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Add You - How To Avoid an Investment Property Scam
How To Open A Home Based Candy Wrapper Making Business m, and encouraged my friends, close family, and business colleagues to buy some also. I paid my reservation fees, and just settled down to wait for these to be completed, and to start generating some surplus cash every month.Among various options in the work from home category, a lucrative deal is start off your own candy wrapper making business. To put simply, the business entails making candy wrappers and associated items like labels at home for various occasions.The key soft skill required for setting up a candy wrapper business in addition to various other material resources is the artistic ability to create designs that appeal to your prospective clientele and suits the occasion. Additionally basic graphics software knowledge always helps; however, various templates that is available free or at a nominal price can be referred to in this context.This business can be taken up as either a full time or part time work option. An individual working as a full time can earn up to $1500 per week. Few prerequisites for the candy wrapper making business are enlisted below: • Computer with relevant graphic software • Colored printers and printer cartridges • Papers • Candy bars • Basic office stationery like glue, paper cutter, etc. Few Imperative Business Development Details at a Glance: Competition analysis and pricing decisions: Price your wrappers based on your competitor’s offerings and overall cost. A candy wrapper could ra The first event in the chain of things was that the houses were very late in being completed, so we were in danger of losing the student intake for autumn 2005, but the investment still seemed quite good, and anyway we had all exchanged contracts by then. And, of course, we all thought we had at least an 11% equity holding in each property, plus the usual growth of 4-6 % from last year. Also, when asked if we could inspect them prior to completion, we were told - “Sorry, as you have tenants in them, you have to give 48 hours or more notice”. Then when we did try for appointments nobody could find the keys… Where were my alarm bells I hear you ask - Obviousl Keeping the Costs Low on Newsletter Printing To many people, taking the plunge, and investing in property for their future is a major leap of faith. Imagine how they must feel, if their investment turns out to be an investment property Scam?These days, having to save money is on your priorities, this applies also with newsletter printing whilst not skimping on quality. Newsletters are a form of publication that gives news or information which is sent to a certain group. While there is an online newsletter, there is also a printed newsletter. Both of them deliver news to a particular group; this can be a very good way to inform them of your promotions and advertisements.If you are looking for ways to lessen the costs on your newsletter printing needs, there are a lot of ways that can offer you solutions and still have an effective newssheet. Taking into consideration on costs, content, and time constraint plays a vital role in making your newssheet.The budget speaks for itself if you’re planning to publish a newsletter. The costs of production can seem to be high so having to look at every detail that can reduce production costs. Here are some tips to get most out of your printing project at the same time keeping a tight budget.Evaluating your printing needs is a must. This can lessen the burden of other factors to weigh in the process of producing quality newsletter prints. It is always wise to plan things ahead, getting to know the facts can always be rewarding.In th Is there a way out of any Investment Property Scam? The first thing to realise is that if you do feel you have been conned, you are probably not the only one. It may feel like it, and you may feel alone, stupid, cheated, and angry or embarrassed - some of the common emotions felt at this time. But, these are the emotions that developers with crooked minds will encourage you to think. They hope that you will feel 'suckered', and just don't want to tell anybody. In fact, with a clever scam, there may seem to be nothing to tell anyway, apart from your gut instinct, until you start digging. But inertia is just what these criminals (and they usually are criminals) want you to think. In these circumstances, you must not hold it all into yourself. You must try and find if other people have been duped into a similar situation. You never know, you may be one of ten, twenty or hundreds of similar souls, and if you can find, and become identified with such groups you will stand a far greater chance of getting retribution, believe me. I got caught up in such an investment property scam about 18 months ago (I know - gasp - shock - horror - and I sell investment properties!). For some months, I thought I was going crazy, I could not understand why I could not get tenants in at anywhere near the prices I was expecting, or even get tenants at all. This was the first revelation, as I had been promised that the properties would have been fully tenanted on completion. Well, at least, that's what the brochures said, as well as the sales manager at the presentation I attended. And I had bought a number of these 'beauties' each supposedly fully tenanted and making me around ?500 each per month rental surplus. Then I started to investigate the situation more thoroughly, and I soon identified the problem. It's a down and out highly complex investment property Scam! So how did I, an experienced property investor, and a reseller of investment properties - get involved in an investment property scam? I'll tell you how - perhaps Criminal Intent? What I have done is to chronicle the events that actually took place with my investments, of which I have since found out there were well over 100 similar incidents. Before I went into this investment, or even recommended them to others, which consisted of a number of refurbished houses converted into HMO's for students (Houses of Multiple Occupation) I investigated the company thoroughly. (Note the company and location of these houses is not mentioned in this report for legal reasons). I checked out at least 6 of their property conversions, spoke to their rentals people, and spoke with several existing investors. I took my business partner at the time with me to check out my findings. I was also comforted by the fact that these people were spending (and still are spending) a lot of money in the big national newspapers (Sunday Times, Telegraph, and so forth), and had produced a whole range of glossy brochures backing up their claims. Some of their larger off-plan developments were also being featured in a two-page spread in one of the UK's leading property magazines. Not only that, but they had (and still do have) very large exhibition stands at a number of the leading UK Property Shows. Everything seemed to stack up, so I bought a number of them, and encouraged my friends, close family, and business colleagues to buy some also. I paid my reservation fees, and just settled down to wait for these to be completed, and to start generating some surplus cash every month. The first event in the chain of things was that the houses were very late in being completed, so we were in danger of losing the student intake for autumn 2005, but the investment still seemed quite good, and anyway we had all exchanged contracts by then. And, of course, we all thought we had at least an 11% equity holding in each property, plus the usual growth of 4-6 % from last year. Also, when asked if we could inspect them prior to completion, we were told - “Sorry, as you have tenants in them, you have to give 48 hours or more notice”. Then when we did try for appointments nobody could find the keys… Where were my alarm bells I hear you ask - Obviously Cheap Unsecured Loan - A Low-cost Solution for Your Financial Woes tion I attended. And I had bought a number of these 'beauties' each supposedly fully tenanted and making me around ?500 each per month rental surplus.An unsecured loan does not require collateral to be furnished by the borrower. Thus it is most suitable for people who either don’t own a home or have adverse credit history. However, absence of collateral makes an unsecured loan a high-risk loan product for the lender. He, therefore, is forced to set strict terms and conditions for the loan. The interest rates are high and the term of repayment short. These disadvantages, for a long time, discouraged numerous borrowers from availing an unsecured loan. It is for such consumers that lenders in UK have come up with cheap unsecured loan.Cheap unsecured loan, as the term suggests, is cheaper than the usual unsecured loan products available in the loan market UK. Its interest rate is low and some lenders also give the borrower an option to choose a long repayment term so that the monthly instalments don’t make a hole in the borrower’s pocket.As far as the use is concerned, a cheap unsecured loan is one of the most flexible loan products available right now. One can use a cheap unsecured loan for a number of purposes like wedding, holiday expenses, home renovation, debt consolidation, medical expenditure, car purchase and shopping.A MySpace: A Viable Marketing Tool MySpace is not only for teenagers and musicians. MySpace is also making a buzz among Internet marketers. At the invitation of Internet marketing guru Marlon Sanders, I set up a profile to see what the buzz is all about. Marlon calls it "...a ‘secret’ networking method the people on the inside are using."Being the active experimenter that I am, once I got started, I couldn't stay away from MySpace, setting up my profile, posting on my blog, adding events to the public calendar. As I poked around, I thought about how this networking space could work for professionals as a business tool.It's pretty easy to set up a profile and it's free. If you're using it as a business tool, be professional about the information you reveal. Remember MySpace is ultimately a SOCIAL tool and many people use it to hook up for dates and relationships. If that's not your intent, keep your content business-oriented.What I noticed in looking at random profiles is that most are sloppy and incomplete. A lot have no information about the person and no photo. What's the point? My sense is that a lot of profiles get set up and then abandoned, much like blogs.So can you use it as a marketing tool for your business?My guess is yes, if you're very str Then I started to investigate the situation more thoroughly, and I soon identified the problem. It's a down and out highly complex investment property Scam! So how did I, an experienced property investor, and a reseller of investment properties - get involved in an investment property scam? I'll tell you how - perhaps Criminal Intent? What I have done is to chronicle the events that actually took place with my investments, of which I have since found out there were well over 100 similar incidents. Before I went into this investment, or even recommended them to others, which consisted of a number of refurbished houses converted into HMO's for students (Houses of Multiple Occupation) I investigated the company thoroughly. (Note the company and location of these houses is not mentioned in this report for legal reasons). I checked out at least 6 of their property conversions, spoke to their rentals people, and spoke with several existing investors. I took my business partner at the time with me to check out my findings. I was also comforted by the fact that these people were spending (and still are spending) a lot of money in the big national newspapers (Sunday Times, Telegraph, and so forth), and had produced a whole range of glossy brochures backing up their claims. Some of their larger off-plan developments were also being featured in a two-page spread in one of the UK's leading property magazines. Not only that, but they had (and still do have) very large exhibition stands at a number of the leading UK Property Shows. Everything seemed to stack up, so I bought a number of them, and encouraged my friends, close family, and business colleagues to buy some also. I paid my reservation fees, and just settled down to wait for these to be completed, and to start generating some surplus cash every month. The first event in the chain of things was that the houses were very late in being completed, so we were in danger of losing the student intake for autumn 2005, but the investment still seemed quite good, and anyway we had all exchanged contracts by then. And, of course, we all thought we had at least an 11% equity holding in each property, plus the usual growth of 4-6 % from last year. Also, when asked if we could inspect them prior to completion, we were told - “Sorry, as you have tenants in them, you have to give 48 hours or more notice”. Then when we did try for appointments nobody could find the keys… Where were my alarm bells I hear you ask - Obviousl Thinking Like A Farmer thoroughly. (Note the company and location of these houses is not mentioned in this report for legal reasons). I checked out at least 6 of their property conversions, spoke to their rentals people, and spoke with several existing investors. I took my business partner at the time with me to check out my findings. I was also comforted by the fact that these people were spending (and still are spending) a lot of money in the big national newspapers (Sunday Times, Telegraph, and so forth), and had produced a whole range of glossy brochures backing up their claims.One of the difficulties we face in our industrialized age is the fact we've lost our sense of seasons. Unlike the farmer whose priorities change with the seasons, we have become impervious to the natural rhythm of life. As a result, we have our priorities out of balance.Let me illustrate what I mean:For a farmer, springtime is his most active time. It's then when he must work around the clock, up before the sun and still toiling at the stroke of midnight. He must keep his equipment running at full capacity because he has but a small window of time for the planting of his crop.Eventually winter comes when there is less for him to do to keep him busy.There is a lesson here.Learn to use the seasons of life.Decide when to pour it on and when to ease back, when to take advantage and when to let things ride.It's easy to keep going from nine to five year in and year out and lose a natural sense of priorities and cycles. Don't let one year blend into another in a seemingly endless parade of tasks and responsibilities. Keep your eye on your own seasons, lest you lose sight of value and substance.To Your Success, Jim Rohn Some of their larger off-plan developments were also being featured in a two-page spread in one of the UK's leading property magazines. Not only that, but they had (and still do have) very large exhibition stands at a number of the leading UK Property Shows. Everything seemed to stack up, so I bought a number of them, and encouraged my friends, close family, and business colleagues to buy some also. I paid my reservation fees, and just settled down to wait for these to be completed, and to start generating some surplus cash every month. The first event in the chain of things was that the houses were very late in being completed, so we were in danger of losing the student intake for autumn 2005, but the investment still seemed quite good, and anyway we had all exchanged contracts by then. And, of course, we all thought we had at least an 11% equity holding in each property, plus the usual growth of 4-6 % from last year. Also, when asked if we could inspect them prior to completion, we were told - “Sorry, as you have tenants in them, you have to give 48 hours or more notice”. Then when we did try for appointments nobody could find the keys… Where were my alarm bells I hear you ask - Obviousl Marketing With An Autoresponder m, and encouraged my friends, close family, and business colleagues to buy some also. I paid my reservation fees, and just settled down to wait for these to be completed, and to start generating some surplus cash every month.Advertise, advertise and advertise.You can never do too much advertising on the internet. It is absolutely essential so you can make money with affiliate programs and services.One way to get exposure for your products or services is to have your own website, and then drive as much traffic as you can to this website. An effective way of promoting your website is by marketing with an auto responder.Create an opt-in list with your own newsletter where you send out useful marketing tips and techniques periodically to your subscribers, once or twice a week. And at the same time you will market your own affiliate products or services. Researches have shown that it takes a minimum of seven emails to a person, before the person responds to an offer. Your email campaign should be at least seven emails, preferably more.A good way is to write a special e-Course, which can be sent out by auto responder, and special reports that are in PDF-format. Do not send out just anything, what you send to your list must be of high quality. It must be useful information, and it must provide a solution to a problem. You will gain respect from your readers, and become an authority in your niche. When your subscribers trust you, you will see sales coming in.W The first event in the chain of things was that the houses were very late in being completed, so we were in danger of losing the student intake for autumn 2005, but the investment still seemed quite good, and anyway we had all exchanged contracts by then. And, of course, we all thought we had at least an 11% equity holding in each property, plus the usual growth of 4-6 % from last year. Also, when asked if we could inspect them prior to completion, we were told - “Sorry, as you have tenants in them, you have to give 48 hours or more notice”. Then when we did try for appointments nobody could find the keys… Where were my alarm bells I hear you ask - Obviously on Silent Mode! But then the dirt really started to rise to the surface… These houses were all sold under the premise of 'All contacts for services under one roof for the investor - Use our Services for Sales, Recommended Solicitors, In-house Brokers, mortgages, Tenancy Management from our Own Company' - you know, a really good packaged deal for the armchair investor.' Issue 1 was that the houses were not fully tenanted on completion, and in a lot of cases, the tenants seemed to 'melt away' after contracts had been signed. So much for the promises made in the developers' glossies that tenants would be in place before completion, with cross-guarantees so that there would be virtually no void periods, no issues with rent, as if one tenant failed to pay, the cross guarantees meant that the other tenants would be liable. Also, in some cases, (not with mine luckily) no renovation work had been carried out at all, and the developers then had the cheek to ask for ?3,000 per property to fix those that had not been done. Then, major issues with the building work started to surface. Basements would flood, not due to rain, (although this did happen on a number of occasions where the basements had not been 'tanked' correctly), but due to faulty plumbing, But if course we had a 12 month warranty contract - Right? Wrong? Even after constant phone calls and emails, the management company failed to send us proper records, and they did not keep us informed of maintenance issues, tenants leaving, tenants not paying rent on time - all the sort of standard things one was used to expect from a 'proper' management company that charged 10% of the rent as fees. And the hassle I had moving the management agreements to another company is another story for another day when it can be told. Ok, so, this just seemed like rogue building work and an outright total lack of proper management by the department handling the tenancies. Not the sort of service to be expected from a firm carrying out so much nationwide marketing, but of course, being of such a high profile firm, you would have thought they would have fixed the issues. Right? Wrong! So because of all these issues, I had by now started to do some very intensive investigation into this company, and the methods being used to package the sale of these houses. It then transpired that most of these houses had been bought by the developer some three to four months prior to selling them, for about ?90,000 - in the developers words - derelict houses that were totally gutted; 3 bed properties that had basements opened out, and or roof conversions done, so adding as many as 2, 3 or even 4 more bedrooms, and supposedly converted to the highest of standards for HMO purposes, and these were sold to us for around ?249,950 up to ?325,000 and higher. Ding Ding Ding - Alarm Bells… Why were we quite happy to purchase them - because they all came with RICS (Royal Institute of Chartered Surveyors) valuations on the property value and the anticipated rental incomes. All of which matched the developers claims. But when we noticed that several investors from other groups were having some of these similar houses repossessed - as they were not getting the rent, and consequently could not afford the mortgage, and the valuations were all coming in at around ?80,000 to ?100,000 BELOW THE MORTGAGE VALUE! Our own investigations then uncovered that many of these properties had been valued by the same firm, and for comparison, they had used p
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