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Other Added - 9 Home Buyer Traps and How to Avoid Them
Flexible Spending Accounts- A Great Employee Benefit rdstick with which to measure every home you look at.If you are lucky enough to work for a company that offers Flexible Spending Accounts, be sure to take advantage of this great benefit that will put more money back into your pocket. If you or your dependents have any medical or dental expenses not covered under your health insurance during the year, you can use this benefit to pay for them with pre-tax dollars. Simply figure the amount of out-of-pocket medical expenses you will have for the year, sign up for your company’s FSA by the deadline, save your receipts and submit them for reimbursement as you incur them.This will save you 3. Unclear Title Make sure very early on in the negotiation that you will own your new home free and clear by having a title search completed. The last thing you want to discover when you're in the back stretch of a transaction is that there are encumbrances on the property such as tax liens, undisclosed owners, easements, leases or the like. 4. Inaccurate Survey As Becoming an eBay Seller - The First Steps No matter which way you look at it buying a home is a major investment. But for many homebuyers, it can be an even more expensive process than it needs to be because many fall prey to at least a few of the many common and costly mistakes which trap them into either:You've been lurking around eBay for a few months now. You might have even registered and perhaps bought the odd item. Good for you - you have at least taken steps in the right direction!So what now? You want to start selling and taking your share of the $40+ million that changes hands on eBay every day, but just don't know where to begin. You will find a lot of conflicting advice out there. Some advocate going straight into drop shipping, others say find a niche, but my advice is to take just a few steps at a time.Although you may be itching to go straight for the high p -paying too much for the home they want, or -losing their dream home to another buyer or, -(worse) buying the wrong home for their needs. A systemized approach to the home buying process can help you steer clear of these common traps, allowing you to not only cut costs, but also secure the home that's best for you. 9 Buyer Traps This important report discusses the 9 most common and costly of these homebuyer traps, how to identify them, and what you can do to avoid them: 1. Bidding Blind What price should you offer when you bid on a home? Is the seller's asking price too high, or does it represent a great deal. If you fail to research the market in order to understand what comparable homes are selling for, making your offer would be like bidding blind. Without this knowledge of market value, you could easily bid too much, or fail to make a competitive offer at all on an excellent value. 2. Buying the Wrong Home What are you looking for in a home? A simple enough question, but the answer can be quite complex. More than one buyer has been swept up in the emotion and excitement of the buying process only to find themselves the owner of a home that is either too big or too small. Maybe they're stuck with a longer than desired commute to work, or a dozen more fix-ups than they really want to deal with now that the excitement has died down. Take the time upfront to clearly define your wants and needs. Put it in writing and then use it as a yardstick with which to measure every home you look at. 3. Unclear Title Make sure very early on in the negotiation that you will own your new home free and clear by having a title search completed. The last thing you want to discover when you're in the back stretch of a transaction is that there are encumbrances on the property such as tax liens, undisclosed owners, easements, leases or the like. 4. Inaccurate Survey As 3D Rendering with a Transparent Background oach to the home buying process can help you steer clear of these common traps, allowing you to not only cut costs, but also secure the home that's best for you.As a graphic design I sometimes have to render an object with a transparent background. These images are usually placed in brochures, catalogs and/or advertisements. In Feburary, we were working on a project that required rendered objects instead of photos. The problem we were running into is not having smooth edges on our rendered images after clipping out the background. So, I came accross a technique that allows you to prep a 3D object for Photoshop background clipping. This technique will allow you to create a 3D object with a transparent background. To perform this technique you will 9 Buyer Traps This important report discusses the 9 most common and costly of these homebuyer traps, how to identify them, and what you can do to avoid them: 1. Bidding Blind What price should you offer when you bid on a home? Is the seller's asking price too high, or does it represent a great deal. If you fail to research the market in order to understand what comparable homes are selling for, making your offer would be like bidding blind. Without this knowledge of market value, you could easily bid too much, or fail to make a competitive offer at all on an excellent value. 2. Buying the Wrong Home What are you looking for in a home? A simple enough question, but the answer can be quite complex. More than one buyer has been swept up in the emotion and excitement of the buying process only to find themselves the owner of a home that is either too big or too small. Maybe they're stuck with a longer than desired commute to work, or a dozen more fix-ups than they really want to deal with now that the excitement has died down. Take the time upfront to clearly define your wants and needs. Put it in writing and then use it as a yardstick with which to measure every home you look at. 3. Unclear Title Make sure very early on in the negotiation that you will own your new home free and clear by having a title search completed. The last thing you want to discover when you're in the back stretch of a transaction is that there are encumbrances on the property such as tax liens, undisclosed owners, easements, leases or the like. 4. Inaccurate Survey As How To Market Your Internet Business For Free And Effectively igh, or does it represent a great deal. If you fail to research the market in order to understand what comparable homes are selling for, making your offer would be like bidding blind. Without this knowledge of market value, you could easily bid too much, or fail to make a competitive offer at all on an excellent value.I realized myself as an internet marketer that there are many people on paying big bucks to use tools to promote their business whether is it offline or online. Tools that can cost a range from US$10 to US$300 or more but ask yourself did you really make use of the tool or information that you have purchased?Most of the time, not many people actually apply what they bought and claim the information or tool they buy is useless or not workable for them. But actual fact is that they themselves did not apply the tool or information they purchase enough to actually see results from it. 2. Buying the Wrong Home What are you looking for in a home? A simple enough question, but the answer can be quite complex. More than one buyer has been swept up in the emotion and excitement of the buying process only to find themselves the owner of a home that is either too big or too small. Maybe they're stuck with a longer than desired commute to work, or a dozen more fix-ups than they really want to deal with now that the excitement has died down. Take the time upfront to clearly define your wants and needs. Put it in writing and then use it as a yardstick with which to measure every home you look at. 3. Unclear Title Make sure very early on in the negotiation that you will own your new home free and clear by having a title search completed. The last thing you want to discover when you're in the back stretch of a transaction is that there are encumbrances on the property such as tax liens, undisclosed owners, easements, leases or the like. 4. Inaccurate Survey As 9 Response-Producing Headlines And Why They Worked e complex. More than one buyer has been swept up in the emotion and excitement of the buying process only to find themselves the owner of a home that is either too big or too small. Maybe they're stuck with a longer than desired commute to work, or a dozen more fix-ups than they really want to deal with now that the excitement has died down. Take the time upfront to clearly define your wants and needs. Put it in writing and then use it as a yardstick with which to measure every home you look at.“The purpose of a headline is to pick out people you can interest…For the entire return from an ad depends on attracting the right sort of readers…The best of salesmanship has no chance whatever unless we get a hearing.” - From the timeless classic, Scientific Advertising, by legendary adman Claude HopkinsMake no mistake about it, as a copywriter or marketing professional your ability to write or identify compelling, attention-grabbing headlines that get prospects to read your ads…is one of the most valuable skills you can possess. Because the simple truth of the matter is th 3. Unclear Title Make sure very early on in the negotiation that you will own your new home free and clear by having a title search completed. The last thing you want to discover when you're in the back stretch of a transaction is that there are encumbrances on the property such as tax liens, undisclosed owners, easements, leases or the like. 4. Inaccurate Survey As Give Yourself an Instant Pay Raise of $200-$1,000/Mo Tomorrow! Courtesy of the IRS! rdstick with which to measure every home you look at.Most people have never heard of an Instant Pay Raise. They do not even know how much income tax they paid last year!How much tax did you pay last year? See! If you are like most people, you will say the amount of tax you paid on April 15. Others will say none, they got a refund!It is amazing that so many people are unconscious of the fact that taxes are their biggest expense. In most households, it totals more than housing, clothing and food.To figure out how much tax you really paid, look at your pay stub and multiply the total taxes taken out, federal, state, local a 3. Unclear Title Make sure very early on in the negotiation that you will own your new home free and clear by having a title search completed. The last thing you want to discover when you're in the back stretch of a transaction is that there are encumbrances on the property such as tax liens, undisclosed owners, easements, leases or the like. 4. Inaccurate Survey As part of your offer to purchase, make sure you request an updated property survey, which clearly marks your boundaries. If the survey is not current, you may find that there are structural changes that are not shown (e.g. additions to the house, a new swimming pool, a neighbor's new fence which is extending a boundary line, etc.). Be very clear on these issues. 5. Undisclosed Fix-ups Don't expect every seller to own up to every physical detail that will need to be attended to. Both you and the seller are out to maximize your investment. Ensure that you conduct a thorough inspection of the home early in the process. Consider hiring an independent inspector to objectively view the home inside and out, and make the final contract contingent upon this inspector's report. This inspector should be able to give you a report of any item that needs to be fixed with associated, approximate cost. 6. Not Getting Mortgage Pre-approval Pre-approval is fast, easy and free. When you have a pre-approved mortgage, you can shop for your home with a greater sense of freedom and security, knowing that the money will be there when you find the home of your dreams. 7. Contract Misses If a seller fails to comply to the letter of the contract by neglecting to attend to some repair issues, or changing the spirit of the agreement in some way, this could delay the final closing and settlement. Agree ahead of time on a dollar amount for an escrow fund to cover items that the seller fails to follow through on. Prepare a list of agreed issues, walk through them, and check them off one by one. 8. Hidden Costs Make sure you identify and uncover all costs - large and small -far enough ahead of time. When a transaction closes, you will sometime
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