HOW TO START YOUR OWN CREDIT AND DEBT COUNSELING SERVICE
Here's a business idea that meets all the aspirations of the American
Dream.
You can start small with little or no investment, develop it in your
spare time, and parlay it into a $100,000 a year income - all within
the next twelve months or so.
Really, all it takes to move on this one is an empathy for people,
a basic understanding of money management, about 500 business cards,
some smart advertising, and you're in business. Your greatest expense
or investment, of course, will be for
advertising.
The first, and most important thing to learn is the "thought processes"
in the minds of the people or firms that lend money. No one lends
money with the thoughts of foreclosing on the loan and taking away
a borrower's collateral. Whenever the lender is
forced into such a situation, everybody loses. The borrower loses
his possessions, and the lender ends up with about one tenth of the
money he originally loaned out.
Therefore, the lending institution will generally do everything possible
to work with the borrower as long as he continues to show good faith
in attempting to repay the full amount of the loan. The most important
thing a borrower should do, once he finds himself in a financial bind,
is get in touch with his creditors and apprise them of his situation.
Usually, the lender will set up a meeting for an open discussion between
himself and the borrower, in order to adjust or work out a more convenient
repayment schedule.
Most people who borrow money are having money management problems
to begin with, and are actually terrified to death at the thought of
people from the loan company calling them. Although they generally
won't admit it, most are aware that they are having
problems managing their money. They are embarrassed about it, and
instead of openly seeking help, they attempt to cover up the problem,
and then hide from or avoid the very people who want to help them.
Over the past three years, personal and small business bankruptcies
have been soaring to record levels. At the bottom line, very few people
want to file bankruptcy against their creditors, because regardless
how easy it is, the thought of having "gone bankrupt," still leaves
a stigma.
And this is where you step in with your Professional Credit and Debt
Counseling Service. You should never have any trouble finding clients.
Remember, step one is always to notify the client's creditors. This
is the first instruction (or job) that you give to the client after
you've heard his story. The borrower should be the one to notify the
creditors, and ideally, he should call each on the phone, set up a
meeting and then discuss with the lender his current financial situation
as well as his plans to rectify the problems, and resume payments.
The plan he'll discuss with the
lender will be the plan you assist him in setting up.
If the borrower is in over his head and with no other alternative,
you should immediately advise him to file for relief under "The Wage
Earner's Plan," as explained in Chapter 13 of the Federal Bankruptcy
Act. In essence, this "plan" gives the debtor
time to regroup and reorganize his financial situation without being
hounded by bill collectors.
Anyone who's capable of earning wages, salaries or commissions, can
make use of this plan. It should in no way be thought of as bankruptcy.
This is simply a court supervised method for a borrower to pay off
his debts. The borrower simply draws up a plan to pay off his debts
over a three-year period. If the court accepts the plan, the lenders
are almost obligated to accept it. While more recent bankruptcy laws
still leave room for
abuse by dishonest "big business," they fortunately have improved the
outlook for the "little guy."
Your job as a Credit and Debt Counselor is to meet with the overextended
borrower, listen to his problems, and help him to plan a budget to
live by, and set up a plan for the proper management of his income
that will include money for him to live
on, plus regular payments to his creditors. In the beginning, you
can meet in the borrower's home, pretty much the same way an insurance
agent does. Later on, you'll probably want your own office, but a
formal office for your business will never be absolutely necessary.
Many people are reluctant to be seen walking into a Credit Counselor's
office. Again, there's a personal embarrassment - the thought of their
friends seeing them, and the worry of what other people will think
of them. So if you do opt for an office, make
it as unobtrusive and as confidential as possible. A sign stating
"Money Management Consultant" would be appropriate. Gaining the confidence
and trust of your clients will be the secret of your success. And
do not underestimate the power of "word-of-mouth"
recommendations by grateful clients.
Follow the methods of the insurance salesman, making everything as
comfortable as possible for your clients. So long as you listen to
your client's problems, and then work with him to plan a budget he
can live with while paying off his bills, you won't be required to
have a license in most states. You simply listen, assist the borrower
in planning a budget, and he administers it himself. He makes all
the contacts with his creditors, and makes all the payments directly
to them. To give you the money and have you disburse it among his
creditors would require a license for your business.
Step two in your service is to find out the total amount of cash your
client has coming in each month, and on what dates. Calculate according
to his current obligations, how much he needs for living expenses:
Rent or mortgage payment, utilities, food and clothing. The remainder
of his available income is then budgeted for division among his creditors.
One of the best (and easiest) methods of money management within a
budget is via envelopes. The wage earner marks a different envelope
for each of his obligations. He then makes predetermined amount of
deposit in each of these envelopes each payday.
Thus, if his mortgage was $500 per month, and he brought home $750
each pay day, you'd probably advise that he "deposit" $250 each payday
into the mortgage envelope. And so it would be with each payment envelope.
Many people find this kind of system scary in the beginning, but after
they've used it for a month, they swear by it as the only way to keep
bills up to date.
Of course, the most important thing you want to advise your clients
to do is destroy all their credit cards. Best of all, have them cut
them in half, and send them back with a short note explaining what
they are doing and why - getting a handle on their debts according
to their actual income. Basically, that's all there is to your counseling
service.
You'll need a first meeting to hear the problems, and to make your
proposals. A second meeting will be in order to polish and endorse
the planning. Perhaps a third meeting at the end of the first month
to assist them in making their payments from their
obligation envelopes. Finally, you'll want to keep in touch with them
and ask how they are doing from time to time. You'll find that most
of the people you serve today will need your services again at some
time within the next five years - sad, but statistically true.
It's a "fast-track" and ever-changing world. People who are poor
money manager today invariable encounter money problems again and again,
regardless of how often they get everything paid off. This is, unfortunately,
what keeps the lending institutions in
business, and presents the opportunity for you to become wealthy as
a Professional Credit and Debt Counselor.
You'll need a receipt book. Drop by any large stationery store and
get the most impressive one available. You should charge $100, more
or less, for your services. Three counseling sessions, with the payments
at $10 per month spread over ten months is an ideal arrangement. Explain
your fee during your first contact - $100 in payments of $10 per month
per ten months. You'll find the sound of a $100 fee affords an intangible
degree of respect for your services, while the explanation of modest
$10 monthly payments closes the sale for you.
Always carry an attache case, and at each meeting, work at the kitchen
or dining room table. If it's a husband and wife, be sure that each
is seated beside you. If it's just one person, have him or her to
your right if you're right-handed; to your left if you're left-handed.
Never have a client opposite you, across the table. Round tables are
best for empathy, agreement and cooperation; this has been proven psychologicall
y
- just believe
it, and be guided accordingly.
Always carry a yellow legal pad, and have plenty of pencils with erasers
available. The legal pad lends authority to your knowledge, while
leaving plenty of room for alternatives. The pencils and erasers eliminate
the symbolic fear of every thing being "cast in stone," and conveys
the feeling of negotiation.
You should be well-dressed, a portrayal of the traditional "financial
officer," and yet in warm colors to accentuate your empathy with the
problems of your clients. By all means, you should be sparkling clean
and well-groomed. Do not smoke during a meeting with a client, and
always diplomatically refuse any alcoholic drinks that may be offered.
Try to "talk" with your clients. You must never show any signs of
disapproval of the
actions that resulted in your clients being in their present predicament,
nor should you sound as if you're lecturing or speaking to children.
Remember - and you can tell your client - this has happened to many
stable, conscientious people.
Maintain an attitude of understanding and a sincere desire to help
them out of their current "tight spot." Don't let them get going on
a deprecatory tangent, either. Should they start down that path, simply
tell them, "These things happen to everyone, and what's done is done;
the important thing now is working out the solution to the problem."
As mentioned earlier, your only real investment to set yourself up
in this business will be for advertising. Even that does not have
to be a "saved up" cash outlay. You can start off by planning to run
a two-column wide by three-inch deep a dvertisement in your most read
area newspaper. Check with the newspaper office to get the best price
on a bulk space contract.
Under this kind of agreement, you sign to pay for a certain minimum
number of column inches for the next year, and as a result, your rates
are considerably lower than those paid by the infrequent advertiser.
Best of all, the newspaper will bill you after the ad has run, and
allow you 30 days from the date of your billing to pay.
You should plan to run an ad in the newspaper for at least three days
a week, especially in the Sunday editions, every week. You might also
want to run the same ad in several of your weekly Shoppers Newspapers.
Definitely have a flyer made up describing
your services. About once a month, hire 7th or 8th grade school children
to hand these out for you in the busy shopping centers. Another good
place to hand them out is at the entrances to your state's employment
service offices. Small 3 by 5 announcement cards or descriptive business
cards on all the bulletin boards in the area will also pull in business.
Finally - and most importantly - just as soon as you can afford it,
an advertisement and listing in the yellow pages of your telephone
directory should be bought. Telephone directories come out on a regular
(usually annual) schedule, so check ahead, and anticipate cost and
date you may expect results.
A good place to check for help in writing your advertising is your
area colleges. The students will generally help you in exchange for
the opportunity to build a portfolio. There's never a need to pay
the "out-of-sight" high prices demanded for professional copywriting
and advertising design by some agencies, even if you have the money.
All finished ads are unproven, and you have no guarantee that one
is better than another until you begin testing or using it.
The important element is that your ad says what you want it to say
- that is looks good and makes you feel that it will appeal to your
potential customers - that it instills a confidence within you that
it will bring in the customers. Use the "AIDA" formula: ATTENTION,
INTEREST, DESIRE, ACTION!
An attention-grabbing headline (or first line) - a line or paragraph
that definitely appeals to or arouses the self-interest of your potential
customer; a "hooker," or image-building description that causes the
prospect to picture how much better his life will be as a result of
availing himself of your services; a line that relieves the prospect's
fear of making the wrong decision (such as "Satisfaction Guaranteed");
and a demand that he
take immediate action such as "CALL NOW!" Do not approve, and do not
run any ad that does not contain all these ingredients.
Here's an example of an ad that should work very well for you:
ARE BILL COLLECTORS HOUNDING YOU?
Now there's a way to stop those dunning letters and embarassing phone
calls. Get out of debt completely - without bankruptcy! Preserve
your good credit rating; maintain your present lifestyle; worry no
more about bill collectors! Just an hour or so of your time, and your
money problems can be solved! Your satisfaction is guaranteed! Phone
123-4567 right now for an appointment.
Nationwide Credit Counselors
123 Tenth St.
City, State.
A classified ad might read:
Solve all your money problems with this easy and
completely legal solution. 100% guaranteed
anywhere in the U.S. Call Consumer Credit
Solutions at 123-4567.
At the same time your newspaper ads begin to appear, be sure to get
a press release about your business to the business editors and consumer
advocates at all the newspapers, radio and television stations in your
area. Of help to you in this area will be our report #3504, The Inside
Secrets of Getting Free Publicity For Your Business.
It's generally not worthwhile to advertise this particular kind of
business on radio and TV, unless you do so on a "per inquiry" basis.
For more details on this approach, see Report #3406, How To Get Free
Radio Advertising For Your Company.
After any free radio and TV talk shows, and newspaper feature stories
about your business, the next best method of spreading the word about
your business will be via the guest speaker route at civic club meetings.
And don't forget the women' s clubs. Your talk to these groups should
be "scripted," simply explaining the alarming number of bankruptcies,
the great losses suffered by business because of bankruptcies; the
exasperatingly poor record of the American people with money management
responsibilities; and urging for support to get "back to the basics"
and teach practical
money management courses in the schools, and be example in the home.
Such a talk should bring you a big round of applause and a continuing
source of referrals.
To carry this effort just a little further, set up Credit and Debt
Counseling Seminars or Workshops. You can arrange to hold them in
the banquet rooms of well-known restaurants in your area, meeting rooms
at your local community college, fraternal club
meeting halls, motels, or even churches - because of the suspicion
that you are setting up to sell something when you don't charge an
attendance fee. Most people are aware of the bottom line - that you
are trying to sell them something w hen you invite them to a seminar
or workshop. However, most feel that when there is a cover charge,
the basic information you will be giving will be more useful than that
given when there is no charge to attend. And if they have paid some
kind of fee, they will be more at ease in listening and evaluating,
without the pressure when they have come "for free."
Seminars are one of the most lucrative (and fastest) ways of getting
a new business of to a running start. When you stage seminars, it
is imperative that you flood the area with advertising, being sure
to promote the seminar, not the product that you are really selling.
Your seminar script should be basically the same that I have outlined
for your as a guest speaker, the difference being that instead of closing
with a call for more education in money management, you briefly outline
the simplicity of the "envelope deposit" system. You then close with
an open invitation for those with particular problems or needing special
help to call you office and set up an appointment for personalized
counseling
service.
Even before you officially open for business, you will want have
a tentative list of people you can possibly train as employees to handle
the workload as your business grows. Rather than pay these people
a salary, simply give them a commission for each client they handle.
In other words, you can sign a client for $100 over 10 months, sell
the account to a factoring company for 80% of the total, collect $80
in cash immediately, pay your commission counselor $30, and bank $50
in prof it with no real work involved on your part. And if you have
hired a good counselor, you can rest assured that your client has been
well served.
Basically, that is how easy it is to put this kind of business together
and make it start paying off immediately. Remember, you must be constantly
soliciting new customers, and building the number of customers you
or your counselors talk to each day. You should strive for an average
of three counseling sessions per day, five days per week, before seriously
considering additional help.
At $10 per month from each account, this will give you $150 per week
or a total account billing of $1,500 per week. By factoring your accounts
at 20% of their total value, you will have an immediate cash income
of $1,200 for the week. The factoring
company will handle all the billing and bookkeeping, eliminating your
need for those services.
The way to success in this business is, however, to keep this happening
every week. It will depend upon your advertising, the service you
give, and the reputation you build.
The prime requisite will be work and perseverance on your part, but
once you are established, with a few commission counselors working
for you, the business can easily gross $150,000 per year in even small
to medium size cities. You now have the knowledge; the rest - the
action part - is up to you. Best of luck!