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Casual Articles - Pensions and Long Term Care - Why You Should Turn Again to Property
Still Selling By The Numbers? 05,000 to our US cousins), so you could have at your disposal a lot of this money by refinancing your house.For years, sales managers and sales trainers have been saying that sales is a ‘numbers’ game. I can recall my first sales manager telling me over 35 years ago, “If you will see enough people, you will make enough sales.” First of all what’s enough sales? Second of all, how many is enough people? Thirdly, is this the best approach to take to prospect for new business? When I wrote Soft Sell in 1981, it was the result of trying to figure out what was the best approach. After years of doing what I was told and wasting lots of time and failing in the process I had an interesting revelation. This With the average deposit needed to buy another house as an investment in the UK being around 15%, and the average UK home costing ?150,000, another house would require you to raise around ?22,500 deposit, so in theory, you could go out and buy and 5 more houses using the equity in your existing house, and each house growing in equity by 8% (?12,000 each per year), you would see your net worth grow by around ?60,000 every year! That’s all good and dandy, but now you have 5 extra mortgages of around ?127,000 each, each one costing around ?550 a month to service. This is what most people find is still the most daunting, and even terrifying prospect, of investing in property. H 7 Things You Can Do To Weather The Lows Of A Business Cycle Most people have this plan in life – they work for a large (secure?) organisation, for 40 years or more, and then they feel that the organisation will repay their loyalty by providing them with quite a sizable top-up to their State pensions.Hey, as hard as this may be for you to swallow, business online is no different than a business on Main Street in your home town or city. We have good times and we have slow times.It is quite obvious what we do when our eBusinesses are experiencing the high times, we are pretty pumped up and of course very happy. When times are slow though that is a totally different story.Many people don't understand that we do have high's and low's that is just a fact of business. It is what you do during the low's that is quite a different story and below you will find some tips whi How wrong can they be? Look at the chaos caused over the last few years on both sides of the Atlantic where companies have either illegally or by bankruptcy robbed hundreds of thousands of hard-working, loyal employees, their right to a comfortable retirement – Murdock and Equitable Life in the UK; Enron, IBM and now Delphi in the States are just the tip of the iceberg. (Will GM be next…?) Then there is another highly relevant issue – that of long term care. In the UK particularly, human rights for older people remains a very uncertain area, and unless you have money or very vociferous friends and relatives, you could become victim of bureaucratic activities. As reported in the Telegraph Money section in February this year, a couple who had lived together since the beginning of the Second World War ( 65 years of togetherness) found that when the husband had to go into a care home, his wife was refused permission to move in with him. Enforced divorce by the Welfare state? Luckily the couple’s family rallied to their rescue, and Gloucester County Council relented and the couple are now reunited. What is the common theme in this reassurance that control of our twilight years will not be taken out of our hands by some faceless bureaucrat? Financial insecurity of course. In an attempt to overcome this uncertainty, many people are turning back to one of the bedrocks of financial security – property. But to many ‘average’ people, the thought of investing in property is seen as a privilege that only the very rich – and therefore those totally unaffected by the pension crisis – can afford to indulge in. However, many of these folk are already into property investment, and don’t yet realise it. One thing most of us are brought up to believe is that we should, as soon as we are able, get a foot on the property ladder and buy our own house. But then it all goes a bit pear-shaped…. Most of us live in this house we have bought, usually with a really low cost, long term mortgage, and we then have this urgent desire to pay off the mortgage as quickly as we can, so when we retire, we can live rent-free in our own property. That is what we are taught to do in school, by our parents, by society in general. Very commendable – but what about our standard of living on retirement? Or our choice of care homes when the inevitable happens? We may have a nice house to live in, but if all of a sudden, we are only getting a fraction of our usual income, due to retirement or long term illness, what happens to the nice car, the good holidays, the freedom to go and see all the family when we want to? Over the lifetime of the mortgage the average property - wherever it is situated, has been increasing in value by around 8% every year. With the average price of a house in the UK now at ?150,000, that represents a growth of around ?12,000 every year. After 10 years, that will amount to some ?120,000 (about $205,000 to our US cousins), so you could have at your disposal a lot of this money by refinancing your house. With the average deposit needed to buy another house as an investment in the UK being around 15%, and the average UK home costing ?150,000, another house would require you to raise around ?22,500 deposit, so in theory, you could go out and buy and 5 more houses using the equity in your existing house, and each house growing in equity by 8% (?12,000 each per year), you would see your net worth grow by around ?60,000 every year! That’s all good and dandy, but now you have 5 extra mortgages of around ?127,000 each, each one costing around ?550 a month to service. This is what most people find is still the most daunting, and even terrifying prospect, of investing in property. H The Curve Drawdown - A Sensitive Aspect of Stock Trading nd unless you have money or very vociferous friends and relatives, you could become victim of bureaucratic activities. As reported in the Telegraph Money section in February this year, a couple who had lived together since the beginning of the Second World War ( 65 years of togetherness) found that when the husband had to go into a care home, his wife was refused permission to move in with him. Enforced divorce by the Welfare state? Luckily the couple’s family rallied to their rescue, and Gloucester County Council relented and the couple are now reunited.If you are a new player on the stock market, you should know that things aren’t always nice and shiny when it comes to stock trading. There are downsides and upsides as in any other trading or investing process and you have to be prepared to cope with the negative aspects. The drawdown is the worse thing a stock trader may experience along the years. You should know that a peak in a share’s price is always followed by a going down to the bottom period. But don’t panic, this negative impact is also followed by an ascending trend, so your shares will be going up again.Experienced systems trad What is the common theme in this reassurance that control of our twilight years will not be taken out of our hands by some faceless bureaucrat? Financial insecurity of course. In an attempt to overcome this uncertainty, many people are turning back to one of the bedrocks of financial security – property. But to many ‘average’ people, the thought of investing in property is seen as a privilege that only the very rich – and therefore those totally unaffected by the pension crisis – can afford to indulge in. However, many of these folk are already into property investment, and don’t yet realise it. One thing most of us are brought up to believe is that we should, as soon as we are able, get a foot on the property ladder and buy our own house. But then it all goes a bit pear-shaped…. Most of us live in this house we have bought, usually with a really low cost, long term mortgage, and we then have this urgent desire to pay off the mortgage as quickly as we can, so when we retire, we can live rent-free in our own property. That is what we are taught to do in school, by our parents, by society in general. Very commendable – but what about our standard of living on retirement? Or our choice of care homes when the inevitable happens? We may have a nice house to live in, but if all of a sudden, we are only getting a fraction of our usual income, due to retirement or long term illness, what happens to the nice car, the good holidays, the freedom to go and see all the family when we want to? Over the lifetime of the mortgage the average property - wherever it is situated, has been increasing in value by around 8% every year. With the average price of a house in the UK now at ?150,000, that represents a growth of around ?12,000 every year. After 10 years, that will amount to some ?120,000 (about $205,000 to our US cousins), so you could have at your disposal a lot of this money by refinancing your house. With the average deposit needed to buy another house as an investment in the UK being around 15%, and the average UK home costing ?150,000, another house would require you to raise around ?22,500 deposit, so in theory, you could go out and buy and 5 more houses using the equity in your existing house, and each house growing in equity by 8% (?12,000 each per year), you would see your net worth grow by around ?60,000 every year! That’s all good and dandy, but now you have 5 extra mortgages of around ?127,000 each, each one costing around ?550 a month to service. This is what most people find is still the most daunting, and even terrifying prospect, of investing in property. H Why Be An Internet Marketer le are turning back to one of the bedrocks of financial security – property.Have you ever thought about being an Internet marketer? Have you ever thought about leaving your nine-to-five job and doing something on your own? Each day of our lives we need to make decisions. Some decisions are easier than others, but we still have to make decisions.When you thought about leaving your job, did you think about what it would take to leave your job? Have you sat down and tried to figure out how much money you would need to make? When you really think about it, it might seem to be a little scary. When you work a full time job you feel like you have some security. But to many ‘average’ people, the thought of investing in property is seen as a privilege that only the very rich – and therefore those totally unaffected by the pension crisis – can afford to indulge in. However, many of these folk are already into property investment, and don’t yet realise it. One thing most of us are brought up to believe is that we should, as soon as we are able, get a foot on the property ladder and buy our own house. But then it all goes a bit pear-shaped…. Most of us live in this house we have bought, usually with a really low cost, long term mortgage, and we then have this urgent desire to pay off the mortgage as quickly as we can, so when we retire, we can live rent-free in our own property. That is what we are taught to do in school, by our parents, by society in general. Very commendable – but what about our standard of living on retirement? Or our choice of care homes when the inevitable happens? We may have a nice house to live in, but if all of a sudden, we are only getting a fraction of our usual income, due to retirement or long term illness, what happens to the nice car, the good holidays, the freedom to go and see all the family when we want to? Over the lifetime of the mortgage the average property - wherever it is situated, has been increasing in value by around 8% every year. With the average price of a house in the UK now at ?150,000, that represents a growth of around ?12,000 every year. After 10 years, that will amount to some ?120,000 (about $205,000 to our US cousins), so you could have at your disposal a lot of this money by refinancing your house. With the average deposit needed to buy another house as an investment in the UK being around 15%, and the average UK home costing ?150,000, another house would require you to raise around ?22,500 deposit, so in theory, you could go out and buy and 5 more houses using the equity in your existing house, and each house growing in equity by 8% (?12,000 each per year), you would see your net worth grow by around ?60,000 every year! That’s all good and dandy, but now you have 5 extra mortgages of around ?127,000 each, each one costing around ?550 a month to service. This is what most people find is still the most daunting, and even terrifying prospect, of investing in property. H Internet Marketing Gurus: Experts or Evangelists? own property. That is what we are taught to do in school, by our parents, by society in general.Do Internet marketing gurus sometimes eerily remind you of Jim and Tammy Faye?When I first started exploring ways in which to advertise my Virtual Assistant business over the Internet, I was baffled and overwhelmed.Buzzwords and terms like “SEO” and “Keywords” flew over my head faster than a speeding bullet. I really wasn’t getting it. My web site also wasn’t getting it, at least not in terms of the traffic I had expected and hoped for.I decided to do some further research into marketing tips and was horrified when my Google search engine turned up 168,000,000 (yes, that’s 168 Very commendable – but what about our standard of living on retirement? Or our choice of care homes when the inevitable happens? We may have a nice house to live in, but if all of a sudden, we are only getting a fraction of our usual income, due to retirement or long term illness, what happens to the nice car, the good holidays, the freedom to go and see all the family when we want to? Over the lifetime of the mortgage the average property - wherever it is situated, has been increasing in value by around 8% every year. With the average price of a house in the UK now at ?150,000, that represents a growth of around ?12,000 every year. After 10 years, that will amount to some ?120,000 (about $205,000 to our US cousins), so you could have at your disposal a lot of this money by refinancing your house. With the average deposit needed to buy another house as an investment in the UK being around 15%, and the average UK home costing ?150,000, another house would require you to raise around ?22,500 deposit, so in theory, you could go out and buy and 5 more houses using the equity in your existing house, and each house growing in equity by 8% (?12,000 each per year), you would see your net worth grow by around ?60,000 every year! That’s all good and dandy, but now you have 5 extra mortgages of around ?127,000 each, each one costing around ?550 a month to service. This is what most people find is still the most daunting, and even terrifying prospect, of investing in property. H Improving Corporate Culture 05,000 to our US cousins), so you could have at your disposal a lot of this money by refinancing your house.I believe that most organizations are miserable places to work. They are Corporate Cubeworlds. And no one is to blame. Companies have inherited their corporate culture from the Industrial Age and it just don't work anymore. People are unhappy and Corporate Cubeworlds are much less profitable than they could be.Before I go further, let me identify what I mean by the Corporate Cubeworld.Key Attributes of the Corporate Cubeworld:1. Work is a worker's primary responsibility in life and comes above family and personal concerns (even health) 2. If a woman takes time off to rais With the average deposit needed to buy another house as an investment in the UK being around 15%, and the average UK home costing ?150,000, another house would require you to raise around ?22,500 deposit, so in theory, you could go out and buy and 5 more houses using the equity in your existing house, and each house growing in equity by 8% (?12,000 each per year), you would see your net worth grow by around ?60,000 every year! That’s all good and dandy, but now you have 5 extra mortgages of around ?127,000 each, each one costing around ?550 a month to service. This is what most people find is still the most daunting, and even terrifying prospect, of investing in property. However, there are organisations around who specialise in locating property both in the UK and in places such as Spain where properties can be brought for very low amounts of money down, and for the uninitiated, full rental guarantees for up to 10 years can be provided in some cases. OK, there the trade off is that there would be little or no rental income, but the mortgage would be paid with no worries, and the capital growth after 5, 10, or more years would provide a very tidy capital nest egg indeed. But – and there is always a ‘But’ – where there is money to be made, sharks tend to circle, and before anybody rushes out and starts to buy low money down property, they should seek sound financial advice from an independent financial advisor. Copyright 2006 Geoff Morris
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