Posts Tagged ‘debt specialist’
Specialist Debt Reduction Advice
When will I ever get out of debt? When will I ever learn? Why do these credit card companies keep offering me even more credit? Will I ever be free from debt? Are these questions that you ask yourself? Well if you do then help is at hand. People can break free from the cycle of debt; I am not trying to suggest it is easy but it can be achieved.
At the end of the day it is all about how much people really want it and about their willingness to cut back on all of those luxuries that they are used to having – luxuries I might add that they could not ever afford without the aid of their credit card.
So how should or could one go about reducing their debt or even clearing their debts in full? Well to start with I must stress that I am not a financial adviser and therefore what you read within this article should not be seen as advice. It would be prudent in these situations to seek the advice of a debt specialist. Any initial advice should be from any charge or fee. In my business life I work selling external doors here in the UK as well as offering Tesco voucher codes.
The way forward is to start by freezing those crippling interest charges.
The specialist debt adviser is the person who can arrange this debt repayment plan on your behalf. These people are of course experts at dealing with creditors and they are likely to have contacts within the companies themselves.
Then there is a telecoms cost savings expert, these are people that can help you to reduce your overall overheads therefore enabling you to have additional spare cash to help you to pay back your debts.
I wish you every success in your quest to become debt free.
How To Arrange A Debt Repayment Plan
I was watching a financial news program last night when I heard an interesting observation from a business professor:
“There has never been a better time to reduce your debts”
Now when you think about this in a bit more detail you realise that this rather educated person is in fact most probably incorrect. How can it be the best time?
The real facts are eveident for each and everyone to see; the rate of unemployment is rising quickly, pay rises are thing of the past and money is scarce. For this reason I can not understand as to how he feels that this is the best time to reduce our debts; the reality is that this is a time when the majority of people have a real lack of money!
At this stage I would like to make it clear that I am not involved in debt management and that what I write in this article is purely an opinion of the current financial situation that we find ourselves in. This information should not therefore be seen as financial advice. I am merely an average man from England who is involved in various industries including cost reduction, stammering and helping people to obtain a professional web promotion service.
In another way I can actually see where he is coming from; unlike in past years when people could seemingly borrow as much money as they wanted to, the times have now changed and credit is much harder to come by. The companies that we owe money to are also deep in the mire. This may well be a great time to contact the company to arrange an affordable repayment plan.
What kind of deal are you talking about? Well quite simply these companies are also in need of cash and many people are not keeping up their debt repayments. By contacting the company, in writing, and stating that you are eager to pay off the debt but that the interest rates are crippling you in these problematic financial times. Offer them an amount that you could afford to pay on a weekly or a monthly basis and ask them to confirm if this is suitable to them. There are certain ways to write these types of letter and it may well be prudent to ask a debt specialist to contact these companies on your behalf.
So maybe, perhaps maybe, this professor was in fact correct. What do you think?



