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Add You - How Do You Treat Your Mortgage
Professional Web Hosting And Design protected, providing consumers with security they did not have in the '30s. Since the birth of the CDIC, no one has lost their life savings due to bank failure because they are now protected by insurance.So, you decided that you want to hire a professional web hosting and design service to develop and host your website. What can you do to make sure you get the most of your money?First consider that you don’t need to hire the same company to handle both the web hosting and the design. Sometimes you get more value for your money if you hire a professional company to handle the web design, and another professional company to handle the web hosting. However, it is convenient to have your professional web designer take care of the hosting as well.When hiring a professional web hosting and design service, it is important to maintain good communication. That usually means that you will have to do your homework before you hire someone. Consider exactly what purpose your website will serve, what content you want to include and information about how many pages you would like. The more you envision your website, the more you will get out of your experience. When a professional web hosting and design service puts together a quote on the project, the more information you provide means the quote will be more accurate.Also, make sure what the web hosting and design company’s policy is on revisions. Some companies may charge you extra to make changes. Others may include that in their initial quote. Before you begin, make sure you get the quote and their policy in writing. A lot of web hosting and design companies make you sign a contract. Make sure you understand exactly what it says before you sign. Some web hosting and design companies quote you a price with the understanding that it will change if the circumstances change. Make sure this is communicated to you before you begin, so there aren’t any surprises down the r There have been 43 financial institution failures since it was formed. The last was in 1996 when Calgary-based Security Home Mortgage Corporation closed its doors. About 2,600 Canadians had deposited $42 million in the firm. All but $10,000 of the deposits were insured and CDIC paid back all insured deposits within three weeks of Security Home Mortgage's closure. 4. The major lesson that governments learned after the stock market crash of 1929 is that the best way to prevent economical disaster is to grant banks all the cash they need, rather than withhold currency like the US government did in 1929. Back then, the government believed that flooding the banks with cash would result in inflation. Instead, the government created the worst depression in history. Hard lesson learned, but learned all the same. 5. Competition in the mortgage industry has dramatically increased. If Bank "A" won't provide you with the loan you seek, odds are in your favor that Bank "B" will. Additionally, new, innovative loan programs now exist, which make mortgages more affordable and flexible than ever before, significantly reducing the likelihood of consumer default. For those of you who are still hell bent on getting rid of your mortgage, let's paint the most extreme picture of financial disaster. If something so cataclysmic happened to our world - whatever that may be, our financial markets would ultimately crumble. And by markets I mean all markets - real estate, stock and bond markets, etc. If that happened, the real estate that we owned would be worthless. The mortgage market would be in tatters. (No one would be coming to collect on the mortgage because nothing would have value anymore and everyone would be out of work). The GICs in our friendly bank would be worthless because the financial institutions and/or governments "guaranteeing" them would not be around. In fact, there would be looting and pillaging in all urban centers here and abroad as everyone tried to get food! "The law of the jungle" would be the order of the day. Now if this sounds as ext Vital Component to Marketing Success: Establishing Credibility If you won the lottery tomorrow, would you pay off your mortgage?As a salesperson or the owner of a small business, do you consider yourself to be qualified, experienced, and dependable? More importantly, have 95% of your customers had a satisfying experience doing business with you or your company? If your answer is ‘yes’ to all those questions, then your services or products have the potential to be in high demand. The trick is effectively communicating that information to your target market.Let’s assume that you have what your prospective customers are looking for: excellent service, high ethical and quality standards, a near-perfect track record in living up to promises and producing desired results, and the skills or knowledge to help your clients achieve their goals or solve their problems. Think about it. You are exactly what people are scouring the Internet or Yellow Pages for and spending countless hours researching. If you’re not in demand now, then you ought to be!What’s Standing in the Way?In all likelihood, your phone isn’t ringing off the hook because you haven’t convinced your prospects that you can offer them all these desirable qualities and benefits. That’s where marketing strategy comes in!Whether or not people ask you these questions, you can be sure it’s almost always on their minds: "How long have you been in business? What are your credentials? Are there people who can vouch for your dependability (provide references)? Why should I feel secure choosing you over the competition for this important project/need/solution?Strategies for Establishing Credibility & TrustPut yourself in your customer’s shoes for a minute and try to think like someone who’s in the market for your services. At some level, they’re thinking, “Why should Most people would. After all, isn't it "The Canadian Dream" to own your own home - and own it outright with no mortgage payment or lien encumbering the deed to your property? Can you imagine how much more money you would have if you weren't required to send a check to the bank every month for that big, fat mortgage payment to keep a roof over your head? Imagine the sense of liberation you will have after 25 long years (300 months!) of monthly mortgage payments! It would feel as if a thousand pound weight just rolled off your shoulders! All your money and the house will finally be yours! You would be loaded - filthy rich, indeed! A mortgage is a debt and debt is a bad thing! Right? Of course you would pay off your mortgage - it's the smartest thing to do, right? Hold on a minute! It is crucial that you understand what is really happening here. You need to figure out why you are doing what you are doing! Your burning desire to satisfy your mortgage is not about economics or finance - it's about emotion. You "love" the idea of owning your own home. You "hate" having to pay your mortgage payment. If you are like most, you may even "fear" your mortgage. Your drive to pay off your mortgage early is fueled by emotion, not by good financial sense! A mortgage is a financial tool, not an emotional state of mind, so why are you making decisions regarding your mortgage based upon emotion? And why do you feel the way you do about your mortgage? Could it be that your perception of mortgages is a learned perception, influenced by your parents and grandparents? Think about this - just about everything you have ever learned about money, you learned from Mom and Dad. When you told them that you were planning to buy your first home, they said, "Better make a big down payment, and keep that mortgage payment low! You better pay extra to pay it of just as soon as you can! You don't want to be a slave to that mortgage for the next 30 years! You don't know what you are getting yourself into!" This is precisely what my parents said to me. My parents were wrong! Because, as a result of their advice, I lost thousands of dollars by paying extra toward my mortgage in order to "beat" the interest and pay off my loan early. Get your FREE copy of "The UnCanadian Way To Be House Rich AND Cash Rich" at: http://HowToBeSetForLife.com/HouseRichJV.html We were taught that mortgages are "bad", require us to work extra hard to pay them off early, or that we should avoid them completely if at all possible. But what they never told us is why they felt this way about mortgages! It is important that you first understand their perspective in order to clearly understand why their financial advice is bad for you. Let's take a look at mortgages through the eyes of our parents and grandparents. Back in the 1920s, homes typically cost around $5,000. That sounds like pocket change until you consider that the average annual household income in 1925 was only $1,434. Just like today, very few could afford to purchase their homes outright, so they borrowed money from the banks to buy their homes. Times have changed drastically and so have lending laws. Back then, banks had the right to demand full repayment of mortgage loans at any given time. If you failed to repay your loan when it was called due, the bank had the right to seize your property, force you out of your home and sell it to satisfy the debt. On October 29, 1929, when the US stock market crashed, millions of investors lost huge sums of money. To make matters worse, the money they lost was not theirs to begin with - it was borrowed money. Back in the '20s, investors commonly purchased stock with money borrowed from stockbrokers, from what was called a "margin account." Under laws and rules in effect at that time, you could purchase $100 worth of stock for a payment of just $10 to your broker; your broker would then put up the other $90. When the Crash hit, 30% of the value of everyone's stock portfolios was sheered right off the top. A typical brokerage account previously worth $100 was now worth only $70. The investor was left holding the bag, having borrowed $90 to buy the stock! The Crash led to a "margin call" where the broker would demand that the investor come up with more cash because his account had exceeded the "margin limits." If the investor couldn't cough up the cash, the broker would begin selling off the investor's stocks until enough cash was generated to meet the margin call. This is the last thing an investor wanted the broker to do! Stocks were already down in value 30% - this was the worst time to sell! To avoid having his stocks sold, the investor would go to his bank and withdraw enough cash to meet the broker's margin call. The investor had to move fast, because under stock exchange rules, margin calls were required to be fulfilled within 24 hours (nothing like a little pressure, eh?) In the days following the Crash of '29, swarms of investors went to banks to make cash withdraws. Within a very short period of time, the banks' cash supplies were depleted. When the banks ran out of cash, word spread like wildfire and panic set in. Bank depositors stampeded the banks, demanding their money, but the banks were unable to meet their demands because the cash supply had completely dried up. To get more cash, banks started calling their loans due. They sent word to their borrowers demanding they satisfy the full balances owing on their loans immediately. The homeowners didn't have the cash, so the banks foreclosed on the homeowners' properties, forcing millions of families from their homes and into the streets. The banks' plan of raising cash by calling mortgage notes due backfired. Nobody had the money to buy the homes repossessed by the banks, so the banks were essentially left holding worthless real estate. Unable to meet the demands for cash by their depositors, US banks began closing their doors, many of them to never open again. The Crash caused a domino effect - investors couldn't meet margin calls, brokers couldn't find buyers for the stocks and with no one willing to buy, brokers had to continuously drop the stocks’ prices. More than half of US banks failed. Tens of millions of Americans lost their jobs as companies declared bankruptcy. Millions were rendered homeless. Thousands committed suicide. This domino effect of financial catastrophe spilled over countries boarders and virtually no one was immune to the havoc that ensued. Who weathered the Crash of '29 without feeling the fury of its devastating impact? Those who owned their homes free from a mortgage. These few fortunate individuals were immune from the banks' collapse. With no loans to repay, they succeeded in keeping their homes. They may have had no work and little food to eat, but they kept a roof over their families' heads as their neighbors went broke and were forced into homelessness. My grandparents lived through the Depression, and were raised with the Depression mind set that mortgages were a bad thing. This belief was passed down to my parents, who then passed it along to me. And yet, a small group of Americans (the wealthy!) insist on carrying home mortgages even when they can afford not to. Why would they voluntarily place themselves at such risk? Don't they know what they are doing? The truth may surprise you. They wealthy know exactly what they are doing. These people are among America's elite: the wealthiest 1% of the population. Not only do they know what they are doing, they understand why they are doing it. The wealthy understand things about how money works which most of the middle class do not. America took her hard knocks in the '30s and learned her lessons well. Both the US and Canada have never seen such financial devastation as happened in the '30s. However, it cannot happen again because of the safeguards for consumers that have long since been put into place by both Canadian and US governments . This is not to say that a Depression cannot occur again - but that a Depression like the 1930s cannot occur again. Should financial disaster strike, the causes will be significantly different. Let's consider some of the safeguards for consumers today: 1. Banks are no longer able to cancel your mortgage. This means that if you have a mortgage, you are no longer at risk that the bank will suddenly mandate that you pay the loan in full or take your home. If you are current on your loan payments each month, no bank can force you to pay off the entire remaining balance upon demand. 2. Consumers can no longer buy stocks with only 10% down. The maximum margin limit is 50%. It is zero for speculative investments (such as internet stocks.) 3. The Canadian Deposit Insurance Corporation. CDIC is a Canadian Federal Crown Corporation, created in 1967. Before this, consumers were unprotected in the event their bank went bust - this is no longer the case. Today, consumer accounts up to $100,000 are protected, providing consumers with security they did not have in the '30s. Since the birth of the CDIC, no one has lost their life savings due to bank failure because they are now protected by insurance. There have been 43 financial institution failures since it was formed. The last was in 1996 when Calgary-based Security Home Mortgage Corporation closed its doors. About 2,600 Canadians had deposited $42 million in the firm. All but $10,000 of the deposits were insured and CDIC paid back all insured deposits within three weeks of Security Home Mortgage's closure. 4. The major lesson that governments learned after the stock market crash of 1929 is that the best way to prevent economical disaster is to grant banks all the cash they need, rather than withhold currency like the US government did in 1929. Back then, the government believed that flooding the banks with cash would result in inflation. Instead, the government created the worst depression in history. Hard lesson learned, but learned all the same. 5. Competition in the mortgage industry has dramatically increased. If Bank "A" won't provide you with the loan you seek, odds are in your favor that Bank "B" will. Additionally, new, innovative loan programs now exist, which make mortgages more affordable and flexible than ever before, significantly reducing the likelihood of consumer default. For those of you who are still hell bent on getting rid of your mortgage, let's paint the most extreme picture of financial disaster. If something so cataclysmic happened to our world - whatever that may be, our financial markets would ultimately crumble. And by markets I mean all markets - real estate, stock and bond markets, etc. If that happened, the real estate that we owned would be worthless. The mortgage market would be in tatters. (No one would be coming to collect on the mortgage because nothing would have value anymore and everyone would be out of work). The GICs in our friendly bank would be worthless because the financial institutions and/or governments "guaranteeing" them would not be around. In fact, there would be looting and pillaging in all urban centers here and abroad as everyone tried to get food! "The law of the jungle" would be the order of the day. Now if this sounds as extr Maintaining Energy Control Systems In Your Business in order to "beat" the interest and pay off my loan early.Heating, ventilation, air conditioning and refrigeration (HVAC/R) are major concerns for most organisations when it comes to operations. Whatever business you’re in – from manufacturing to office-based services – these constituents can be the ‘life’ of a building. They can have an indirect effect on production, if your workers depend on comfortable working conditions. And they can have a direct effect if you depend, for instance, on product storage (e.g. refrigerated produce).There’s another equally important cost too. HVAC/R systems are often integrated with other equipment across the business, and so equipment failures can have serious knock-on effects. Repairs can be expensive.It’s not all gloomy though. Modern HVAC/R systems have developed to cater for potential problems on the horizon. Control and monitoring systems allow equipment to be tested over the months, meaning that operations managers can keep an eye on the performance of their equipment. Businesses can be in a position where they don’t have to wait for failures to happen before they call in the workmen. They actually put themselves in a position of prevention rather than cure – smart troubleshooting allows issues to be solved even before they start, nevermind grow out of control.The reality is that HVAC/R equipment is built with mechanical and electrical components. These two types of component work together, and if the electrical ones (controls) are working well and are set correctly, the mechanical elements (equipment) work to optimal levels. These HVAC/R controls and monitoring systems are becoming more user-friendly, and so the good news is that most people can work with them having just received a low level of training. Easy-to-use int Get your FREE copy of "The UnCanadian Way To Be House Rich AND Cash Rich" at: http://HowToBeSetForLife.com/HouseRichJV.html We were taught that mortgages are "bad", require us to work extra hard to pay them off early, or that we should avoid them completely if at all possible. But what they never told us is why they felt this way about mortgages! It is important that you first understand their perspective in order to clearly understand why their financial advice is bad for you. Let's take a look at mortgages through the eyes of our parents and grandparents. Back in the 1920s, homes typically cost around $5,000. That sounds like pocket change until you consider that the average annual household income in 1925 was only $1,434. Just like today, very few could afford to purchase their homes outright, so they borrowed money from the banks to buy their homes. Times have changed drastically and so have lending laws. Back then, banks had the right to demand full repayment of mortgage loans at any given time. If you failed to repay your loan when it was called due, the bank had the right to seize your property, force you out of your home and sell it to satisfy the debt. On October 29, 1929, when the US stock market crashed, millions of investors lost huge sums of money. To make matters worse, the money they lost was not theirs to begin with - it was borrowed money. Back in the '20s, investors commonly purchased stock with money borrowed from stockbrokers, from what was called a "margin account." Under laws and rules in effect at that time, you could purchase $100 worth of stock for a payment of just $10 to your broker; your broker would then put up the other $90. When the Crash hit, 30% of the value of everyone's stock portfolios was sheered right off the top. A typical brokerage account previously worth $100 was now worth only $70. The investor was left holding the bag, having borrowed $90 to buy the stock! The Crash led to a "margin call" where the broker would demand that the investor come up with more cash because his account had exceeded the "margin limits." If the investor couldn't cough up the cash, the broker would begin selling off the investor's stocks until enough cash was generated to meet the margin call. This is the last thing an investor wanted the broker to do! Stocks were already down in value 30% - this was the worst time to sell! To avoid having his stocks sold, the investor would go to his bank and withdraw enough cash to meet the broker's margin call. The investor had to move fast, because under stock exchange rules, margin calls were required to be fulfilled within 24 hours (nothing like a little pressure, eh?) In the days following the Crash of '29, swarms of investors went to banks to make cash withdraws. Within a very short period of time, the banks' cash supplies were depleted. When the banks ran out of cash, word spread like wildfire and panic set in. Bank depositors stampeded the banks, demanding their money, but the banks were unable to meet their demands because the cash supply had completely dried up. To get more cash, banks started calling their loans due. They sent word to their borrowers demanding they satisfy the full balances owing on their loans immediately. The homeowners didn't have the cash, so the banks foreclosed on the homeowners' properties, forcing millions of families from their homes and into the streets. The banks' plan of raising cash by calling mortgage notes due backfired. Nobody had the money to buy the homes repossessed by the banks, so the banks were essentially left holding worthless real estate. Unable to meet the demands for cash by their depositors, US banks began closing their doors, many of them to never open again. The Crash caused a domino effect - investors couldn't meet margin calls, brokers couldn't find buyers for the stocks and with no one willing to buy, brokers had to continuously drop the stocks’ prices. More than half of US banks failed. Tens of millions of Americans lost their jobs as companies declared bankruptcy. Millions were rendered homeless. Thousands committed suicide. This domino effect of financial catastrophe spilled over countries boarders and virtually no one was immune to the havoc that ensued. Who weathered the Crash of '29 without feeling the fury of its devastating impact? Those who owned their homes free from a mortgage. These few fortunate individuals were immune from the banks' collapse. With no loans to repay, they succeeded in keeping their homes. They may have had no work and little food to eat, but they kept a roof over their families' heads as their neighbors went broke and were forced into homelessness. My grandparents lived through the Depression, and were raised with the Depression mind set that mortgages were a bad thing. This belief was passed down to my parents, who then passed it along to me. And yet, a small group of Americans (the wealthy!) insist on carrying home mortgages even when they can afford not to. Why would they voluntarily place themselves at such risk? Don't they know what they are doing? The truth may surprise you. They wealthy know exactly what they are doing. These people are among America's elite: the wealthiest 1% of the population. Not only do they know what they are doing, they understand why they are doing it. The wealthy understand things about how money works which most of the middle class do not. America took her hard knocks in the '30s and learned her lessons well. Both the US and Canada have never seen such financial devastation as happened in the '30s. However, it cannot happen again because of the safeguards for consumers that have long since been put into place by both Canadian and US governments . This is not to say that a Depression cannot occur again - but that a Depression like the 1930s cannot occur again. Should financial disaster strike, the causes will be significantly different. Let's consider some of the safeguards for consumers today: 1. Banks are no longer able to cancel your mortgage. This means that if you have a mortgage, you are no longer at risk that the bank will suddenly mandate that you pay the loan in full or take your home. If you are current on your loan payments each month, no bank can force you to pay off the entire remaining balance upon demand. 2. Consumers can no longer buy stocks with only 10% down. The maximum margin limit is 50%. It is zero for speculative investments (such as internet stocks.) 3. The Canadian Deposit Insurance Corporation. CDIC is a Canadian Federal Crown Corporation, created in 1967. Before this, consumers were unprotected in the event their bank went bust - this is no longer the case. Today, consumer accounts up to $100,000 are protected, providing consumers with security they did not have in the '30s. Since the birth of the CDIC, no one has lost their life savings due to bank failure because they are now protected by insurance. There have been 43 financial institution failures since it was formed. The last was in 1996 when Calgary-based Security Home Mortgage Corporation closed its doors. About 2,600 Canadians had deposited $42 million in the firm. All but $10,000 of the deposits were insured and CDIC paid back all insured deposits within three weeks of Security Home Mortgage's closure. 4. The major lesson that governments learned after the stock market crash of 1929 is that the best way to prevent economical disaster is to grant banks all the cash they need, rather than withhold currency like the US government did in 1929. Back then, the government believed that flooding the banks with cash would result in inflation. Instead, the government created the worst depression in history. Hard lesson learned, but learned all the same. 5. Competition in the mortgage industry has dramatically increased. If Bank "A" won't provide you with the loan you seek, odds are in your favor that Bank "B" will. Additionally, new, innovative loan programs now exist, which make mortgages more affordable and flexible than ever before, significantly reducing the likelihood of consumer default. For those of you who are still hell bent on getting rid of your mortgage, let's paint the most extreme picture of financial disaster. If something so cataclysmic happened to our world - whatever that may be, our financial markets would ultimately crumble. And by markets I mean all markets - real estate, stock and bond markets, etc. If that happened, the real estate that we owned would be worthless. The mortgage market would be in tatters. (No one would be coming to collect on the mortgage because nothing would have value anymore and everyone would be out of work). The GICs in our friendly bank would be worthless because the financial institutions and/or governments "guaranteeing" them would not be around. In fact, there would be looting and pillaging in all urban centers here and abroad as everyone tried to get food! "The law of the jungle" would be the order of the day. Now if this sounds as ext Traditional Mediums versus Search Engine Positioning cash was generated to meet the margin call. This is the last thing an investor wanted the broker to do! Stocks were already down in value 30% - this was the worst time to sell! To avoid having his stocks sold, the investor would go to his bank and withdraw enough cash to meet the broker's margin call. The investor had to move fast, because under stock exchange rules, margin calls were required to be fulfilled within 24 hours (nothing like a little pressure, eh?) In the days following the Crash of '29, swarms of investors went to banks to make cash withdraws. Within a very short period of time, the banks' cash supplies were depleted.Banner Advertising:Paying $15 for a 1000 impressions on a high traffic website. Sounds like good exposure for a low price? It is! After all you will have a 1000 unique people view your banner. But how many actually end up clicking on it, and how many more actually end up buying stuff from you? According to most industry sources the average click through rate of a banner campaign is 0.38%. So you get 3.8 people to click on your banner for $15. And the rate of conversion is typically 1 to 5%. So how much do you actually spend before a person buys from you? You do the math. It appears quite a lot to me.What about those popup ads? Or the ones that keep popping up and refuse to close? Wouldn’t that give you more exposure? Some banner sellers would love to make you believe that. Well its not the case. Ever had one very stubborn popup refusing to close? How irritating is that? I would never even buy anything from that kind of banner advertiser. Its downright irritating to have banner popup in the face when you are in the middle of surfing for some useful information.Pay Per Click Search Engines:The internet boom may be over, but for search engines the boom may have just begun. Many engines, the most famous being Overture and now Looksmart have turned to this model. Pay per click model makes you pay for the amount of actual clicks your site link receives and not for the number of exposures. Sounds good? It sometimes is very effective too. For starters, you get quality traffic, cause the people who click on your link would have searched for a term relevant to you. However it can be pretty expensive. Overture makes you bid on the term you want to rank high on, and trust me sometimes the bids get pretty high. When the banks ran out of cash, word spread like wildfire and panic set in. Bank depositors stampeded the banks, demanding their money, but the banks were unable to meet their demands because the cash supply had completely dried up. To get more cash, banks started calling their loans due. They sent word to their borrowers demanding they satisfy the full balances owing on their loans immediately. The homeowners didn't have the cash, so the banks foreclosed on the homeowners' properties, forcing millions of families from their homes and into the streets. The banks' plan of raising cash by calling mortgage notes due backfired. Nobody had the money to buy the homes repossessed by the banks, so the banks were essentially left holding worthless real estate. Unable to meet the demands for cash by their depositors, US banks began closing their doors, many of them to never open again. The Crash caused a domino effect - investors couldn't meet margin calls, brokers couldn't find buyers for the stocks and with no one willing to buy, brokers had to continuously drop the stocks’ prices. More than half of US banks failed. Tens of millions of Americans lost their jobs as companies declared bankruptcy. Millions were rendered homeless. Thousands committed suicide. This domino effect of financial catastrophe spilled over countries boarders and virtually no one was immune to the havoc that ensued. Who weathered the Crash of '29 without feeling the fury of its devastating impact? Those who owned their homes free from a mortgage. These few fortunate individuals were immune from the banks' collapse. With no loans to repay, they succeeded in keeping their homes. They may have had no work and little food to eat, but they kept a roof over their families' heads as their neighbors went broke and were forced into homelessness. My grandparents lived through the Depression, and were raised with the Depression mind set that mortgages were a bad thing. This belief was passed down to my parents, who then passed it along to me. And yet, a small group of Americans (the wealthy!) insist on carrying home mortgages even when they can afford not to. Why would they voluntarily place themselves at such risk? Don't they know what they are doing? The truth may surprise you. They wealthy know exactly what they are doing. These people are among America's elite: the wealthiest 1% of the population. Not only do they know what they are doing, they understand why they are doing it. The wealthy understand things about how money works which most of the middle class do not. America took her hard knocks in the '30s and learned her lessons well. Both the US and Canada have never seen such financial devastation as happened in the '30s. However, it cannot happen again because of the safeguards for consumers that have long since been put into place by both Canadian and US governments . This is not to say that a Depression cannot occur again - but that a Depression like the 1930s cannot occur again. Should financial disaster strike, the causes will be significantly different. Let's consider some of the safeguards for consumers today: 1. Banks are no longer able to cancel your mortgage. This means that if you have a mortgage, you are no longer at risk that the bank will suddenly mandate that you pay the loan in full or take your home. If you are current on your loan payments each month, no bank can force you to pay off the entire remaining balance upon demand. 2. Consumers can no longer buy stocks with only 10% down. The maximum margin limit is 50%. It is zero for speculative investments (such as internet stocks.) 3. The Canadian Deposit Insurance Corporation. CDIC is a Canadian Federal Crown Corporation, created in 1967. Before this, consumers were unprotected in the event their bank went bust - this is no longer the case. Today, consumer accounts up to $100,000 are protected, providing consumers with security they did not have in the '30s. Since the birth of the CDIC, no one has lost their life savings due to bank failure because they are now protected by insurance. There have been 43 financial institution failures since it was formed. The last was in 1996 when Calgary-based Security Home Mortgage Corporation closed its doors. About 2,600 Canadians had deposited $42 million in the firm. All but $10,000 of the deposits were insured and CDIC paid back all insured deposits within three weeks of Security Home Mortgage's closure. 4. The major lesson that governments learned after the stock market crash of 1929 is that the best way to prevent economical disaster is to grant banks all the cash they need, rather than withhold currency like the US government did in 1929. Back then, the government believed that flooding the banks with cash would result in inflation. Instead, the government created the worst depression in history. Hard lesson learned, but learned all the same. 5. Competition in the mortgage industry has dramatically increased. If Bank "A" won't provide you with the loan you seek, odds are in your favor that Bank "B" will. Additionally, new, innovative loan programs now exist, which make mortgages more affordable and flexible than ever before, significantly reducing the likelihood of consumer default. For those of you who are still hell bent on getting rid of your mortgage, let's paint the most extreme picture of financial disaster. If something so cataclysmic happened to our world - whatever that may be, our financial markets would ultimately crumble. And by markets I mean all markets - real estate, stock and bond markets, etc. If that happened, the real estate that we owned would be worthless. The mortgage market would be in tatters. (No one would be coming to collect on the mortgage because nothing would have value anymore and everyone would be out of work). The GICs in our friendly bank would be worthless because the financial institutions and/or governments "guaranteeing" them would not be around. In fact, there would be looting and pillaging in all urban centers here and abroad as everyone tried to get food! "The law of the jungle" would be the order of the day. Now if this sounds as ext 6 Common Mistakes Entrepreneurs Make Trying to Grow Their Bottom Line hey succeeded in keeping their homes. They may have had no work and little food to eat, but they kept a roof over their families' heads as their neighbors went broke and were forced into homelessness.Have you ever felt like you were running a rat race? Everything seems like it takes forever, costs 10 times as much as you expected and you still feel like you are a million miles away from achieving your financial goals?That’s because people often approach their financial growth with the wrong strategies. You may have heard the saying, “The strategy you used to create your million is drastically different than the strategy to maintain it.” It’s the same thing here. The strategy you used to get started is drastically different than the one you need to grow consistent six and seven figure revenue.Here are six of the common mistakes entrepreneurs make when trying to grow their bottom line.Mistake #1: Setting unrealistic expectations. I conducted a workshop where one of the students shared she planned to create $500,000 in new revenue in the next 12 months. She was barely making $50,000 and was launching a brand new business. This plan seemed unrealistic to me. Unrealistic expectations are different than setting ‘stretch goals.’ When you are unrealistic, you will often over spend and under perform because you believe you have everything on track for a huge leap in income.Mistake #2: Focusing on price versus payoff. This being so focused on what everything will cost you that you miss the opportunities that will allow you to leap forward. The saying, “It costs money to make money” means that when you invest in high payoff opportunities, you will leap forward. Many people who are stuck financially don’t have the financial resources to invest in the tactics that would actually position them for a huge windfall.Mistake #3: Making short-term decisions that sabotage the long term goal. I once knew som My grandparents lived through the Depression, and were raised with the Depression mind set that mortgages were a bad thing. This belief was passed down to my parents, who then passed it along to me. And yet, a small group of Americans (the wealthy!) insist on carrying home mortgages even when they can afford not to. Why would they voluntarily place themselves at such risk? Don't they know what they are doing? The truth may surprise you. They wealthy know exactly what they are doing. These people are among America's elite: the wealthiest 1% of the population. Not only do they know what they are doing, they understand why they are doing it. The wealthy understand things about how money works which most of the middle class do not. America took her hard knocks in the '30s and learned her lessons well. Both the US and Canada have never seen such financial devastation as happened in the '30s. However, it cannot happen again because of the safeguards for consumers that have long since been put into place by both Canadian and US governments . This is not to say that a Depression cannot occur again - but that a Depression like the 1930s cannot occur again. Should financial disaster strike, the causes will be significantly different. Let's consider some of the safeguards for consumers today: 1. Banks are no longer able to cancel your mortgage. This means that if you have a mortgage, you are no longer at risk that the bank will suddenly mandate that you pay the loan in full or take your home. If you are current on your loan payments each month, no bank can force you to pay off the entire remaining balance upon demand. 2. Consumers can no longer buy stocks with only 10% down. The maximum margin limit is 50%. It is zero for speculative investments (such as internet stocks.) 3. The Canadian Deposit Insurance Corporation. CDIC is a Canadian Federal Crown Corporation, created in 1967. Before this, consumers were unprotected in the event their bank went bust - this is no longer the case. Today, consumer accounts up to $100,000 are protected, providing consumers with security they did not have in the '30s. Since the birth of the CDIC, no one has lost their life savings due to bank failure because they are now protected by insurance. There have been 43 financial institution failures since it was formed. The last was in 1996 when Calgary-based Security Home Mortgage Corporation closed its doors. About 2,600 Canadians had deposited $42 million in the firm. All but $10,000 of the deposits were insured and CDIC paid back all insured deposits within three weeks of Security Home Mortgage's closure. 4. The major lesson that governments learned after the stock market crash of 1929 is that the best way to prevent economical disaster is to grant banks all the cash they need, rather than withhold currency like the US government did in 1929. Back then, the government believed that flooding the banks with cash would result in inflation. Instead, the government created the worst depression in history. Hard lesson learned, but learned all the same. 5. Competition in the mortgage industry has dramatically increased. If Bank "A" won't provide you with the loan you seek, odds are in your favor that Bank "B" will. Additionally, new, innovative loan programs now exist, which make mortgages more affordable and flexible than ever before, significantly reducing the likelihood of consumer default. For those of you who are still hell bent on getting rid of your mortgage, let's paint the most extreme picture of financial disaster. If something so cataclysmic happened to our world - whatever that may be, our financial markets would ultimately crumble. And by markets I mean all markets - real estate, stock and bond markets, etc. If that happened, the real estate that we owned would be worthless. The mortgage market would be in tatters. (No one would be coming to collect on the mortgage because nothing would have value anymore and everyone would be out of work). The GICs in our friendly bank would be worthless because the financial institutions and/or governments "guaranteeing" them would not be around. In fact, there would be looting and pillaging in all urban centers here and abroad as everyone tried to get food! "The law of the jungle" would be the order of the day. Now if this sounds as ext Reseller Hosting Explained protected, providing consumers with security they did not have in the '30s. Since the birth of the CDIC, no one has lost their life savings due to bank failure because they are now protected by insurance.Reseller Defined:The term Reseller according to the dictionary means to sell again i.e. to sell a product or service to the public or to an end user, especially as an authorized dealer, while making sure that you make a profit on the sale.Reseller HostingReseller hosting is no different either, a reseller buys a Web hosting package from a hosting company and tries to sell it independently. The profit for the reseller lies in either the discount or in the commission s/he gets from selling an account.For example: The reseller might purchase a package whose features are valued at $100 for $90. So, the reseller stands to make a $10 profit on selling the package to customers. Normally as the customers increase, so does the profit margin for the reseller.Or, you can get some money by earning commissions from a hosting company. This happens when you refer potential customers to the hosting company. If the customer signs up with the company then you earn a small recurring commission until the customer uses the services.Most web hosting companies try to outsource their services to resellers as it helps them to extend their business reach without the cost of marketing and sales and also helps them to concentrate on the business side of things.What can be resoldAs a reseller you can decide what kinds of services you can sell. You can provide shared, dedicated or co-location web hosting or merchant accounts, store fronts etc.If you go with hosting then it might be useful to offer some other hosting related services like domain names, search engines etc.Of course, if you have problems selling these value added services in the beginning then you can sell them later. There have been 43 financial institution failures since it was formed. The last was in 1996 when Calgary-based Security Home Mortgage Corporation closed its doors. About 2,600 Canadians had deposited $42 million in the firm. All but $10,000 of the deposits were insured and CDIC paid back all insured deposits within three weeks of Security Home Mortgage's closure. 4. The major lesson that governments learned after the stock market crash of 1929 is that the best way to prevent economical disaster is to grant banks all the cash they need, rather than withhold currency like the US government did in 1929. Back then, the government believed that flooding the banks with cash would result in inflation. Instead, the government created the worst depression in history. Hard lesson learned, but learned all the same. 5. Competition in the mortgage industry has dramatically increased. If Bank "A" won't provide you with the loan you seek, odds are in your favor that Bank "B" will. Additionally, new, innovative loan programs now exist, which make mortgages more affordable and flexible than ever before, significantly reducing the likelihood of consumer default. For those of you who are still hell bent on getting rid of your mortgage, let's paint the most extreme picture of financial disaster. If something so cataclysmic happened to our world - whatever that may be, our financial markets would ultimately crumble. And by markets I mean all markets - real estate, stock and bond markets, etc. If that happened, the real estate that we owned would be worthless. The mortgage market would be in tatters. (No one would be coming to collect on the mortgage because nothing would have value anymore and everyone would be out of work). The GICs in our friendly bank would be worthless because the financial institutions and/or governments "guaranteeing" them would not be around. In fact, there would be looting and pillaging in all urban centers here and abroad as everyone tried to get food! "The law of the jungle" would be the order of the day. Now if this sounds as extreme and far fetched to you as it does to me, our reality will continue on as has for the past hundreds of years. We will continue to dream and work to accomplish those dreams. We will look for love and love and be loved. In fact, we will live and die…and the cycle will repeat itself again and again and again… However, what we do during our brief stay on this earth will have a profound effect on us and those we love and have in our lives. We have the ability to dream big dreams and make those dreams into our realities. Or we can dream and never quite seem to get a grasp on the brass ring to achieve the good life. The choice is ours. We have the intelligence, we have the knowledge all we must now do is act. So what is the point of all this? Well, those who tell you to pay off your mortgage are basing their beliefs and advice upon their fears! They fear that having a mortgage might cause them to lose the roof over their heads. These fears were well justified - fifty years ago. Today, however, these fears are largely unfounded. You will note, I said largely - but not entirely. Still remaining are additional aspects of mortgage loans we haven't discussed yet. Two of them are: 1. The challenge of affording monthly mortgage payments; Do you worry that you might not be able to make your mortgage payment each month? Is your job in jeopardy due to corporate downsizing and the instability of today's job market? This can be a very real problem, because the bank can foreclose on your home in the event that mortgage payments are not made on time. If you were suddenly to lose your job, you may not be able to make your house payment and you could potentially lose your home. Wouldn't it then make sense to eliminate your mortgage? Believe it or not, the answer is NO! Even though on the surface it does not make sense, the truth is that the less money you have, and the more worried you are about the possibility of losing your job, the more important it is that you keep a big mortgage on your home! I realize that this sounds absurd, but it is true, and it is imperative to your own financial health that you understand this point as gospel truth! Here's why! If you have little money, and even less job security, the safest way to keep your home is to have a mortgage securely in place!
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