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Answer Upon - Protecting Your Collection From The Bad-Guys
There are Plenty of Reasons to Look into Government Student Loan Consolidation as an Option ething. Talk to your insurance agent about your collection. It may be that all you need to do is to disclose to him or her –or the company- that you have a valuable collection in your home. Likely that you might find that upping your coverage –and your bill- is a good idea –at least in your agent’s mind. Try this –send a return-receipt letter advising the company of the fact that you have a collection of X and ask what to do. Likely you will be ignored. Hold on to a copy of this letter and the delivery receipt and you might have a better’n average snow-ball’s-chance-in-hell of collecting on your loss. But you MUST have documentation –note the above.
Government student loan consolidation is a great idea, as interest rates are at record lows, no matter if you are an undergrad, or have already graduated.Government student loan consolidation programs can be a wonderful tool to lower payments on your student loans. You may have to go to a longer term than you currently have, but the interest rates right now are great. Everyone who has student loans should at least look into this option before rates go up.Some of the benefits of consolidation include: Protecting your credit rating, You can save money over the life of the loan. There are also programs for those of us who may have had a stumble or two. For those who have several student loans, government student loan consolidation will combine them into one lower monthly payment. For many people this makes managing your monthly bills easier.If you are reasonably close to paying off your loans and you can afford the payments government student loan consolidation is probably not a good option.It is always better to be out of debt completely than to prolong it with lower monthly payments. Refinancing any loan than will soon be paid off is never a good idea, remember the ultimate goal is to be out of debt completely.Government student loan consolidation should be used as a tool to get a better start in life. After graduation the majority of students today face overwhelming debt that has accumulated during their college years. When you add to that the debt of buying a home and starting a family, the pressure can quickly mount as you are trying to start a new career. I encourage everyone no matter what their circumstances to always take advantage of each opportunity to st Here is what I learned when talking to a couple of experts in the field –and I must stress that just because this is how most insurance companies work, you may have something completely different! Remember how you agent tried to sell you the more expensive policy and you went with the cheap one? It may turn out that this decision comes to bite you in the ass if you are robbed. TALK TO YOUR AGENT! Home-owner’s policies –or renter’s policies for that matter, cover you from a variety of risks –usually fire, theft, and storm. BUT it turns out that ‘storm’ may include the above mentioned tidal wave in Kansas but exclude tornadoes there. Conversely, it may include avalanche hazard in New Orleans , but exclude hurricane. Also, ‘theft’ may OR MAY NOT include vandalism. Be hard to ruin a rock collection through vandalism –not so hard if it was a collection of porcelain figurines. Usually, and this applies more to home-owner’s policies, there is a total amount of coverage and some percent of this amount for ‘personal property” Remember you HS business class? real property involves land and buildings in some way, while you can take your personal property and go h What a Low Interest Loan Can Do for You OBLIGATORY STATISTICS: Articles such as this are all but required to start out with crime statistics. You may well have heard or read these before, but they are worth repeating:
There are actually several good things that obtaining a low interest loan can do for your financial health, as well as other areas of your life. Here are some ideas on why this sort of loan situation can make you very attractive to other people who want to do business with you, as well as enhance your own sense of self worth.Loans with a low rate of interest do not grow on trees. The fact is that not everyone can get this sort of a loan. Persons who are able to command a lower rate of interest tend to be those that have proven themselves to be good credit risks, with an established history of paying back any outstanding amounts in a timely manner. You can bet that when a credit card or finance company sees this sort of thing on your credit report, they will certainly want to do business with you.Above and beyond the number of entities that would like to add you to their client list as a result of your reliability, there is also the security of knowing you can get this type of loan. In fact, you can go to the bank or credit union that extended you the previous low interest loan and repeat the process with a minimum of red tape. Your already sterling reputation with them will make it all the easier to get what you need for your home or business needs.The ability to secure a loan with a low interest rate also has an impact on your self-image. While many of us understand that we are more than just our jobs or our bank books, the fact is that most of us take pride in knowing that we are capable of entering into an agreement and following through on everything we commit to. When it comes to a low interest loan, the simple knowledge that others respect and trust us enough to make this • The FBI reports a burglary occurs every 15 seconds. • Only about 13% of all reported burglaries are ‘cleared’ and the police very rarely catch the thief in the act. • A home without a security system is 2 to 3 times more likely to be burglarized. • 90% of police believe home monitored alarms help deter burglary attempts. • Over 1.3 million home invasions occurred in 2004. • 61.4% of all burglaries involve forcible entry, and over half (62%) occur during daylight hours. • The value of property stolen during burglaries in 2004 was an estimated 3.5 billion dollars. GENERAL ADVICE: So what to do? Basically it comes down to sending the bad-guys to your neighbor’s house because your house is too hard to get into. Not impossible, just harder. You know the story of the two guys walking in the forest and talking about bears? One said he would run away but he doubted he could out-run a bear. The other guy said he had similar doubts, but noted he didn’t have to out-run a bear –he only had to out-run the other guy. I’m not at all sure about the morality of either outrunning the other guy, nor contributing –in some small way- to your neighbor’s house being burgled, but nor am I going to lose any sleep over it. Here is the advice –from Brinks Home Security no less: Leave your outside lights on at night. If your neighborhood is dimly lit, ask your municipal authorities to add streetlights or replace existing bulbs with higher watt bulbs. Leave one or two lamps on inside your house when you're not at home. Lock up with reliable dead-bolt door locks and sturdy window latches help prevent break-ins. Tall hedges provide hiding places for potential burglars. Trim the hedges so that they're no higher than your windowsills. Peepholes with magnifying lenses let you see who's at your door – without opening it. Never leave notes on your door, even when you're at home. Tune the stereo or TV to your favorite station when you leave the house. To a burglar, noise means that someone's home. Close and lock garage doors to protect valuables stored there and to prevent access to your house. Park an additional car in your driveway or ask a neighbor to park there. It gives the appearance that someone's always home and prevents burglars from backing a van into the drive for easy loading. If you leave a spare key outside, hide it creatively. Burglars routinely check under flowerpots and welcome mats and on window ledges. Ask a neighbor to collect newspapers and mail when you're away. If you'll be gone for an extended period, hire someone to take care of your lawn or even to house sit. Team up with your neighbors and form a crime watch program. Your local police can help you get started. ADVICE SPECIFIC to COLLECTORS: While all of the above home-protection ideas are useful to collectors, there is one DON’T and one very important DO: DON’T engrave your driver’s license number on every item in your collection. (Duh !?1) DO photograph & log every item in your collection. This is no more then what a serious collector does just for the fun of it. Or he or she does it to keep track of what needs to be added to complete the collection. Store the list in your workplace or somewhere away from your home in case of fire. Update it every quarter or so. If it is a sufficiently large collection, update it every month. There is actually software for some collectibles (coins and stamps for example) that makes this easy. It’s is also essential when filing insurance claims. More on insurance in anon. The one statistic I couldn’t find was a portion of how many thefts are committed by people the victim knows. I suspect it’s higher then we might expect. You protect your home from the bad guys –the burglars and drug addicts, but what about the people who would never think to break into your home and steal your plasma TV? Not your kids surely, but what about their little friends? Your housekeeper? Perhaps not her –she’s been with you for years, right? But her boy-friend drops her off & picks her up -and waits around if she isn’t quite done? What about the guy who also collects X and was referred to you by that guy who knew the other guy who you met at the last show. You going to get together and talk about your mutual interest in X? You going to show him you best items? What if the phone rings while you have your X’s proudly spread all out? Is your mom-in-law is a kook? Your roommate besotted in love with the wrong person? And so it goes. If you were to think about it for awhile, you undoubtedly could come up with you own list of doubtful visitors. If any of these people were to take a single item from the back of the bottom drawer, how long would it be before you were to notice it was missing? And even if you did notice it right away, how would you go about getting it back? The police? You had best have a good friend either on the police force or the town council, ‘cause the police are too busy writing tickets for wrong left turns. (That portion of municipality’s budgets coming from traffic tickets has –on average- doubled in the last 20 years while the portion of crimes against citizens that are solved –or are even investigated- has dropped by more then half!) So what to do about “friendly” theft? Lock it up! As I have said elsewhere in my site, locks may only keep the honest people out, but it is a good start. Someone from the list above who steals from you is not honest –but nor are they habitual criminals like the guy who breaks into your home while you are at work. A lock on a display case may be easily defeated with nothing more then a big screwdriver, and a hammer will get you through the glass or plastic on a display-case, but it will make noise and there is no doubt that the perpetrator is stealing –not “borrowing”. Might be enough to keep your stuff where you think it belongs. Additionally, let’s suppose that it is valuable only in your mind –your spouse has some doubt as to this fact. Lock it up and it becomes clear that it is –BY-GOD- valuable. Most of the stuff that I make can be made with a lock. Wall and floor safes for the home come in every shape and size. I have built more then one elegant drawer case to fit into a wall safe. Got a really BIG collection? Check out gun safes. Such a thing would hold a LOT of coins or stamps. INSURANCE: Ever read the fine print on an insurance contract? Do so and it seems that they exclude everything from coverage EXCEPT –maybe- theft by Mongol horde of left-handed horseman stealing your stuff after the roof of your house was torn off by an inland tidal wave, in Kansas, on Thursdays, in months with an ‘R’ in them… or something. Talk to your insurance agent about your collection. It may be that all you need to do is to disclose to him or her –or the company- that you have a valuable collection in your home. Likely that you might find that upping your coverage –and your bill- is a good idea –at least in your agent’s mind. Try this –send a return-receipt letter advising the company of the fact that you have a collection of X and ask what to do. Likely you will be ignored. Hold on to a copy of this letter and the delivery receipt and you might have a better’n average snow-ball’s-chance-in-hell of collecting on your loss. But you MUST have documentation –note the above. Here is what I learned when talking to a couple of experts in the field –and I must stress that just because this is how most insurance companies work, you may have something completely different! Remember how you agent tried to sell you the more expensive policy and you went with the cheap one? It may turn out that this decision comes to bite you in the ass if you are robbed. TALK TO YOUR AGENT! Home-owner’s policies –or renter’s policies for that matter, cover you from a variety of risks –usually fire, theft, and storm. BUT it turns out that ‘storm’ may include the above mentioned tidal wave in Kansas but exclude tornadoes there. Conversely, it may include avalanche hazard in New Orleans , but exclude hurricane. Also, ‘theft’ may OR MAY NOT include vandalism. Be hard to ruin a rock collection through vandalism –not so hard if it was a collection of porcelain figurines. Usually, and this applies more to home-owner’s policies, there is a total amount of coverage and some percent of this amount for ‘personal property” Remember you HS business class? real property involves land and buildings in some way, while you can take your personal property and go h Life Insurance 101 Explained side your house when you're not at home.
While most of us do not like to think of the subject of our own death, the fact of the matter is that death is a part of life and in order to protect our families we need to give some thought to the subject of life insurance. The more you understand about life insurance the better you can prepare not only for your final expenses and protect your family.First, understand there are different types of life insurance. The type that is best for you will depend on a variety of factors including your current age and health condition. The two major types of life insurance policies that you need to concern yourself with are term life insurance and permanent life insurance.Term life insurance provides coverage for a specified period of time. This type of coverage will usually be less expensive than permanent life insurance. Policy periods are usually divided up into easy periods such as one, ten or twenty years. In the event you die within that time period, the death benefit will be paid to your beneficiaries. On the other hand, if you should reach the end of the time period and you are still alive your protection will end unless you elect to renew the policy. The option of building up cash value is not available with this type of insurance policy.Individuals who only need temporary life insurance and those who need a large amount of coverage but who can’t afford to spend a lot benefit from this type of policy the most.Permanent life insurance is designed to provide coverage for the duration of your life, although in some cases, the policy may be limited up until a specific age. When you reach that age, the cash value of the policy will be paid to you. Because you are building a cas Lock up with reliable dead-bolt door locks and sturdy window latches help prevent break-ins. Tall hedges provide hiding places for potential burglars. Trim the hedges so that they're no higher than your windowsills. Peepholes with magnifying lenses let you see who's at your door – without opening it. Never leave notes on your door, even when you're at home. Tune the stereo or TV to your favorite station when you leave the house. To a burglar, noise means that someone's home. Close and lock garage doors to protect valuables stored there and to prevent access to your house. Park an additional car in your driveway or ask a neighbor to park there. It gives the appearance that someone's always home and prevents burglars from backing a van into the drive for easy loading. If you leave a spare key outside, hide it creatively. Burglars routinely check under flowerpots and welcome mats and on window ledges. Ask a neighbor to collect newspapers and mail when you're away. If you'll be gone for an extended period, hire someone to take care of your lawn or even to house sit. Team up with your neighbors and form a crime watch program. Your local police can help you get started. ADVICE SPECIFIC to COLLECTORS: While all of the above home-protection ideas are useful to collectors, there is one DON’T and one very important DO: DON’T engrave your driver’s license number on every item in your collection. (Duh !?1) DO photograph & log every item in your collection. This is no more then what a serious collector does just for the fun of it. Or he or she does it to keep track of what needs to be added to complete the collection. Store the list in your workplace or somewhere away from your home in case of fire. Update it every quarter or so. If it is a sufficiently large collection, update it every month. There is actually software for some collectibles (coins and stamps for example) that makes this easy. It’s is also essential when filing insurance claims. More on insurance in anon. The one statistic I couldn’t find was a portion of how many thefts are committed by people the victim knows. I suspect it’s higher then we might expect. You protect your home from the bad guys –the burglars and drug addicts, but what about the people who would never think to break into your home and steal your plasma TV? Not your kids surely, but what about their little friends? Your housekeeper? Perhaps not her –she’s been with you for years, right? But her boy-friend drops her off & picks her up -and waits around if she isn’t quite done? What about the guy who also collects X and was referred to you by that guy who knew the other guy who you met at the last show. You going to get together and talk about your mutual interest in X? You going to show him you best items? What if the phone rings while you have your X’s proudly spread all out? Is your mom-in-law is a kook? Your roommate besotted in love with the wrong person? And so it goes. If you were to think about it for awhile, you undoubtedly could come up with you own list of doubtful visitors. If any of these people were to take a single item from the back of the bottom drawer, how long would it be before you were to notice it was missing? And even if you did notice it right away, how would you go about getting it back? The police? You had best have a good friend either on the police force or the town council, ‘cause the police are too busy writing tickets for wrong left turns. (That portion of municipality’s budgets coming from traffic tickets has –on average- doubled in the last 20 years while the portion of crimes against citizens that are solved –or are even investigated- has dropped by more then half!) So what to do about “friendly” theft? Lock it up! As I have said elsewhere in my site, locks may only keep the honest people out, but it is a good start. Someone from the list above who steals from you is not honest –but nor are they habitual criminals like the guy who breaks into your home while you are at work. A lock on a display case may be easily defeated with nothing more then a big screwdriver, and a hammer will get you through the glass or plastic on a display-case, but it will make noise and there is no doubt that the perpetrator is stealing –not “borrowing”. Might be enough to keep your stuff where you think it belongs. Additionally, let’s suppose that it is valuable only in your mind –your spouse has some doubt as to this fact. Lock it up and it becomes clear that it is –BY-GOD- valuable. Most of the stuff that I make can be made with a lock. Wall and floor safes for the home come in every shape and size. I have built more then one elegant drawer case to fit into a wall safe. Got a really BIG collection? Check out gun safes. Such a thing would hold a LOT of coins or stamps. INSURANCE: Ever read the fine print on an insurance contract? Do so and it seems that they exclude everything from coverage EXCEPT –maybe- theft by Mongol horde of left-handed horseman stealing your stuff after the roof of your house was torn off by an inland tidal wave, in Kansas, on Thursdays, in months with an ‘R’ in them… or something. Talk to your insurance agent about your collection. It may be that all you need to do is to disclose to him or her –or the company- that you have a valuable collection in your home. Likely that you might find that upping your coverage –and your bill- is a good idea –at least in your agent’s mind. Try this –send a return-receipt letter advising the company of the fact that you have a collection of X and ask what to do. Likely you will be ignored. Hold on to a copy of this letter and the delivery receipt and you might have a better’n average snow-ball’s-chance-in-hell of collecting on your loss. But you MUST have documentation –note the above. Here is what I learned when talking to a couple of experts in the field –and I must stress that just because this is how most insurance companies work, you may have something completely different! Remember how you agent tried to sell you the more expensive policy and you went with the cheap one? It may turn out that this decision comes to bite you in the ass if you are robbed. TALK TO YOUR AGENT! Home-owner’s policies –or renter’s policies for that matter, cover you from a variety of risks –usually fire, theft, and storm. BUT it turns out that ‘storm’ may include the above mentioned tidal wave in Kansas but exclude tornadoes there. Conversely, it may include avalanche hazard in New Orleans , but exclude hurricane. Also, ‘theft’ may OR MAY NOT include vandalism. Be hard to ruin a rock collection through vandalism –not so hard if it was a collection of porcelain figurines. Usually, and this applies more to home-owner’s policies, there is a total amount of coverage and some percent of this amount for ‘personal property” Remember you HS business class? real property involves land and buildings in some way, while you can take your personal property and go h How to Double Your Debt Collections o more then what a serious collector does just for the fun of it. Or he or she does it to keep track of what needs to be added to complete the collection. Store the list in your workplace or somewhere away from your home in case of fire. Update it every quarter or so. If it is a sufficiently large collection, update it every month. There is actually software for some collectibles (coins and stamps for example) that makes this easy. It’s is also essential when filing insurance claims. More on insurance in anon.
Believe it or not, the success of your attempt to collect a debt is usually decided right at the beginning of your phone call – with the very first thing you say after the other party says hello. Knowing exactly what you are going to say – and handling the call in an organized, professional manner is the foundation upon which collections are made or lost. A professionally executed collections call has four parts:Part One is The Open – how you identify yourself, your company and the problem. And, how you place that problem before the debtor. Don’t ask him when he’s going to get around to paying you, or why he is putting you off. If you do you’ll be at a disadvantage right off the bat. Instead, put the debtor in the position of having to explain himself. Say something like “What are your intentions toward this bill?”Part Two: The Facts. If the debtor doesn’t agree to pay the bill early on, move into the next part of the call: asking questions about his situation. It’s important to make a smooth transition here because you don’t want to alarm the debtor. Say something like: “Let me just fill out an extension form for you.” Then you can start asking about his job, whether his wife is employed, any outstanding loans he may have, credit cards, etc.Part Three: The Dun – Once your questioning has given you the information you need you can show the debtor a way in which he or she can pay the debt. You now know, for instance, that he can afford to put it on his MasterCard, or that she could qualify for a bank loan. Now you’re in position to make your demand for payment (the dun).Part Four: The Close. Whether the debtor has agreed to pay or not, there is also a specific way you shoul The one statistic I couldn’t find was a portion of how many thefts are committed by people the victim knows. I suspect it’s higher then we might expect. You protect your home from the bad guys –the burglars and drug addicts, but what about the people who would never think to break into your home and steal your plasma TV? Not your kids surely, but what about their little friends? Your housekeeper? Perhaps not her –she’s been with you for years, right? But her boy-friend drops her off & picks her up -and waits around if she isn’t quite done? What about the guy who also collects X and was referred to you by that guy who knew the other guy who you met at the last show. You going to get together and talk about your mutual interest in X? You going to show him you best items? What if the phone rings while you have your X’s proudly spread all out? Is your mom-in-law is a kook? Your roommate besotted in love with the wrong person? And so it goes. If you were to think about it for awhile, you undoubtedly could come up with you own list of doubtful visitors. If any of these people were to take a single item from the back of the bottom drawer, how long would it be before you were to notice it was missing? And even if you did notice it right away, how would you go about getting it back? The police? You had best have a good friend either on the police force or the town council, ‘cause the police are too busy writing tickets for wrong left turns. (That portion of municipality’s budgets coming from traffic tickets has –on average- doubled in the last 20 years while the portion of crimes against citizens that are solved –or are even investigated- has dropped by more then half!) So what to do about “friendly” theft? Lock it up! As I have said elsewhere in my site, locks may only keep the honest people out, but it is a good start. Someone from the list above who steals from you is not honest –but nor are they habitual criminals like the guy who breaks into your home while you are at work. A lock on a display case may be easily defeated with nothing more then a big screwdriver, and a hammer will get you through the glass or plastic on a display-case, but it will make noise and there is no doubt that the perpetrator is stealing –not “borrowing”. Might be enough to keep your stuff where you think it belongs. Additionally, let’s suppose that it is valuable only in your mind –your spouse has some doubt as to this fact. Lock it up and it becomes clear that it is –BY-GOD- valuable. Most of the stuff that I make can be made with a lock. Wall and floor safes for the home come in every shape and size. I have built more then one elegant drawer case to fit into a wall safe. Got a really BIG collection? Check out gun safes. Such a thing would hold a LOT of coins or stamps. INSURANCE: Ever read the fine print on an insurance contract? Do so and it seems that they exclude everything from coverage EXCEPT –maybe- theft by Mongol horde of left-handed horseman stealing your stuff after the roof of your house was torn off by an inland tidal wave, in Kansas, on Thursdays, in months with an ‘R’ in them… or something. Talk to your insurance agent about your collection. It may be that all you need to do is to disclose to him or her –or the company- that you have a valuable collection in your home. Likely that you might find that upping your coverage –and your bill- is a good idea –at least in your agent’s mind. Try this –send a return-receipt letter advising the company of the fact that you have a collection of X and ask what to do. Likely you will be ignored. Hold on to a copy of this letter and the delivery receipt and you might have a better’n average snow-ball’s-chance-in-hell of collecting on your loss. But you MUST have documentation –note the above. Here is what I learned when talking to a couple of experts in the field –and I must stress that just because this is how most insurance companies work, you may have something completely different! Remember how you agent tried to sell you the more expensive policy and you went with the cheap one? It may turn out that this decision comes to bite you in the ass if you are robbed. TALK TO YOUR AGENT! Home-owner’s policies –or renter’s policies for that matter, cover you from a variety of risks –usually fire, theft, and storm. BUT it turns out that ‘storm’ may include the above mentioned tidal wave in Kansas but exclude tornadoes there. Conversely, it may include avalanche hazard in New Orleans , but exclude hurricane. Also, ‘theft’ may OR MAY NOT include vandalism. Be hard to ruin a rock collection through vandalism –not so hard if it was a collection of porcelain figurines. Usually, and this applies more to home-owner’s policies, there is a total amount of coverage and some percent of this amount for ‘personal property” Remember you HS business class? real property involves land and buildings in some way, while you can take your personal property and go h Mobile Phones - Almost Whatever The Need Be ou had best have a good friend either on the police force or the town council, ‘cause the police are too busy writing tickets for wrong left turns. (That portion of municipality’s budgets coming from traffic tickets has –on average- doubled in the last 20 years while the portion of crimes against citizens that are solved –or are even investigated- has dropped by more then half!)
So what to do about “friendly” theft? Lock it up! As I have said elsewhere in my site, locks may only keep the honest people out, but it is a good start. Someone from the list above who steals from you is not honest –but nor are they habitual criminals like the guy who breaks into your home while you are at work. A lock on a display case may be easily defeated with nothing more then a big screwdriver, and a hammer will get you through the glass or plastic on a display-case, but it will make noise and there is no doubt that the perpetrator is stealing –not “borrowing”. Might be enough to keep your stuff where you think it belongs.
Being a part of the ceremoniously evolving 21st century, our senses have grown akin to the most surprising developments that pleasantly assure us a safe passage to a hassle free life. The world has witnessed a great variety of progressive events in the last decade that can easily be dubbed as the most prolific period of the century. A tempestuous rise in technology has worked as the constant supply of coal in the steady steam engine ride of progress. Owing to this infallible contribution of technology, a new wave of super smart gadget manufacturers has rushed into the arena to sweep everyone across their feet. The mobile phone industry is one of the most thriving sectors in recent times, and the products, which have made their way out of it have highly impacted human lives through their impressive approach to an easier life.Previously introduced as the ultimate tool to take care of your communication needs, mobile phones have evolved through time to emerge as multi tasking gadgets with some unbelievable features. Taking a step ahead from being a provider of the conventional communication platform to being the wielder of some revolutionary abilities, mobile phones promise to fulfil a lot of your daily life needs. Figuring in conveniently distinct categories like camera phones, music phones, smartphones, PDA phones and pocket PC phones, mobile phones give usability a new definition for people with varying demands. Camera phones lend their photography prowess to budding photographers who desire their fill from their mobile phones. Music phones raise the tempo of music lovers, smartphones offer office and business solutions to professionals and pocket PC phones promise you the most convenient expe Additionally, let’s suppose that it is valuable only in your mind –your spouse has some doubt as to this fact. Lock it up and it becomes clear that it is –BY-GOD- valuable. Most of the stuff that I make can be made with a lock. Wall and floor safes for the home come in every shape and size. I have built more then one elegant drawer case to fit into a wall safe. Got a really BIG collection? Check out gun safes. Such a thing would hold a LOT of coins or stamps. INSURANCE: Ever read the fine print on an insurance contract? Do so and it seems that they exclude everything from coverage EXCEPT –maybe- theft by Mongol horde of left-handed horseman stealing your stuff after the roof of your house was torn off by an inland tidal wave, in Kansas, on Thursdays, in months with an ‘R’ in them… or something. Talk to your insurance agent about your collection. It may be that all you need to do is to disclose to him or her –or the company- that you have a valuable collection in your home. Likely that you might find that upping your coverage –and your bill- is a good idea –at least in your agent’s mind. Try this –send a return-receipt letter advising the company of the fact that you have a collection of X and ask what to do. Likely you will be ignored. Hold on to a copy of this letter and the delivery receipt and you might have a better’n average snow-ball’s-chance-in-hell of collecting on your loss. But you MUST have documentation –note the above. Here is what I learned when talking to a couple of experts in the field –and I must stress that just because this is how most insurance companies work, you may have something completely different! Remember how you agent tried to sell you the more expensive policy and you went with the cheap one? It may turn out that this decision comes to bite you in the ass if you are robbed. TALK TO YOUR AGENT! Home-owner’s policies –or renter’s policies for that matter, cover you from a variety of risks –usually fire, theft, and storm. BUT it turns out that ‘storm’ may include the above mentioned tidal wave in Kansas but exclude tornadoes there. Conversely, it may include avalanche hazard in New Orleans , but exclude hurricane. Also, ‘theft’ may OR MAY NOT include vandalism. Be hard to ruin a rock collection through vandalism –not so hard if it was a collection of porcelain figurines. Usually, and this applies more to home-owner’s policies, there is a total amount of coverage and some percent of this amount for ‘personal property” Remember you HS business class? real property involves land and buildings in some way, while you can take your personal property and go h Disguised As An Article ething. Talk to your insurance agent about your collection. It may be that all you need to do is to disclose to him or her –or the company- that you have a valuable collection in your home. Likely that you might find that upping your coverage –and your bill- is a good idea –at least in your agent’s mind. Try this –send a return-receipt letter advising the company of the fact that you have a collection of X and ask what to do. Likely you will be ignored. Hold on to a copy of this letter and the delivery receipt and you might have a better’n average snow-ball’s-chance-in-hell of collecting on your loss. But you MUST have documentation –note the above.
There are many sites that tell you not to submit any articles that are sales letters disguised as an article. No matter how cleverly disguised. And there are people who will try. Besides the fact that this can be very annoying to the host / owner of the article directory. This can also be very harmful to the author as well.You see people come to the article directories looking for good articles, with quality content. Either they want to read up on a subject to understand it better, or they are looking for relevant material for their website, blog or newsletter. They do not intend to post your sales letter on their site for you. It is important to remember that everything you do, say and write communicates a message about you.When you try to get away with having a sales letter for an article, the consequences of this will be:1.You’ll have missed having your articles posted on several potential sites. 2. You’ll have missed out on several potential back links. 3. You will have lost credibility.Instead of looking like an expert in a field, you can look like a person looking to make a quick buck. The thoughts that the public may have about you now are:Your product or service is secondary Your customer service is probably lacking Your clients probably do not matterSo what is the difference between a sales letter and an article. An sales letter promotes An article teaches A sales letter talks about the company or product An article explains and guides you on a subjectOne way I have seen people try to disguise them, is to have the article in an interview style and repeated say, said John Smi Here is what I learned when talking to a couple of experts in the field –and I must stress that just because this is how most insurance companies work, you may have something completely different! Remember how you agent tried to sell you the more expensive policy and you went with the cheap one? It may turn out that this decision comes to bite you in the ass if you are robbed. TALK TO YOUR AGENT! Home-owner’s policies –or renter’s policies for that matter, cover you from a variety of risks –usually fire, theft, and storm. BUT it turns out that ‘storm’ may include the above mentioned tidal wave in Kansas but exclude tornadoes there. Conversely, it may include avalanche hazard in New Orleans , but exclude hurricane. Also, ‘theft’ may OR MAY NOT include vandalism. Be hard to ruin a rock collection through vandalism –not so hard if it was a collection of porcelain figurines. Usually, and this applies more to home-owner’s policies, there is a total amount of coverage and some percent of this amount for ‘personal property” Remember you HS business class? real property involves land and buildings in some way, while you can take your personal property and go home. BUT –and don’cha love these buts- if you are in the business of buying, selling, and / or trading your collection, it is business property and excluded. BUT for items of more than about $3000, you had better have pretty good proof that you actually owned it, and it was indeed worth $3000+. Gets us back to listing, indexing, cross-referencing, and cataloging. An appraisal might be necessary. “I saw one just like it on “Antiques Road-Show” and the guy said it was worth $X00, 000.” ain’t going to get it done. Gathering prices –without hiring your own Road-Show type wank- may take some imagination. For instance, there is Replacements Limited that stands ready to sell you a single plate to match great-gramma’s china what got broken. They also do crystal and silver. They will provide a “third-party” price so it doesn’t come down to you and the insurance company arguing as two opposing parties. Another possibility is an interesting company that acts as a clearing-house for stolen valuables. It’s not clear if it serves in America , but Swift-Find it has excellent suggestions for both valuation / documentation and security. Moving up a level –and moving up in cost, there is “named article” coverage. What it comes down to is that you can insure anything if you want to pay for it.* Such policies can cover all manner of risks –from your klutz of a nephew playing with his new golf-club next to your Waterford crystal collection to a meteorite turning your sugar-packet collection into a smoking hole in the ground. But notice the “named article” part of the title. The need to name AND DOCUMENT the items is rather the whole point. SOME FINAL WORDS: One old boy I spoke to said that jewelry boxes do a really good job of telling the burglars (or acquisitive “friends”) where the valuable stuff is. Keeps it all in one convenient place for him. If the box is on the small side, it even makes a convenient way to carry it all out to the back of their van. And I make jewelry boxes! Where do I get off on telling you they are not a good idea? I just do. I have also made more then a few pieces with hidden compartments. Have a look at my CUSTOMER’S SCRAPBOOK for some of both the safe and not-so- safe stuff I have built for small valuables. Then there is the matter of alarms. The kind expert that explained insurance to me points out that while alarm systems may be good things, you become a slave to the silly alarm and its keyboard & password. This from her own experience and for a hugely valuable china set her great gram’ma owned. Got to be too much of a pain to hurry to the keyboard and enter the password. Once a family pet –who ordinarily slouched around on the floor –was frightened by a lightening storm, jumped up on a couch and tripped the alarm. As is predictable –and in contradiction to my comments about the police above –this time they showed up –three cars worth of them! (It was a rural town in Montanna. On the other hand, there is a city in northern California – Fremont- that made news for itself a few years ago. They decided that responding to home alarms was taking too much time away from traffic-ticket-writing and they were not going to respond anymore –unless the alarm companies paid then $20 or so to do so. Gives you a warm fuzzy feeling about our boys in blue, don’t it? ©Bill Harvey October 2006 *True story –though it sounds like an urban legend- 20th Century-Fox had Betty Grable's legs insured with Lloyd's of London for the whopping sum of $1.25 million. When you stop and think about it though, this is likely more of a publicity stunt then anything else. She is going to misplace her legs? Perhaps they get vandalized? Or lost at sea in a storm? Betty is still here –alive and kicking, (well, perhaps not kicking) but her legs are gone? Or her cleavage is somehow inoperative, but they could'a still made movies with her legs? (Things were different then –perhaps it’s more important for women stars to have cleavage now-a-days.) For this they make life insurance and lots of people have insurable interests in other people who are not moms and dads. What do you suppose the value of them two quarterbacks is to the NFL in the weeks between the playoffs and super-bowl? Or for that matter, what is the value of a single throwing-arm to a single beer company? Staggers the mind.
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