Totaled or stolen vehicles

September 21st, 2011 No Comments   Posted in Insurance

You always hope for the best whatever you do. Let’s face it, setting off expecting the worst often becomes a self-fulfilling prophesy. So when you learn to drive, you first hope you will never have an accident. Then you hope you will only have a small accident. The idea of a total loss is not something you want to think about. Yet it’s surprising how often you find the insurer wants to total your vehicle; and then there are the times when your pride and joy disappears off the face of the Earth. That’s a really sad moment. So what are the rules when the unthinkable happens? In this, don’t forget the minimum liability policy is no help. For repair of your own vehicle, you need a collision policy. To recover value should your vehicle be stolen, you need a comprehensive policy.

Let’s start with an accident in which your vehicle is damaged. Your first instinct is to repair. The insurer gets estimates. If it’s going to cost more than the market value of your vehicle, the insurer will offer you a check. Now comes the really sad part. The check is for less than you expect. This is not the price you paid. This is not the price you think the vehicle would command if you advertised it for sale. This is the price the insurer thinks you will have to pay to buy a similar replacement. So you may have showered love on this vehicle. Its paint may gleam in the morning sun and it has been perfectly maintained. You look at the check and see it will only buy an unloved wreck. But there’s worse to come. Suppose your vehicle was bought using an auto loan and the amount of the check will only pay off a part of the money outstanding on the loan. To cover this gap, there’s a separate insurance policy you can buy. That way, there will always be enough to pay off whatever is owing to the bank or finance company. More »


Auto insurance and the new GM offer

September 19th, 2011 No Comments   Posted in Insurance

There’s never really anything new in the world of marketing. The same ideas that sold three bottles of wine for the price of two in ancient Rome still work today. We all like to think we’re getting good value for money. The most usual approach is to offer volume for a discount. The more you buy, the less you pay. In the insurance world, we see bundles on offer. Pay less if you buy both an auto and home insurance policy. There will be further discounts if you insure multiple vehicles or several different “homes”, e.g. when your teens go off to college and need cover for their possessions. This is simple commercial sense. Unless your family is particularly unlucky, you are paying an increasingly large amount of premium income to the insurer which turns into more profit when you make no large claim. That earns a discount to reward you for your loyalty.

Well, here comes a new experiment from the motor industry. General Motors is flexing its muscles now it’s recovering from the Chapter 11 reorganization. During the last ten years, its reputation has taken a beating and sales of its brands has been declining year-on-year. The last financial year, 2010, was the first time it showed a profit since 2004. It has also shown a slight increase in sales volumes – the first increase after ten years of losing market share. To boost sales this year, it’s offering one year’s free insurance if you buy one of the eligible models. Before you all get too excited, this only applies to the good folk who live in Oregon and Washington, and the offer expires come September. But we can assume more of these offers will be made if sales in the models shows significant increase. So why is this potentially a good thing for you? More »


Reducing the risk of burglary

September 16th, 2011 No Comments   Posted in Insurance

As we move into fall, there’s still time for one more quick break. It’s good to get away for a long weekend before winter comes – except for those of you in the south, of course, where it manages to be summer all year round. So the first rule is not to tell all your friends on Facebook or any of the other social network sites. No posting of photographs showing you enjoying a margarita by the beach. Similarly, stop tweeting your instant reactions to the hotel or the food in the restaurant. It’s bad enough you telling the world you have the type of lifestyle that makes it worth a burglar’s time breaking into your home. But also telling the burglar you’re not home. . . Indeed, any real-time messaging to the world describing what you do, where you shop, what food you enjoy, and so on gives thieves a shopping list of what to steal.

Did you know most burglaries take place during the holiday periods when there are fewer people around in your neighborhood and the thieves know your home is unoccupied. Remarkably, many do not actually have to break anything to enter. It seems we’re very forgetful when it comes to locking doors and securing windows. Some thieves don’t actually bother entering the home but force open the garage or shed, taking bicycles and anything else easily moved and saleable. So, if you’re going away, what precautions should you take? The first step is to create the impression your home is still occupied. You can buy timers for lights and electrical equipment. Leaving the curtains or blinds slightly open, you can program the television to come on. Ask neighbors to spend time inside your home in the evenings. Then cancel deliveries of the newspaper or anything else that will signal your absence. More »


Auto insurance tips to save money

September 16th, 2011 No Comments   Posted in Insurance

The majority of politicians have a split personality. One minute, the deficit is the end of the world as we know it. The next, there’s no reason to panic. Except, when you look round the neighborhood and see the number of homes going through foreclosure, all those people you know who are unemployed and businesses closing down, you realize the country has not yet recovered from the recession. With every dollar counting to put food on the table and keep a roof over your head, the challenge is to keep all the essentials in place within breaking the budget. In this, remember you always get what you pay for, so buying something cheap is often not giving you good value for your money. It’s always better to find goods or services of reasonable quality at a price you can afford.

So, from the earliest years, we’re taught to shop around. Family and friends laugh at us if we accept the first price offered in the first shop we walk into. Everyone knows you have to go into at least three shops to get an idea of how much goods of this type actually cost. Only then can we see what represents good value for money. Would you start walking round car lots and showrooms without having an idea of the current prices? Would you simply agree to pay the asking price? Almost everyone is prepared to ask for a discount. Haggling may not be everyone’s strength but, in these tough economic times, we should all make the effort. It’s the same with insurance to go with the vehicle. More »


Medical clinics in drugstores

September 16th, 2011 No Comments   Posted in Insurance

When is a doctor not a doctor? When is a clinic not a clinic? All questions of this type sound a little nonsensical. You can check whether someone has a degree and the credentials to be a doctor. Similarly, you always rely on a doctor in a clinic to diagnose and treat your medical condition. Right? Well, not necessarily. Here’s a slightly different question for you. Suppose a nurse works in a hospital for years and has vast experience in dealing with certain types of medical problem. You have that problem and are lying in a bed when this nurse gets in an argument with an intern – that’s a new medical graduate going through supervised training. The nurse effectively tells the doctor-to-be he has made a mistake. Whose judgement do you trust?

In other countries, experienced nurses are trusted to make limited diagnoses and prescribe some drugs. This allows urgent treatment to be given. If a consultant has to be summoned to confirm the treatment, this delay could be dangerous to health. In America, doctors are careful to protect their status and reputation. There are also medical malpractice implications if nurses are allowed to assume responsibility for critical parts of the treatment regime. It’s therefore interesting to observe the spread of medical clinics in drugstores and other retail environments. As an example, the Minute Clinic chain has more than 600 outlets in 24 states. These clinics are staffed by family nurse practitioners and physician assistants. Why should they have become so popular? More »


Financial Asset Management Systems Collections on the Art of Debt Collection

September 15th, 2011 No Comments   Posted in Life Style

Many companies fail to realize that debt collection can prove to be one of their best sources of income. However, some tend to give up after just a few attempts on trying to collect the accounts receivables due to them. Once they fail and the client proves to be highly stubborn or uncooperative, most companies just shrug it off and decide to write it off as bad debts. That, however, is the wrong attitude to take to debts, says Financial Asset Management Systems Collections (FAMSC). If a company becomes known for never taking a strong stand in debt collection, a lot of clients will end up abusing their generosity. Worse, many people with criminal intent will deliberately consume their products or avail of their services with zero intention of paying for them. If this is allowed to continue, then sooner or later the company will end up bankrupt or suffering from continuous financial losses when they should have been receiving a constant stream of income.

Financial Asset Management Systems Collections say it is okay to be generous and understanding but only up to a point. It is good business, in fact, for companies to extend the deadline and especially when the client is up front about their inability to pay on time and when a valid reason is presented. Delays can hurt the business, of course, but one smart way of getting around that is for companies to make their initial deadlines shorter than usual. Take, for example, when a client borrows money or avails of products or services on April 1 and the company needs to be paid by May 1. Instead of asking the client to pay on April 30, they can choose instead to ask the client to pay by April 15 or even April 20. If the client is unable to, they can choose to extend the deadline to April 30. They will even appear generous by doing so.

If, however, that still does not work then there is no other option but to ask for agencies like Financial Asset Management Systems Collections to step in.


Simplicity for Communication Support

August 30th, 2011 No Comments   Posted in Life Style

These days, we could find out there is no more problem about distance because the world could be not so wide because there are so many technology product which could help human being to handle the situation for sure. We could find out that the transportation technology could be sophisticated enough to make sure people could go from one country to another country easily. But there is nothing more spectacular support which we could find nowadays because the communication is not something complicated and could cause death.

It is obvious that cell phone must be very great support which we could find today as modern human being because we basically do not have to fly anywhere if we want to just talk with someone who lives in another country for example. Cell phone could also be so much more personal because everyone could only have on cell phone. Even there are also some people who have two or more cell phone with different number. In this situation there is no doubt that best communication network provider could open the service.

We need to pay for the whole support which if gotten from the package because we could also save some of the money with straight talk promo code.


Insuring your custom ride

May 2nd, 2011 No Comments   Posted in Insurance

You’ve definitely seen many of those cars that the TV show “Pimp My Ride” and many other love to highlight. It has become a real fad among car owners, especially the younger ones, to customize their vehicles for the purpose of reflecting their individuality through the car they drive. Sure, in such an individualistic society as we all are there’s nothing wrong or bad about such a fad. However, quite often when it comes to insuring such vehicles their owners tend to overlook the changes their car has be subjected to, believing that their policy will cover it in case of an accident. And it’s such a bitter feeling when they actually file a claim and get covered partially or denied coverage in general. What’s wrong with custom cars that insurance companies are so picky about them?

First of all let’s take a look at what the insurance company covers in the first place. When you purchase a policy the company is obliged to cover the losses to your car in its form as the policy was signed according to its market value or independent evaluation. What happens when you decide to customize it? You change certain parts of the car from original to custom and effectively alter the market value of your vehicle. Let’s agree that installing a stereo system worth of 6k to your 3k Honda Civic is actually altering its price in a drastic manner. And in case you end up filing a claim for the altered value and configuration of your vehicle the insurance company has the right to deny you with coverage simply because you’ve altered the value of the insurance object without informing the insurer. It’s like buying a cheap computer, upgrading it with the most advanced parts, and then trying to get a refund for the final value of your PC because there was a short circuit in your flat. More »


Electric and hybrid vehicle insurance facts

May 2nd, 2011 No Comments   Posted in Insurance

The fad for electric and hybrid drive is still on the rise these days, with more models being introduced by car makers and new incentives offered for purchasing such environmental-friendly vehicles. You see more of these vehicles on the road and it may look like a good bargain to buy one. But what’s the situation when you actually try to insure such cars? Are they on par with their carbon-footprint peers or there are some peculiarities when it comes to covering such vehicles?

While electric motor vehicles haven’t been around for long enough to speak about any lengthy claims history, hybrid cars have been on the market for almost a decade and insurance providers have all the statistics they need to determine adequate insurance rates for such vehicles. And to much surprise, owning a hybrid vehicle doesn’t automatically mean that you’ll get better insurance rates. More »


When People are allowed to Lookup SSN

April 28th, 2011 No Comments   Posted in Life Style

The SSN is a private record of an individual. The records began back in 1965 when they were used to meet the needs of the retirees after the age of 65. However, changes have been made and people can Lookup SSN for a number of reasons. Not everybody is allowed to access the records which are provided by the government agencies. There are certain conditions that allow one to Lookup SSN.

The main reason as to why most people prefer to Lookup SSN is due to the accuracy that they offer. People are allowed to Lookup SSN during a criminal investigation. This is done to validate what the accused says. Companies today are also allowed to Lookup SSN when hiring new employees to determine their reliance. After death, the SSN records can also be accessed for people to learn more about the individual. Privacy is assured by the welfare organizations and limits access.


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