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    Blogging and Article Marketing - Untapped Home Business Resources
    The most valuable tools to promote your home business are free. Yes, they are completely, totally free. Blogging and article marketing are the most important things you can do for your online business opportunity. You can use blogging and article marketing to promote any niche that you want.You can sign up for a free blog online and start posting entries. This blog will then have its own address where people will be able to view the information
    ve Lombel's job. They have borrowed from their anticipated equity and sale to build a new house.”

    The Lombel’s Maryland property was hundreds of miles away and eating up thousands of dollars a month. “Their agent has held 21 open houses. They've cut their asking price three times and now are offering to pay mortgage loan points to help a buy

    Handling Invoices and Payments in A Medical Billing Business
    When you start a medical billing service you need to be prepared not to receive a payment for at least thirty to forty-five days. It would be nice if all of your clients paid you within ten days but this is just not realistic. The majority of your clients may not be able to pay you until they are paid themselves. Usually this is what happens with smaller clients. However, with larger clients if only a few of their patients pay, you will still get paid beca
    Home sellers are having a difficult time enduring any success in this buyer’s market. Even expecting the worst is proven to be not enough as some sellers are realizing the market is a lot staler than they thought.

    Every seller by now has become aware they stubbornness will not be rewarded, at least not until the housing market completes a full rebound, which will not happen for at least a couple more years.

    The key to surviving the slumping market for a seller is anticipation; really anticipate the worst case scenario because there is a good chance it will come true.

    With that being said, do not try and sell unless you have to. But many people do have to, either for job relocation, a growing family or other financially important reasons. The article, “Vacant houses hold empty promise for sellers,” written by Lorraine Mirabella originally published in the Baltimore Sun and later reprinted in the February 8, 2007 edition of the Chicago Tribune, reports the depressing reality many home sellers are being forced to accept. “Steve and Debbie Lombel put their four-bedroom Colonial on the market in May, figuring it could take maybe four months to sell a house in the mid-$800,000 range.” “But almost nine months later, the now-empty house still is sitting on the market. The couple and their children have since relocated to temporary quarters in South Carolina for Steve Lombel's job. They have borrowed from their anticipated equity and sale to build a new house.”

    The Lombel’s Maryland property was hundreds of miles away and eating up thousands of dollars a month. “Their agent has held 21 open houses. They've cut their asking price three times and now are offering to pay mortgage loan points to help a buye

    Avoid e-mail Overload and Still Keep Everyone Informed
    Have you ever come back from vacation, or from a business trip of more than a few days, to find an overstuffed e-mailbox containing a blow-by-blow account of everything that happened while you were away? E-mail overload at its worst!You know the kind of thing I mean: long e-mail threads with contributions from everyone in the department, each copying everyone else and many leading off into side threads and involving even more people. You have to rea
    l rebound, which will not happen for at least a couple more years.

    The key to surviving the slumping market for a seller is anticipation; really anticipate the worst case scenario because there is a good chance it will come true.

    With that being said, do not try and sell unless you have to. But many people do have to, either for job relocation, a growing family or other financially important reasons. The article, “Vacant houses hold empty promise for sellers,” written by Lorraine Mirabella originally published in the Baltimore Sun and later reprinted in the February 8, 2007 edition of the Chicago Tribune, reports the depressing reality many home sellers are being forced to accept. “Steve and Debbie Lombel put their four-bedroom Colonial on the market in May, figuring it could take maybe four months to sell a house in the mid-$800,000 range.” “But almost nine months later, the now-empty house still is sitting on the market. The couple and their children have since relocated to temporary quarters in South Carolina for Steve Lombel's job. They have borrowed from their anticipated equity and sale to build a new house.”

    The Lombel’s Maryland property was hundreds of miles away and eating up thousands of dollars a month. “Their agent has held 21 open houses. They've cut their asking price three times and now are offering to pay mortgage loan points to help a buy

    Feeding the Small Business Ecosystem
    Forgive what may seem like a bit of a theoretical argument today. Sometimes you have to step back and get a sense of the biggest picture in order to understand how all the simple, practical parts relate.Small business is often held together with sweat, creativity and a heavy use of duct tape. (In case you ever wondered where I came up with the term Duct Tape Marketing.) That's the outer reality of small business. The inner reality, the part that mos
    ocation, a growing family or other financially important reasons. The article, “Vacant houses hold empty promise for sellers,” written by Lorraine Mirabella originally published in the Baltimore Sun and later reprinted in the February 8, 2007 edition of the Chicago Tribune, reports the depressing reality many home sellers are being forced to accept. “Steve and Debbie Lombel put their four-bedroom Colonial on the market in May, figuring it could take maybe four months to sell a house in the mid-$800,000 range.” “But almost nine months later, the now-empty house still is sitting on the market. The couple and their children have since relocated to temporary quarters in South Carolina for Steve Lombel's job. They have borrowed from their anticipated equity and sale to build a new house.”

    The Lombel’s Maryland property was hundreds of miles away and eating up thousands of dollars a month. “Their agent has held 21 open houses. They've cut their asking price three times and now are offering to pay mortgage loan points to help a buy

    Credit Card Fraud Prevention - Err on the Side of Caution
    There is a small, yet palpable inherent risk in accepting credit cards. Aside from chargebacks, there always exists a possibility that a given credit card is stolen or presented without any authorization to use from the card holder. Even veteran merchants, processing for decades, can recount incidents where they have sent out product, subsequently learning that they have been victimized by credit card fraud.One day, I received a phone call from one
    t. “Steve and Debbie Lombel put their four-bedroom Colonial on the market in May, figuring it could take maybe four months to sell a house in the mid-$800,000 range.” “But almost nine months later, the now-empty house still is sitting on the market. The couple and their children have since relocated to temporary quarters in South Carolina for Steve Lombel's job. They have borrowed from their anticipated equity and sale to build a new house.”

    The Lombel’s Maryland property was hundreds of miles away and eating up thousands of dollars a month. “Their agent has held 21 open houses. They've cut their asking price three times and now are offering to pay mortgage loan points to help a buy

    Self Fullerton Mold Remediation Versus Professional Fullerton Mold Remediation
    Do you have mold in your home? If so, there is a good chance that you know that you do, as many molds can be seen by the naked eye. If you have mold in your home, it may be dangerous. That is why it is important that you get it taken care of. If you live in or around the Fullerton area, that process may be referred to as Fullerton mold remediation.When it comes to Fullerton mold remediation, you will have two different options. One of those opti
    ve Lombel's job. They have borrowed from their anticipated equity and sale to build a new house.”

    The Lombel’s Maryland property was hundreds of miles away and eating up thousands of dollars a month. “Their agent has held 21 open houses. They've cut their asking price three times and now are offering to pay mortgage loan points to help a buyer get lower interest rates.”

    Life after the housing boom (2001 to 2005) has not been very good to the average home seller. As the first month of 2007 has ended, many sellers were anticipating positive news for the new year. Many economical forecasts assured than this year would be the rebounding one and increasing sales would make the sellers life much easier. Well, the forecasts have been wrong. The amount of inventory listed on the market continues to soar, as well as the number of them that are vacant.

    “Some with little or no equity in their homes face a tough choice of accepting a loss or taking a risk that eventually a buyer will meet their price. Others are straining to pay two mortgages or are renting while they try to sell their old home. Not to mention, homeowners who have relocated sometimes hundreds of miles away [like the Lombels] find it a struggle to maintain a home that sits empty.”

    “The number of vacant homes for sale nationally surged 34 percent to 2.1 million at the end of 2006, compared to a year earlier, according to the Census Bureau.”

    Once a seller is forced to vacate their home for sale, desperation sets in. And even as these sellers continue to lower their asking price and offer incentives such as paying for closing costs and the first six months of the mortgage, buyers are still waiting, waiting, waiting. They know sellers have t

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