 0

I would not spend any real money but would risk maybe twenty bucks. . Usually companies charge hundreds of dollars to simply pull your credit and send correctly worded dispute letters—this is the key…..people will tell you that you can do this yourself for free but the truth of the matter is that the credit bureaus will throw your letters away or simply reject them. There is an easy to use online kit that will deliver the results you want available for just $19.95 at the source website. A similar kit is being sold via infomercials and radio talk shows for seventy dollars more but they try to solicit you repeatedly for other services after the fact.

2007-06-19 22:53:08 · answer #2 · answered by stephen l 2 · 0 0

I wouldn't waste my money on that crap.

You don't "improve" a mortgage. And you clear up your credit record the old-fashioned way -- by challenging erroneous information, paying your bills on time, and using credit wisely.

If your "system" covers any other method, it's BS, and I don't need to pay you or anyone else to tell me what I wrote above.

While some fools do ignore their financial problems, you forgot the 3rd option: Ignore credit repair scammers. That's my choice!

Given that you've posted this twice now, you're on the verge of being labled as a SPAMMER.

2007-06-19 10:14:31 · answer #3 · answered by Bostonian In MO 7 · 0 0

I would be interested, however most people are skeptical about this type of system. Many are scams. Some are essentially "improve your credit by paying off your bills."

So to sell your system or your book, you would need to demonstrate that your system isn't a scam or just "pay your bills"

2007-06-19 10:14:44 · answer #4 · answered by math_prof 5 · 0 0

These seminars come along every day offereing you this and that, saying they could improve your life dramatically blah blah blah...

To me it's all a load of rubbish and I would never buy or attend anything like it.

I'm not saying anything about yours, it could be very good btu that is just my vision on these kind of things.

2007-06-19 10:13:13 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Myself... no. Because I am educated. However there are millions of suckers out there waiting to get ripped off. So go ahead if you want with it.

2007-06-19 11:43:25 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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