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Repurposing A Previous Post

Posted by Mitch Mitchell on Sep 10, 2009

In my 501st post the other day, I talked about possibly going back and repurposing previous posts for one reason or another. I’ve done just that very thing, I wanted to share with you that post and the reason why I did it.

Back in March of 2008, a friend of mine sent me some videos she found where the guy on the video offered solutions for how people could get out of their credit card problems. This wasn’t a quick fix thing, but real videos that were teaching people some long term solutions. Lucky for me I already knew how the process worked, but I thought the videos were neat enough to share, and since this is a sharing blog I decided to share them with others. I wrote a post called CreditCardSolutions.com to highlight them.

Somewhere along the line, the site must have changed hands, and all the old content was suddenly gone. Now I had broken links and a page that literally made no sense whatsoever. I could have just ignored it, until I was writing that 501st post. Though my original page didn’t make the top 5, it was number six. It means there were a lot of people looking for credit card solutions, coming to my site, and finding absolutely nothing to help. Me being me, I just couldn’t let that go on.

So, I’ve gone back and basically rewritten the entire post. What I also did was leave what I’d originally written, so people could see why I changed the page up. And I optimized it slightly, with only one little affiliate ad because it fit the change I made to the content. I also changed the title of the page to Credit Card Solutions, which fits better, and obviously it’s been drawing traffic anyway under that search term, so it just fits much better.

Anyway, I hope you check it out, even though it was an old post, because now it’s totally new. Even if you don’t need the assistance, just see what I did; it might spark an idea in your own mind for some of your older posts.


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Credit Card Solutions

Posted by Mitch Mitchell on Mar 12, 2008

This is something much different than my norm. I originally wrote what’s below the red line on March 12, 2008. At that time, there was a website called Credit Card Solutions that had a bunch of videos on it on how people could work down their debt. Now that site is pretty much gone; I think someone else owns it, but they haven’t done anything with it. I had to unlink this site from that site because it just looked pretty stupid with what I had here.

Today it’s September 10th, 2009. I’m rewriting this post because, strangely enough, it seems to be a post that many people come by to visit because of its title. This makes me feel as though I’m misleading you because what was here isn’t here any longer. I decided I had to rewrite this post and offer those of you who are coming here some advice and options.

I’m going to assume you’re in some kind of difficulty with your credit cards, and that’s why you’ve stopped by looking for solutions. Here’s the first one, which is more informational than actual solutions. I have a blog on finances called Top Finance Blog. I wrote a review of a book called The Skinny On Credit Cards. Go there and read my review, then buy the book. Trust me on this one; it’s the easiest way to understand how credit cards work.

Number two, immediately stop using your credit cards until you can figure out your debt. You figure out your debt by looking at all of your balances, looking at your interest rate, then seeing how much you owe monthly. I could give you the easy way and the hard way of putting together calculations for how many years it would take you to pay off your debt, but I’m going to give you an easy way to make an estimate.

If your balance is $500 or less, look at how much your monthly payment is. Take $5 off that amount, then multiply that figure by 12. Subtract that total from your balance. Then take another $5 off your previous payment amount and multiply that by 12, and subtract that amount from your balance. If you’re at a negative balance, but barely, it means it’ll take you between 18 and 24 months to pay off your balance if you don’t use your card again and only pay the minimum balance.

If your balance is between $501 and $1,500, do the same thing, only in $10 increments every 12 months until you’re down to between $15 and $20. Yes, that’s right; it’s going to take you 5 years or so to pay off that balance if you never use that card again.

If it’s higher than $1,500,… well, just realize it’s going to take you more than 5 years and run with that for now.

Number three, call each of your credit card companies and ask if you can get a reduction on the interest rate. If you can, great. If not, you at least now get to request a free credit report from all 3 agencies, because they have to give you an official reason why you didn’t qualify.

Number four, start paying off your cards, but get rid of one as fast as you can. There are different rules of thought here, but I’ll tell you mine. If you can get one card paid off, you’ll feel a sense of accomplishment and see the plan works. Concentrate on the card you can actually pay off the quickest, and pay more than what’s due only on that card. Doesn’t matter how much it is, just pay more than the minimum. When that card is paid, take that payment and add it to the next card, and so on. If you have only three cards, pay in the order you can get rid of them. If you have more, start with the lowest two, then go after the one with the highest interest rate, not the highest balance. You actually will bring your debt down quicker because that high interest rate is kicking your behind, but now you have extra funds to throw at it, so it’ll come down quickly.

And there you are; it’s not a lot, but these are some valid solutions on how to bring down your credit card debt. If these work for you, then subscribe to the RSS feed of my finance blog, because periodically I write posts on budgeting that might help you out. As a matter of fact, there are a few on there right now, which I’ve paused because they haven’t been getting read all that much so far. But if interest peaks up, I’ll write more. Good luck.


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A friend of mine sent me a link to some videos created by the lawyers who set up the site CreditCardSolution.com. It’s very good stuff, especially the videos on third party debt collectors, of which there are two. In a previous post I talked about the Fair Debt Collections Parctices Act, and the guy in these videos takes it even further. It’s something important for everyone to hear, so here’s the link to their video page. Great stuff; thanks guys!


The Skinny On Credit Cards
by Jim Randel