Credit Repair Tips for Small
Businesses
With more than 30
million people in the United States with bad credit scores (under 620), and
thanks to the country's economic situation, it's making getting a credit card
or loan with fair terms difficult. Smaller business entrepreneurs first must
face their real credit score, then consider accounts receivable factoring to
repair bad credit.
There are more than
30 million people in the United States with bad credit scores. Bad scores are
those under 620. Thanks to the country's economic situation, it's making
getting a credit card or loan with fair terms very difficult.
For those smaller
business entrepreneurs, in order to help fix the problem, you need to first
face your real credit score. Despite free credit report offers, you still have
to pay to find out your score, which is a three-digit number ranging from 300
to 850.
Here's how: Go to
MyFico.com, or you can get Experian's "consumer education" credit
report. Following you will find some credit repair tips:
1) Try to use your
credit cards less often if not sparingly. Totaling up big balances can hurt
your score, regardless of whether you pay your bill in full each month and on
time.
Do NOT hire a credit
repair service. "Don't believe these claims," says the Federal Trade
Commission (FTC): they're very likely signs of a scam. The attorneys at the
nation's consumer protection agency say that they've never seen a legitimate
credit repair operation making those claims."
3) The fact is
there's no quick fix for creditworthiness. You can improve your credit report
legitimately, but it takes time, effort, and sticking to a personal debt
repayment plan.
4) What is reported
to the credit bureaus and calculated into your score is the balance reported on
your last statement.
5) Try to pay down or
pay off credit cards. The credit-scoring system is based on favorability
towards a gap between the amount of credit you're using and the available
credit limits.
6) It is a good idea
to rotate your credit cards. The older your credit history per card, the better
it is, so if you stop using a card, the issuers may stop updating the account
at the credit bureaus, and it won't be given as much weight in the
credit-scoring formula as active accounts.
7) Make sure to keep
tabs on your credit limits. Charging the same amount each month -- say $500 to
$800 -- makes the credit-scoring formula think you are you're regularly maxing
out the card. Simply pay your balance down or off before your statement period
ends.
8) Accounts receivable
factoring is an age old tactic that could help you pay off credit your card
debt. Single invoice factoring provides immediate cash flow.
Factoring is
regaining popularity as a surefire method of financing to improve the cash flow
of a business. And in case you still do not understand it -- factoring is when
a company decides to discount its accounts receivables, at which time the
factor then bears the credit risk for the accounts and becomes the recipient of
payment from the customer. Factoring is one of the most effective and efficient
forms of financing
, or funding a small business with cash
flow today.
