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Will You Add? - Diminished Value - Your Insurance Company's Best Kept Secret
How to Sell Your Product Using Affiliate Marketing Part II ir shoddy job is often visible for all to see, helping decrease the price a potential buyer would willingly pay for a repaired automobile.We will therefore regard joint ventures as a different animal to affiliates, and exclude them from the topic of this article. You can either operate your own affiliate program, if you have the software to administer it, or have a third party such as Clickbank do it. Each has its specific advantages, though a program such as Click bank or Pay-Dot-Com is the better of the two for newcomers to affiliate marketing to promote their own products.Taking Clickbank as the example, you first have to register with them as a merchant. You then provide details about your product and yourself. You have to set up your Hoplink details, that affiliates use in their link to your sales page, the sales page URL that the Hoplink is linked to, the price of your product, the affiliate commission, methods of payment, and so on. You also have to provide the URL of your ‘Thank You’ page.Having done that, your product is put on Clickbank’s database of products, or ‘Marketplace’. Clickbank users can browse the Marketplace for products to sell, although you should offer your affiliate program on your own sales page and also within the product. This provid Insurance Related Diminished Value: Insurance related diminished value results when insurance company claims adjusters, either intentionally or unintentionally, omit needed repairs from an accident victim’s settlement. It may also occur when sufficient payment isn’t made to allow shops to perform repairs as a carmaker intended. As an example, poor-fitting aftermarket parts may cause insurance related diminished value when insurers specify their use instead of original equipment manufacturer’s (OEM) parts. Getting paid for diminished value When it comes to getting paid for diminished value, three misconceptions abound. First, many believe that a claim for diminished value is a claim separate and distinct from the one paying for actual physical damages like bent fenders and doors. This is not true. Rather, diminished value is an element of recoverable damage in the same claim that occurred at the same time, during the same event. An insurer that accepts liability and pays for any damage, must, where proof exists, pay for all the loss, except in cases where an exclusion in the policy exempts insurers from doing so. Second, many believe one mus The Best Way to Start Internet Marketing Diminished Value is the best-kept secret that your auto insurance company hopes you never learn. While the term, diminished value, may be a relatively new one to consumers, insurers are well aware of its existence, having paid claims to both insureds and claimants for more than eighty years.Ever since the Internet was invented there have been many attempts to re-invent it or at least to re-shape it, the majority of which have never amounted to anything more than perhaps a fad, more or less annoying. Quite a few of those attempts have been led by marketers: an unusually stubborn, arrogant, and largely retarded subspecies of the human kind.The idea of inexpensive ebooks has originated in the Internet marketing circles a long time ago, but quite recently it has been spelled out in a rather novel way by Jonathan Leger in his now famous ebook: 7 Dollar Secrets. It would be rather silly to maintain that there is anything original or secret behind the $7 price tag, no matter what some Internet marketers might want you to believe. What is, however, original is the idea of selling those ebooks. Every buyer of such an ebook can resell it to others. All he needs to do is use the same link he used to buy the ebook with his Paypal email address inserted in the link code. As simple as that! Brilliant in my opinion because this offers the simplest and the least expensive way for others to try their efforts in Internet marketing.How c What is Diminished Value? Diminished Value is the term given to the loss in market value a vehicle suffers as a result of an accident and repair. It is a loss based on the beliefs of most people, that once goods become damaged, they are never as valuable as they would be had they never suffered injury. Let’s say you are in the market to purchase a used car and run across two beautiful cars sitting side by side, both identical down to the last detail, offered for sale for $20,000 each. They are equipped the same, have equal mileage, and equivalent wear. The only exception, you are told, is that the car on the right has been involved in an accident at some point in its history. Considering that both cars are equally priced, would you rather purchase the damaged and repaired car or the one that has never been damaged? If you are like most people who have answered that question on surveys, you will have chosen the car on the left - the undamaged one - unless, of course, you could negotiate a significant reduction off the selling price of the repaired car. How much of a reduction would it take to make you want the repaired car over the undamaged one? Figure that out and you will have determined the amount of diminished value that particular car suffered because of its damage history. Causes of diminished value There are many factors that cause repaired cars to become less desirable to buyers and lose market value, the most obvious being poor quality workmanship and use of inferior parts made by sources other than a vehicle’s original manufacturer. But there are a host of other, less obvious, factors that contribute to diminished value as well. Some of these are the loss of factory transferable warranty coverage on damaged and repaired parts, increased title and disclosure obligations, and the loss of eligibility for inclusion in manufacturer’s preowned certification programs. Categories of diminished value While an exhaustive list of causes would be too lengthy to include in this article, most fall into one of three categories. Inherent Diminished Value: Getting paid for diminished value When it comes to getting paid for diminished value, three misconceptions abound. First, many believe that a claim for diminished value is a claim separate and distinct from the one paying for actual physical damages like bent fenders and doors. This is not true. Rather, diminished value is an element of recoverable damage in the same claim that occurred at the same time, during the same event. An insurer that accepts liability and pays for any damage, must, where proof exists, pay for all the loss, except in cases where an exclusion in the policy exempts insurers from doing so. Second, many believe one must Let's Talk Melaleuca ng price of the repaired car. How much of a reduction would it take to make you want the repaired car over the undamaged one? Figure that out and you will have determined the amount of diminished value that particular car suffered because of its damage history.As I grew more and more tired of my stressful life as a doctor I started searching for alternative ways to remain in the health field yet be able to make money without having to grind myself to death at work and spend hours and days away from my family.Many people in many career fields or job industries dream of doing very little and making very much in profit.Also many stay home mothers try to kill their time or add to the household income by finding a good work from home business that is family oriented, safe and ethical.So many of us have decided to start a melaleuca health and wellness home based business and are ecstatic about both the products and opportunity. But somewhere, usually a couple of months after starting the business and attending the calls and buying the leads and trying hard to get those 8 people and become director, somewhere along that route things begin or have already begun to fall apart on you as they did with me and every other person who has joined a home based business.It's strange to see all these corporate directors getting these ginormous 400, 000 dollars checks by Mr Vandersloot as you si Causes of diminished value There are many factors that cause repaired cars to become less desirable to buyers and lose market value, the most obvious being poor quality workmanship and use of inferior parts made by sources other than a vehicle’s original manufacturer. But there are a host of other, less obvious, factors that contribute to diminished value as well. Some of these are the loss of factory transferable warranty coverage on damaged and repaired parts, increased title and disclosure obligations, and the loss of eligibility for inclusion in manufacturer’s preowned certification programs. Categories of diminished value While an exhaustive list of causes would be too lengthy to include in this article, most fall into one of three categories. Inherent Diminished Value: Getting paid for diminished value When it comes to getting paid for diminished value, three misconceptions abound. First, many believe that a claim for diminished value is a claim separate and distinct from the one paying for actual physical damages like bent fenders and doors. This is not true. Rather, diminished value is an element of recoverable damage in the same claim that occurred at the same time, during the same event. An insurer that accepts liability and pays for any damage, must, where proof exists, pay for all the loss, except in cases where an exclusion in the policy exempts insurers from doing so. Second, many believe one mus Stock Market Wisdom Gained From Humpty Dumpty e these perceptions are the fault of no particular party, still they exist in people’s minds and are believed to be real, causing thousands of dollars in losses for consumers who wish to market their repaired automobiles. It should also be noted that inherent diminished value could occur even when cars are expertly repaired because in many cases it is simply not possible to talk some people into the purchase of a repaired car at any price when they are not open to taking a risk.Humpty Dumpty sat on a wall; Humpty Dumpty had a great fall. All the King's horses And all the King's men Couldn't put Humpty together again!You know this tragic story.During the 45+ years that I have been a financial advisor, I have seen this over and over and over again.A new client comes into my office and asks me to review their old portfolio. Very often it is littered with holdings that make no sense. It might have been possible that each of those holdings was purchased for a specific reason at the time, but when put together it looks like a patchwork piece of cloth, a crazy quilt.Investment professionals refer to this as a Humpty Dumpty portfolio. This is a portfolio that is broken beyond repair. Truly, all the king's horses and all the king's man couldn't put this portfolio together again.What's the lesson here? How can you avoid being burdened with a Humpty Dumpty portfolio? And, if this does happen to you, what's the best thing to do?The most important lesson to be learned here it is that while it is important to trust your financial advisor, it is also very impor Insurers, too, understand diminished value and reluctantly admit to its existence when their backs are to the wall. During State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co. v. Mabry, 274 Ga. 498, 501; 556 SE2d 114 (11/28/2001), a lawsuit that caused insurers to begin paying diminished value claims as a normal course of business in the state of Georgia, State Farm provided testimony under oath confirming that the potential for diminished value exists in every claim, even when cars appear properly repaired. Georgia Supreme Court Justice Robert Benham wrote the following November 28, 2001, recounting the testimony of State Farm's witnesses and documents it presented during discovery: “... The first question, whether diminution in value occurs even when physical damage is properly repaired, is one of fact. The trial court found that there is a potential for a diminution in value loss in every event of loss, and that diminution in value can occur even when a vehicle is repaired properly. In support of those findings, the trial court relied primarily upon documents produced by State Farm during discovery and upon the testimony of State Farm’s witnesses. The documents from State Farm acknowledged that there is a common perception that a wrecked vehicle is worth less simply because it has been wrecked. Witnesses for State Farm testified that a potential for diminution in value exists in every automobile accident, and that the public perceives a loss of value in any wrecked vehicle and would choose an unwrecked vehicle over a wrecked one, assuming the vehicles are otherwise the same ...” What was proven true in 2001 is still true today. Diminished value is a reality, even in cases where repairs eliminate all visual evidence of damage. Shop Related Diminished Value: Shop related diminished value is usually the result of poor quality workmanship on the part of repair shops. Mismatched paint, ill-fitting parts, rattles and wind leaks are example of shop related diminished value. If shops accept money from customers for performing particular labor functions, they have an obligation to perform the work correctly. When they don’t, evidence of their shoddy job is often visible for all to see, helping decrease the price a potential buyer would willingly pay for a repaired automobile. Insurance Related Diminished Value: Insurance related diminished value results when insurance company claims adjusters, either intentionally or unintentionally, omit needed repairs from an accident victim’s settlement. It may also occur when sufficient payment isn’t made to allow shops to perform repairs as a carmaker intended. As an example, poor-fitting aftermarket parts may cause insurance related diminished value when insurers specify their use instead of original equipment manufacturer’s (OEM) parts. Getting paid for diminished value When it comes to getting paid for diminished value, three misconceptions abound. First, many believe that a claim for diminished value is a claim separate and distinct from the one paying for actual physical damages like bent fenders and doors. This is not true. Rather, diminished value is an element of recoverable damage in the same claim that occurred at the same time, during the same event. An insurer that accepts liability and pays for any damage, must, where proof exists, pay for all the loss, except in cases where an exclusion in the policy exempts insurers from doing so. Second, many believe one mus Website Design And Common Errors potential for a diminution in value loss in every event of loss, and that diminution in value can occur even when a vehicle is repaired properly. In support of those findings, the trial court relied primarily upon documents produced by State Farm during discovery and upon the testimony of State Farm’s witnesses. The documents from State Farm acknowledged that there is a common perception that a wrecked vehicle is worth less simply because it has been wrecked. Witnesses for State Farm testified that a potential for diminution in value exists in every automobile accident, and that the public perceives a loss of value in any wrecked vehicle and would choose an unwrecked vehicle over a wrecked one, assuming the vehicles are otherwise the same ...”With so many new websites going online every day it is no wonder many of them never succeed. We all hear about the new site that has only been online less than a year and has millions of visitors each month. Why do some sites do so well and others flop? There are many reasons for this and these are just some of the more obvious and often overlooked ones.The landing page takes too long to load. Many website designers and marketers believe everyone has a high-speed connection, which is not the case. Even with a fast connection many pages will take up to 30 seconds to load, which is just too long. Unless someone really wants what you have, and can’t get it anywhere else, they won’t wait; and forget about the person on dial-up. Unless yours is a hobby site, or sales are not important to you, forget about Flash and large fancy graphics.Site is not finished. This may not seem like a big issue except that people who go looking for something don’t want to see an under-construction animation where the information should be. You just wasted their time and probably annoyed them –- not a good start. Do not advertise or promote something you don’ What was proven true in 2001 is still true today. Diminished value is a reality, even in cases where repairs eliminate all visual evidence of damage. Shop Related Diminished Value: Shop related diminished value is usually the result of poor quality workmanship on the part of repair shops. Mismatched paint, ill-fitting parts, rattles and wind leaks are example of shop related diminished value. If shops accept money from customers for performing particular labor functions, they have an obligation to perform the work correctly. When they don’t, evidence of their shoddy job is often visible for all to see, helping decrease the price a potential buyer would willingly pay for a repaired automobile. Insurance Related Diminished Value: Insurance related diminished value results when insurance company claims adjusters, either intentionally or unintentionally, omit needed repairs from an accident victim’s settlement. It may also occur when sufficient payment isn’t made to allow shops to perform repairs as a carmaker intended. As an example, poor-fitting aftermarket parts may cause insurance related diminished value when insurers specify their use instead of original equipment manufacturer’s (OEM) parts. Getting paid for diminished value When it comes to getting paid for diminished value, three misconceptions abound. First, many believe that a claim for diminished value is a claim separate and distinct from the one paying for actual physical damages like bent fenders and doors. This is not true. Rather, diminished value is an element of recoverable damage in the same claim that occurred at the same time, during the same event. An insurer that accepts liability and pays for any damage, must, where proof exists, pay for all the loss, except in cases where an exclusion in the policy exempts insurers from doing so. Second, many believe one mus 5 Reasons You Should Shop Online ir shoddy job is often visible for all to see, helping decrease the price a potential buyer would willingly pay for a repaired automobile.Online shopping has increased in popularity the last few years and it will continue to increase in popularity as time goes on. Even with the that said, many people are still reluctant to purchase goods online for many different reasons. Some of them being high shipping costs, fear of credit card theft and lack of security. Below I will list 5 reasons why people that are not shopping online should start.1. Lower prices. Due to the fact that e-commerce store owners have lower operating costs, they can often offer products at a lower cost than brick and mortar retailers.2. Free shipping. Many websites offer free shipping on purchases over a certain amount to be competitive.3. Larger selections. On the internet you can find a lot of items that you would not see at your local retail stores.4. Convenience. Shopping online is a lot more convenient, especially around the holidays. You do not have to worry about finding a parking space or fighting through crowds and long lines.5. The internet is safe. there are a lot of things that shoppers can do to insure that their credit card information is being sent successfully. I Insurance Related Diminished Value: Insurance related diminished value results when insurance company claims adjusters, either intentionally or unintentionally, omit needed repairs from an accident victim’s settlement. It may also occur when sufficient payment isn’t made to allow shops to perform repairs as a carmaker intended. As an example, poor-fitting aftermarket parts may cause insurance related diminished value when insurers specify their use instead of original equipment manufacturer’s (OEM) parts. Getting paid for diminished value When it comes to getting paid for diminished value, three misconceptions abound. First, many believe that a claim for diminished value is a claim separate and distinct from the one paying for actual physical damages like bent fenders and doors. This is not true. Rather, diminished value is an element of recoverable damage in the same claim that occurred at the same time, during the same event. An insurer that accepts liability and pays for any damage, must, where proof exists, pay for all the loss, except in cases where an exclusion in the policy exempts insurers from doing so. Second, many believe one must sell his/her car to collect a diminished value claim from an insurer. This is another untruth. Insurers simply keep this myth alive to stall claims payouts for as long as possible, knowing the statute of limitations will eventually run out preventing a consumer from ever pursuing a recovery. Diminished value, like other elements of loss, is owed as of the date it actually occurred, not at some far-off unidentifiable point in the future. Third, many believe that courts across the land have banned diminished value claims, labeling them as bogus. Again, this phony spin only benefits insurers who hope not to have to pay these claims. While it is true that some diminished value class action cases about a decade ago got tossed from courts by judges, it was because the lawyers could not show sufficient commonality to sustain a class of members, NOT because diminished value claims have no merit. Other cases have failed because claimants were unsuccessful at proving to the courts that their repaired cars were in some manner compromised despite best efforts to repair them correctly. Conclusion If you want to collect on a claim for diminished value, the burden of proof is on you to authenticate your loss. Sadly, the factor that most often prompts settlement of any claim, including that of diminished value, is the threat of litigation. Insurers pick and choose their fights. If they think you have the means to hire a lawyer and pursue a recovery, an insurer may consider you a threat and pay your claim for diminished value without too much resistance. However, if an insurer considers you to be a weak opponent, the claims adjuster will likely try confusing you with slick word tracks, ultimately stalling you for as long as possible. For a quicker resolution, you can always forgo the diminished value claim with an insurer and take the loss against income taxes you owe. Still, you will have to substantiate your loss and will need the services of an expert to do that for you. Despite insurer’s obstinacy to the contrary, diminished value is owed where a loss can be proven, and those who are persistent stand the best chance of being paid. This information is general in nature and should not be relied upon as a substitute for legal or insurance advice. Readers are encouraged to consult specialists in these fields who have an understanding of legal and insurance issues on a local, state, and national level.
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