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Casual Articles - 6 Key Points to Evaluate Online Lenders
President of Ensign Energy Services Cashes in On $4.5 million in Stock Options online and in the real world of course.Just after releasing year-end financial results, the President of Ensign Energy Services, Selby Porter, excersized and then sold 136,000 stock option for a reported profit of $4.5 million dollars.As an investor in Ensign Energy Services or a potential investor in Ensign Energy Services this is a very interesting issue as if the President felt that the company could improve financial results in the near future then he probably would have not liquidated his interest in the Company.Insider trades are a crucial measure of how an oil and gas stock may perform in the future as insiders possess knowledge of a oil and gas stock that we as investors are not privy to. In the oil and gas industry mergers and acquisitions play a huge role in the markets perception of how an oil and gas stock will perform and insiders have knowledge of whether potential transactions are on the table. Insiders include Board of Director members, Chief Financial Officers, Chief Execu 4. The Short Form The Short form is a term used to describe the basic application that you initially fill out, when seeking a loan from a lender or institution. a) Is it short indeed? Does it ask you for basic information, relevant information, and is it presented in a simple and concise fashion, perhaps no longer then 1 to 2 pages? b) Is the short form organized and appropriate? Does it make sense, is it simple to fill out, and is it easy to understand, and appropriate for an initial application? c) Consider this form as an introduction to your lenders style. If the form is simple, concise, and easy to fill out, this may tell you a lot about the lender. On the other hand, if the form is complex, difficult, and requesting a little more information than your comfortable providing, this too might spell out a word of caution, and provide important information about your prospective lender. 5. Communication Never underestimate the importance of communication Home Business Scams The internet is teeming with lenders who are vying for your business. It seems like everyone wants to loan you money. You are truly in the driver’s seat by going online for your mortgage, refinance, and consolidation needs. But how do you select a lender? How do you choose the right institution? How do you know who to trust?I am not a business major by any means, but I have taken an interest in business, particularly home businesses, since I was in middle school. Even though I have had an interest in business for quite some time, I chose not to continue my college studies within the realm of business as a business major, but rather within science. I currently attend Kansas State University and I am an animal science major. Yet, even with giving my preference to science, I still continue my research of entrepreneurship, businesses, and home based businesses.Everyday, I see ads over the internet offering ways to make thousands of dollars, but they turn out to be scams. On average, I would say that for every legitimate work from home or home business opportunity there are fifty or more scams. The population of those wanting to work from home seems to be growing everyday and the population for scams, particularly internet scams, seems to be growing just as fast if not faster. L In this brief article, we will cover the 6 simple, practical, and essential key points that we feel you should evaluate, when exploring online lenders: Feel free to print this out, and use it as a free guide, while pointing and clicking your way to success: 1. Privacy 2. Design 3. Popularity and Reputation 4. The Short Form 5. Communication 6. Points, Fees, Terms and Rates 1. Privacy: In the modern world of ecommerce, it is essential that all respectable businesses honor your right to privacy: a) Check for a posted PRIVACY POLICY, prominently displayed on the homepage of your prospective lenders site. Read it. Does it make sense to you? Does it address how they will use your email address, your name, and your private information? b) Do they ask for things that may seem unreasonable at this stage of the game? Be wary of requests for credit card numbers, social security numbers, and similar information that may not be appropriate early on, for example, when you are filling out the initial, short form. Naturally, your lender will need that information down the road, but certainly not right out of the gate, when initiating the first steps towards a relationship with you. c) Is the lender a member of a posted, third party, privacy program? For example, TRUSTe is one such independent company that will designate a member site. You can look for their emblem, and similar third-party companies. This is not a requirement for securing a good privacy policy; however, it is worth noting. 2. Design: The storefront of the online world, is the website. Therefore, it is important that you examine the sites design, and evaluate it, much the same way that you evaluate an office or store as you walk in the front door. Let me give you a couple things to consider: a) Is it a fast-loading site, or are you waiting forever? b) Is it straightforward or elusive? Can you glean important, direct information from the homepage, or does the site appear to coax you in deeper? c) Are you inundated with pop-ups, pop-unders, and other in-your-face ads, or does the site seem helpful? Remember, how the lender presents themselves online, is a reflection of their business philosophy, and it tells you a lot about what kind of lender they may be, after you sign on the bottom line. 3. Popularity and Reputation I’m sure you learned in high-school, that popularity and reputation aren’t everything. However, just like in the real world, it is important to gather information on these two key points, and use them as a gauge. a) By typing your lenders URL into http://www.alexa.com, you will be able to ascertain how popular your lenders site is, because Alexa will tell you how much visitor traffic the site gets. This isn’t a science, and popularity isn’t everything. For example, an extremely popular website could treat you like a number, and a relatively new lender or smaller institution, might not be frequently visited, but still be a perfectly viable choice. So, review popularity alongside rock-solid common sense. b) Say, why not check out your prospective lenders reputation, by going to the online Better Business Bureau, http://bbbonline.com and checking the Reliability Report? This report will provide you with corporate information (such as name, address, phone number), BBB membership information, whether or not the lender is a participant of the “BBB Online” program, along with a complaint history, and each complaints final resolution. c) These aren’t the only methods for gauging popularity and reputation, of course. You can talk to people, go to chatrooms, conduct search-engine research, etc. Again, popularity and reputation aren’t everything, but keep them in mind while exploring lenders, both online and in the real world of course. 4. The Short Form The Short form is a term used to describe the basic application that you initially fill out, when seeking a loan from a lender or institution. a) Is it short indeed? Does it ask you for basic information, relevant information, and is it presented in a simple and concise fashion, perhaps no longer then 1 to 2 pages? b) Is the short form organized and appropriate? Does it make sense, is it simple to fill out, and is it easy to understand, and appropriate for an initial application? c) Consider this form as an introduction to your lenders style. If the form is simple, concise, and easy to fill out, this may tell you a lot about the lender. On the other hand, if the form is complex, difficult, and requesting a little more information than your comfortable providing, this too might spell out a word of caution, and provide important information about your prospective lender. 5. Communication Never underestimate the importance of communication EBay Get Rich it make sense to you? Does it address how they will use your email address, your name, and your private information?EBay get rich is a term you find in many places in the internet. On reading this phrase, many people have set about buying and selling things on eBay with the intention of making quick money. However, it should be known that though it is possible to make money on eBay, it is not a get rich quick scheme. There is a lot of patience to become eBay get rich branded material.For eBay get rich to work out with you, you have to have lots of commitment in eBay. There are many scammers who claim that it is possible to use eBay get rich to make money on eBay. Then there are the scam artists who claim that they have a list of wholesalers and drop shippers who can make eBay get rich a reality. However, things are not that simple.Lots of efforts have to be put on your part for eBay get rich. You have to spend lots of time researching on the best products to sell on eBay, the right rates you can quote for the products and if you are buying on eBay, you have to know w b) Do they ask for things that may seem unreasonable at this stage of the game? Be wary of requests for credit card numbers, social security numbers, and similar information that may not be appropriate early on, for example, when you are filling out the initial, short form. Naturally, your lender will need that information down the road, but certainly not right out of the gate, when initiating the first steps towards a relationship with you. c) Is the lender a member of a posted, third party, privacy program? For example, TRUSTe is one such independent company that will designate a member site. You can look for their emblem, and similar third-party companies. This is not a requirement for securing a good privacy policy; however, it is worth noting. 2. Design: The storefront of the online world, is the website. Therefore, it is important that you examine the sites design, and evaluate it, much the same way that you evaluate an office or store as you walk in the front door. Let me give you a couple things to consider: a) Is it a fast-loading site, or are you waiting forever? b) Is it straightforward or elusive? Can you glean important, direct information from the homepage, or does the site appear to coax you in deeper? c) Are you inundated with pop-ups, pop-unders, and other in-your-face ads, or does the site seem helpful? Remember, how the lender presents themselves online, is a reflection of their business philosophy, and it tells you a lot about what kind of lender they may be, after you sign on the bottom line. 3. Popularity and Reputation I’m sure you learned in high-school, that popularity and reputation aren’t everything. However, just like in the real world, it is important to gather information on these two key points, and use them as a gauge. a) By typing your lenders URL into http://www.alexa.com, you will be able to ascertain how popular your lenders site is, because Alexa will tell you how much visitor traffic the site gets. This isn’t a science, and popularity isn’t everything. For example, an extremely popular website could treat you like a number, and a relatively new lender or smaller institution, might not be frequently visited, but still be a perfectly viable choice. So, review popularity alongside rock-solid common sense. b) Say, why not check out your prospective lenders reputation, by going to the online Better Business Bureau, http://bbbonline.com and checking the Reliability Report? This report will provide you with corporate information (such as name, address, phone number), BBB membership information, whether or not the lender is a participant of the “BBB Online” program, along with a complaint history, and each complaints final resolution. c) These aren’t the only methods for gauging popularity and reputation, of course. You can talk to people, go to chatrooms, conduct search-engine research, etc. Again, popularity and reputation aren’t everything, but keep them in mind while exploring lenders, both online and in the real world of course. 4. The Short Form The Short form is a term used to describe the basic application that you initially fill out, when seeking a loan from a lender or institution. a) Is it short indeed? Does it ask you for basic information, relevant information, and is it presented in a simple and concise fashion, perhaps no longer then 1 to 2 pages? b) Is the short form organized and appropriate? Does it make sense, is it simple to fill out, and is it easy to understand, and appropriate for an initial application? c) Consider this form as an introduction to your lenders style. If the form is simple, concise, and easy to fill out, this may tell you a lot about the lender. On the other hand, if the form is complex, difficult, and requesting a little more information than your comfortable providing, this too might spell out a word of caution, and provide important information about your prospective lender. 5. Communication Never underestimate the importance of communication Configuration Management ay that you evaluate an office or store as you walk in the front door. Let me give you a couple things to consider:The primary advantage to formal configuration management is a resulting project with good change management, as evidenced through changes that are properly identified, structured, linked and owned. Configuration management provides the documentation explaining why the project changes occurred, who approved the changes, and who the assigned change owner is.The PMBOK says that the Project Manager is responsible for the following change management responsibilities: 1. Recognizing when a change has occurred. 2. Filtering out changes from inappropriate people. 3. Ensuring that change is beneficial. 4. Managing the changes as they occur.Configuration management is the system for performing these responsibilities as well as providing product, system and software version control.The primary disadvantage to configuration management is that it takes time, cost money, and can bring with it a level of formality that some people view as un a) Is it a fast-loading site, or are you waiting forever? b) Is it straightforward or elusive? Can you glean important, direct information from the homepage, or does the site appear to coax you in deeper? c) Are you inundated with pop-ups, pop-unders, and other in-your-face ads, or does the site seem helpful? Remember, how the lender presents themselves online, is a reflection of their business philosophy, and it tells you a lot about what kind of lender they may be, after you sign on the bottom line. 3. Popularity and Reputation I’m sure you learned in high-school, that popularity and reputation aren’t everything. However, just like in the real world, it is important to gather information on these two key points, and use them as a gauge. a) By typing your lenders URL into http://www.alexa.com, you will be able to ascertain how popular your lenders site is, because Alexa will tell you how much visitor traffic the site gets. This isn’t a science, and popularity isn’t everything. For example, an extremely popular website could treat you like a number, and a relatively new lender or smaller institution, might not be frequently visited, but still be a perfectly viable choice. So, review popularity alongside rock-solid common sense. b) Say, why not check out your prospective lenders reputation, by going to the online Better Business Bureau, http://bbbonline.com and checking the Reliability Report? This report will provide you with corporate information (such as name, address, phone number), BBB membership information, whether or not the lender is a participant of the “BBB Online” program, along with a complaint history, and each complaints final resolution. c) These aren’t the only methods for gauging popularity and reputation, of course. You can talk to people, go to chatrooms, conduct search-engine research, etc. Again, popularity and reputation aren’t everything, but keep them in mind while exploring lenders, both online and in the real world of course. 4. The Short Form The Short form is a term used to describe the basic application that you initially fill out, when seeking a loan from a lender or institution. a) Is it short indeed? Does it ask you for basic information, relevant information, and is it presented in a simple and concise fashion, perhaps no longer then 1 to 2 pages? b) Is the short form organized and appropriate? Does it make sense, is it simple to fill out, and is it easy to understand, and appropriate for an initial application? c) Consider this form as an introduction to your lenders style. If the form is simple, concise, and easy to fill out, this may tell you a lot about the lender. On the other hand, if the form is complex, difficult, and requesting a little more information than your comfortable providing, this too might spell out a word of caution, and provide important information about your prospective lender. 5. Communication Never underestimate the importance of communication Business Strategy – How Clear Decision Roles Enhance Organizational Performance you how much visitor traffic the site gets. This isn’t a science, and popularity isn’t everything. For example, an extremely popular website could treat you like a number, and a relatively new lender or smaller institution, might not be frequently visited, but still be a perfectly viable choice. So, review popularity alongside rock-solid common sense.Decisions are the coin of the realm in business. Every success, every mishap, every opportunity seized or missed is the result of a decision that someone made or failed to make. At many companies, decisions routinely get stuck inside the organization like loose change. But it's more than loose change that's at stake, of course; it's the performance of the entire organization. Never mind what industry you're in, how big and well known your company may be, or how clever your strategy is. If you can't make the right decisions quickly and effectively, and execute those decisions consistently, your business will lose ground.Indeed, making good decisions and making them happen quickly are the hallmarks of high-performing organizations. When we surveyed executives at 350 global companies about their organizational effectiveness, only 15% said that they have an organization that helps the business outperform competitors. What sets those top performers apart is b) Say, why not check out your prospective lenders reputation, by going to the online Better Business Bureau, http://bbbonline.com and checking the Reliability Report? This report will provide you with corporate information (such as name, address, phone number), BBB membership information, whether or not the lender is a participant of the “BBB Online” program, along with a complaint history, and each complaints final resolution. c) These aren’t the only methods for gauging popularity and reputation, of course. You can talk to people, go to chatrooms, conduct search-engine research, etc. Again, popularity and reputation aren’t everything, but keep them in mind while exploring lenders, both online and in the real world of course. 4. The Short Form The Short form is a term used to describe the basic application that you initially fill out, when seeking a loan from a lender or institution. a) Is it short indeed? Does it ask you for basic information, relevant information, and is it presented in a simple and concise fashion, perhaps no longer then 1 to 2 pages? b) Is the short form organized and appropriate? Does it make sense, is it simple to fill out, and is it easy to understand, and appropriate for an initial application? c) Consider this form as an introduction to your lenders style. If the form is simple, concise, and easy to fill out, this may tell you a lot about the lender. On the other hand, if the form is complex, difficult, and requesting a little more information than your comfortable providing, this too might spell out a word of caution, and provide important information about your prospective lender. 5. Communication Never underestimate the importance of communication Affiliate Marketing Gimmick - Do You Know How To Take The Pressure Off Your Potential Visitors? online and in the real world of course.A very good affiliate marketing gimmick that you can use to continually earn a high affiliate revenue is to take the pressure off your prospective visitors that visit your affiliate website(s). What this simply means, is that you should guarantee the products that you are promoting. Do you know how you can guarantee the products that you are promoting? Read on to discover how you guarantee the products that you are promoting.Every successful affiliate has this affiliate marketing gimmick in mind that every product that he or she promotes, must always be guaranteed. This is a secret that pulls in high affiliate sales per month.Here is how to guarantee the product(s) that you are promoting and pull in lots of affiliate sales:Use the guarantee that is on the merchant's website. Most merchants (the owner of the product(s) that you are promoting) have guarantees on their sales page(s). Use the guarantee on the merchant's website, at the closing para 4. The Short Form The Short form is a term used to describe the basic application that you initially fill out, when seeking a loan from a lender or institution. a) Is it short indeed? Does it ask you for basic information, relevant information, and is it presented in a simple and concise fashion, perhaps no longer then 1 to 2 pages? b) Is the short form organized and appropriate? Does it make sense, is it simple to fill out, and is it easy to understand, and appropriate for an initial application? c) Consider this form as an introduction to your lenders style. If the form is simple, concise, and easy to fill out, this may tell you a lot about the lender. On the other hand, if the form is complex, difficult, and requesting a little more information than your comfortable providing, this too might spell out a word of caution, and provide important information about your prospective lender. 5. Communication Never underestimate the importance of communication. How the lender chooses to communicate with you from the get go, might indicate choices the lender will make later on in the process. a) Does the lender have an “about us” page, and do they provide meaningful information about their business, such as how long they’ve been around, where they are located, their phone number, their physical address, and perhaps even their corporate structure? Or, are they a ghost in the machine, providing little to no information about themselves? b) You will ultimately be speaking with a live person on the phone. How do they strike you? Are they pleasant, cordial, and polite? Are they low-key, helpful, and respectful? Or, do you see signs of pushiness, or over marketing? c) Never make an immediate decision. Talk to 3 or 4 lenders, and then give yourself a pause to reflect on who provided the best deal, and, who might be the easiest and most appropriate to work with. 6. Points, Fees, Terms and Rates a) Obtain several offers from competing lenders, and compare the nuts and bolts. b) Who offers you the best savings? Who seems just too low to believe? Who is way too high to consider? c) Check out the current interest rates, and make some market comparisons. Our site has a free RateWatch updated frequently throughout the day, or, you can easily find this information at any search engine or at other reputable websites online. We’ve enjoyed providing this information to you, and we wish you the best of luck in your pursuits. Remember to always seek out good advice from those you trust, and never turn your back on your own common sense. Publisher’s Directions: This article may be freely distributed so long as the copyright, author’s information, disclaimer, and an active link (where possible) are included. Disclaimer: Statements and opinions expressed in the articles, reviews and other materials herein are those of the authors. While every care has been taken in the compilation of this information and every attempt made to present up-to-date and accurate information, we cannot guarantee that inaccuracies will not occur. The author will not be held responsible for any claim, loss, damage or inconvenience caused as a result of any information within these pages or any information accessed through this site.
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