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Member You - Investing - The Horse Ain't Dead Yet
Internet Marketing With Mini-Sites ut after the 10-year surrender penalty was up, she would forfeit the ‘bonus’ and any index gains, and earn a measly total return of only 1.5%. That’s it, regardless of the index. The only way she could EVER get the bonus and index gains was to annuitize the contract for a minimum of 5 years. Even if she died, the children wouldn’t receive the bonus unless they annuitized! Or course, none of this was explained by the trustworthy agent.Mini-Sites have become a huge phenomenon on the Internet today. A mini-site is basically, a sales site with one product selling on the front page of the site. For example, a mini-site that I have been successful with is eBayBusiness.net. There's a basic formula to follow if you want to create a successful mini-site.First you need a product. For a mini-site, I've found that offering an informational product is your best bet. There are a few reasons why informational products are preferred. First of all, there is no stock needed, no warehouse, no shipping department What can you learn from these examples? First, these investors were being asked to invest a subst The Best eBay Selling Tips Agents have been screaming at me to stop beating the ‘dead horse’ about equity-indexed annuities and the dangers of working with commission-based advisors. Unfortunately, the ‘horse’ ain’t dead…it’s very much alive and kicking. I receive calls or emails from at several people every week with stories that clearly illustrate this point. All of these situations have many things in common and the better you understand them the less you will be at risk.There are literally hundreds of places out there that will list out eBay selling tip after tip. Complicating a process that’s pretty simple, the many eBay selling tip ideas out there might be good, but they don’t top the most important eBay selling tip by a long shot.The key to being successful in selling on this online marketplace falls squarely in the lap of a single eBay selling tip: be honest!For those who think lots of visuals, long descriptions or even spectacular, trendy and brand new merchandise are key, think again. The number one eBay selling tip Mr. ‘Smith’ contacted me just a week or so ago. He and his wife are very conservative and near retirement. They have about $1 million in investable assets and their $300,000 home is paid for. Of all this money, less than $30,000 is invested in the stock market with almost all of it being in a super-safe money market account. His email asked me what was wrong with their ‘plan’ of investing basically everything they had into long-term, highly inflexible equity-indexed annuities. The agent who gave them this advice also recommended getting a reverse mortgage on their home and using that money to buy a high-cost life insurance policy under the guise that it could cover their long term care needs. This smart, well-educated couple was about to make the biggest financial mistake of their lives. ‘Susan’ contacted me the same week. Her father recently passed away and now her mother was making the decisions on over $1 million in investable assets. Susan was alarmed when she discovered that an ‘estate planner’ was pushing Mom to invest her entire nest egg into a 15-year equity-indexed annuity contract! 100% of it! This ‘estate planner’ wasn’t an estate planner at all. She was an insurance agent using that title to sound more qualified. She had convinced Mom that the equity-indexed annuity was the answer to all of her problems and Mom was ready to invest. By the way, YOU can be an “estate planner”, “wealth manager”, etc. too. All you have to do is get a business card saying you are and, bingo, you are now more qualified! Watch out for fancy titles, as they can be a ruse to gain your trust. At Susan’s request, I looked over the contract and uncovered some startling facts. If Mom cashed out after the 10-year surrender penalty was up, she would forfeit the ‘bonus’ and any index gains, and earn a measly total return of only 1.5%. That’s it, regardless of the index. The only way she could EVER get the bonus and index gains was to annuitize the contract for a minimum of 5 years. Even if she died, the children wouldn’t receive the bonus unless they annuitized! Or course, none of this was explained by the trustworthy agent. What can you learn from these examples? First, these investors were being asked to invest a subst Why Do Companies Outsource Offshore; Case Study near retirement. They have about $1 million in investable assets and their $300,000 home is paid for. Of all this money, less than $30,000 is invested in the stock market with almost all of it being in a super-safe money market account.So why do so many American Companies offshore overseas? You know the real problem is the over regulation and the over lawyering in the United States. It gets to the point with all the rules and regulations and government agencies screwing with you and people like Elliot Spitzer threatening to do a PR drive bye shooting on your company, stock valuations and such, that it is not really worth dealing with.It is not only about cheap labor, although shareholders equity and quarterly profits are king indeed. You see this is the Ayn Rand affect as much as anything else. His email asked me what was wrong with their ‘plan’ of investing basically everything they had into long-term, highly inflexible equity-indexed annuities. The agent who gave them this advice also recommended getting a reverse mortgage on their home and using that money to buy a high-cost life insurance policy under the guise that it could cover their long term care needs. This smart, well-educated couple was about to make the biggest financial mistake of their lives. ‘Susan’ contacted me the same week. Her father recently passed away and now her mother was making the decisions on over $1 million in investable assets. Susan was alarmed when she discovered that an ‘estate planner’ was pushing Mom to invest her entire nest egg into a 15-year equity-indexed annuity contract! 100% of it! This ‘estate planner’ wasn’t an estate planner at all. She was an insurance agent using that title to sound more qualified. She had convinced Mom that the equity-indexed annuity was the answer to all of her problems and Mom was ready to invest. By the way, YOU can be an “estate planner”, “wealth manager”, etc. too. All you have to do is get a business card saying you are and, bingo, you are now more qualified! Watch out for fancy titles, as they can be a ruse to gain your trust. At Susan’s request, I looked over the contract and uncovered some startling facts. If Mom cashed out after the 10-year surrender penalty was up, she would forfeit the ‘bonus’ and any index gains, and earn a measly total return of only 1.5%. That’s it, regardless of the index. The only way she could EVER get the bonus and index gains was to annuitize the contract for a minimum of 5 years. Even if she died, the children wouldn’t receive the bonus unless they annuitized! Or course, none of this was explained by the trustworthy agent. What can you learn from these examples? First, these investors were being asked to invest a subst Duplicate Content - Penalize Me, Please policy under the guise that it could cover their long term care needs. This smart, well-educated couple was about to make the biggest financial mistake of their lives.Building sites is an interesting thing to do. If you really enjoy having a bad time. No, actually, I love all this stuff, but I'm unable to figure out just what the search engines are doing.However, I have decided that it really doesn't matter. Not because it doesn't matter,but because it's nearly impossible to keep on top of the changes and still do anything.Tracking what's going on is nearly impossible. The forums are full of a lot of BS unsupported by anything except wishful thinking and plain lunacy. There's very little trustworthy research with real ‘Susan’ contacted me the same week. Her father recently passed away and now her mother was making the decisions on over $1 million in investable assets. Susan was alarmed when she discovered that an ‘estate planner’ was pushing Mom to invest her entire nest egg into a 15-year equity-indexed annuity contract! 100% of it! This ‘estate planner’ wasn’t an estate planner at all. She was an insurance agent using that title to sound more qualified. She had convinced Mom that the equity-indexed annuity was the answer to all of her problems and Mom was ready to invest. By the way, YOU can be an “estate planner”, “wealth manager”, etc. too. All you have to do is get a business card saying you are and, bingo, you are now more qualified! Watch out for fancy titles, as they can be a ruse to gain your trust. At Susan’s request, I looked over the contract and uncovered some startling facts. If Mom cashed out after the 10-year surrender penalty was up, she would forfeit the ‘bonus’ and any index gains, and earn a measly total return of only 1.5%. That’s it, regardless of the index. The only way she could EVER get the bonus and index gains was to annuitize the contract for a minimum of 5 years. Even if she died, the children wouldn’t receive the bonus unless they annuitized! Or course, none of this was explained by the trustworthy agent. What can you learn from these examples? First, these investors were being asked to invest a subst Viral Marketing and New Business at all. She was an insurance agent using that title to sound more qualified. She had convinced Mom that the equity-indexed annuity was the answer to all of her problems and Mom was ready to invest.Search engines are too fluid and too volatile for natural or organic results, especially SERPs (Search Engine Ranking Position). Search engine algorithms are constantly being tweaked. Today you may have the #1 position on Google for a variety of search terms, and tomorrow you may find yourself on page 50.Your business development efforts should use an integrated approach that combines at least two communications tools. Internet search engines is one, viral marketing on the internet is another.Here are a few sure-fire ways to get customer attention. Target By the way, YOU can be an “estate planner”, “wealth manager”, etc. too. All you have to do is get a business card saying you are and, bingo, you are now more qualified! Watch out for fancy titles, as they can be a ruse to gain your trust. At Susan’s request, I looked over the contract and uncovered some startling facts. If Mom cashed out after the 10-year surrender penalty was up, she would forfeit the ‘bonus’ and any index gains, and earn a measly total return of only 1.5%. That’s it, regardless of the index. The only way she could EVER get the bonus and index gains was to annuitize the contract for a minimum of 5 years. Even if she died, the children wouldn’t receive the bonus unless they annuitized! Or course, none of this was explained by the trustworthy agent. What can you learn from these examples? First, these investors were being asked to invest a subst What is the Most Effective Way to Get Traffic for a Confused Beginner? ut after the 10-year surrender penalty was up, she would forfeit the ‘bonus’ and any index gains, and earn a measly total return of only 1.5%. That’s it, regardless of the index. The only way she could EVER get the bonus and index gains was to annuitize the contract for a minimum of 5 years. Even if she died, the children wouldn’t receive the bonus unless they annuitized! Or course, none of this was explained by the trustworthy agent.There are so many different traffic programs and traffic scams out there that it is really hard to keep them all straight.The bottom line is, no matter how much traffic you get, if it is not targeted to your niche, it is pretty much useless. That is why most traffic programs do not work, and it is why most guaranteed traffic is a complete waste of money.There are a few things that bring in traffic:1) Articles you write and publish (for proof, go to ezinearticles.com, go to the expert authors page, and see that I now have 1007 articles published – What can you learn from these examples? First, these investors were being asked to invest a substantial portion of their nest egg into a single type of product. This is the first red-flag. Never, ever, put all or even half of your eggs into one investment basket. Second, these investors were being asked to buy long-term pre-packaged investment products that strictly limited access to their money unless they paid hefty surrender penalties. I’ve talked with people who thought the surrender penalty was less than one percent only to find out it was closer to 20%! Never buy an investment with a surrender penalty over 5%. Third, regardless of what they call themselves, these ‘advisors’ were only able to sell insurance-based investments. They can’t sell government guaranteed, corporate or municipal bonds, mutual funds, stocks, REITs, CD’s or any of the other products used by full-fledged advisors. They are a one-trick pony. Third, these advisors obviously don’t have the experience or knowledge to offer appropriate financial advice. A trustworthy advisor would never, ever make the recommendations these charlatans made. They are completely unsuitable Fourth, these agents have little concern for the investor. They were more concerned about themselves then their client. Find someone who will put your needs first. Susan and the Smith’s are the lucky ones. They contacted me and avoided a nightmare. Unfortunately, there are thousands of investors that are taken advantage of every day. This should be criminal and until it stops I will continue to ‘beat this dead horse’! I’ll help you. Have a financial question? Send me an email and I’ll personally respond, free of charge. Go to www.guardingyourwealth.com and click on ‘Ask Jeff’. In addition to being a nationally syndicated columnist and Certified Financial Planning Practitioner, Mr. Voudrie provides personal, private money management services to clients nationwide.
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