Debt Management and Collecting Your Debts

Debt Management Agreements: The Pitfalls

Credit counseling is not a very well-regulated industry today. In the past, credit counseling was operated more like a social service rather than as a business designed to make a profit.

The industry was known by the general term CCCS (Consumer Credit Counseling Service) and operated under the general guidelines of the NFCC (National Foundation for Credit Counseling).

The lay of the credit counseling landscape has changed. As more and more consumers find themselves deeper and deeper in unsecured debt (think credit cards), more and more for profit credit counseling services have sprung up. Some of these services are very good and very fair, but be aware that not all of them are.

Some credit counseling services are good, others are bad, and then there are those that are just evil.

1. The debt management service that you choose should be a member of the BBB (Better Business Bureau). You can check with the BBB to see if the company has a good record and if there have been any complaints filed by others. Membership in the NFCC (National Foundation for Credit Counseling) or AICCA (Association of Independent Consumer Credit Counseling Agencies) is also acceptable.

2. If the debt management service promises you that it will take 20 minutes or less to solve all the financial problems, you need to run as fast as you can. They are referring to THEIR financial problems and not yours. It takes time and effort by a debt management service to help with your financial problems and get you the best deals possible.

3. Be certain that the debt management company can help with all of your unsecured debt and don't just deal with a few companies. Half a fix is often worse than no fix at all.

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Debt Management Experts

People who work as debt management experts go to school for that sort of thing. Many spend four years or more getting college degrees that identify them as experts in the money and debt management fields. And they are experts, there's no doubt about it.

The best of the debt management experts and debt management teachers, however, are those who have learned to manage their personal finances and their personal debts, and then passed that knowledge along to their children.

Those who actually do it are the experts, and they are the ones that we need to learn from to avoid having to visit with a well-educated debt management expert because we have gotten ourselves into financial hot water.

As I look around at expert debt managers (those who successfully manage their own finances) I find that they have many things in common. They don't all do things exactly the same way, of course, but the structure in which they manage their finances is basically the same.

1. They save first. Those people who know how to save very rarely get into financial trouble. Sure, they can. Life can throw some pretty hard curve balls....the loss of a job or a major illness. But unless their financial trouble is caused by an outside force they will not get themselves in debt up to their eyeballs.

2. They live within their means. They do not base their spending upon what their friends have. The neighbors might buy a new car, but that will have no bearing upon whether they do or not.

3. They all have budgets. Not only do they have budgets, but they live within the constraints of that budget. They do not make impulse buys. If asked, they could tell you how much is spent each month on food, shelter, clothing, utilities, and transportation.

 


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Debt Problems and Debt Management

Most of the time people will find themselves drowning in a sea of debt and have no idea how they managed to get themselves into so much trouble. It happened much like wading into a real ocean does.

First, you are standing on a nice warm sandy shore enjoying the sunshine and the breeze. You dip a toe into the ocean and it feels really nice. You begin wading out and you are surrounded by things you have always wanted. You just keep getting deeper and deeper until you are in way over your head and you cant see a nice dry (debt-free) shore anywhere in sight.

People very rarely just suddenly get into deep financial and debt problems....it happens one credit card at a time. The first credit card might be an oil company credit card. The next one is usually a store credit card. Then you get the major bank credit cards. It is just so easy to get all of the stuff that you want and need using credit cards and making the minimum payments that are required is just no problem at all.

Before you know it, you are using these credit cards to make your car payments and your mortgage payments, maybe even to buy the weekly supply of groceries. You find yourself drowning in debt. It isnt a fun place to be, for sure.

You can get credit counseling, and you can get a debt consolidation loan or even a second mortgage. But you are really going to get out of debt the very same way you got into debt...one step at a time. The closer you get to the shoreline, the easier it will become to free yourself of overburdening debt. And next time, you won't get too far from shore.

 

Related Topics: Debt Management Is a Good Thing,  Debt Management by Negotiation, Debt Management and Collecting Your Debts


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