Category: Blog

  • Tips to Educate Your Clients for Better Credit Scores


    Sign up for our brand new 14-day Credit Hero Challenge: http://creditherochallenge.com/

    Starting a credit repair business has never been easy.

    I mean you can get set up, market your services and get your first clients… but by that stage, you haven’t even done the hard work yet!

    You still have to get results for your new clients!

    So in today’s episode, we’re going to teach you everything that you need to know in order to turn your credit clients into credit geniuses.

    If you want to make your clients into credit Einsteins… then this is what you need.

    The top 7 tips you need to know in order to maximize results for your credit repair clients are right here!

    Make sure to check it out!

    Key Takeaways:

    Intro (00:00)
    How one Texas nurse is starting her own credit storefront (02:07)
    The 7 tips to pass on to your clients (03:42)
    Why you have to pay your bills on time (04:22)
    Why you shouldn’t make big promises to clients (05:28)
    Should you show this video to your clients? (06:55)
    Episode wrap-up (09:46)

    #CreditRepair #DanielRosen #CreditHero

    Additional Resources:

    Be sure to subscribe to the podcast at: https://www.creditrepaircloud.com/podcast

    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/creditrepaircloud/
    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/creditrepaircloud/

    Get your FREE trial of the Credit Repair Cloud software at: https://www.creditrepaircloud.com/freetrial
    #businesscoachonline #creditrepair #fixmycredit

  • ALWAYS Avoid THIS Type of Client in Credit Repair


    Sign up for our brand new 14-day Credit Hero Challenge: http://creditherochallenge.com/

    Should you ever turn away credit repair business?

    Is it ever OK to say no to a new client?

    Should you really reject potential prospects when they approach you?

    These are the questions that we are going to analyze in today’s episode, and the answers might not be what you would expect!

    We’re going to talk about some of the situations in which you should accept a prospect… and when you should tell them that your credit repair services aren’t for them.

    At the end of the day, you’re out here to change lives, so when you meet someone and you’re not sure if you can help them, it can be a tough choice to make.

    But thankfully for you… everything you possibly need to know about whether you should turn away credit repair clients is right here.

    Make sure to check it out!

    Key Takeaways:

    Intro (00:00)
    How one credit hero was making six figures in one year (01:26)
    Should you really turn down clients (05:03)
    Some of the situations you should turn a prospect away (05:04)
    What to know about people who want immediate results (08:29)
    Episode wrap-up (10:48)

    #CreditRepair #CreditHeroes #DanielRosen

    Be sure to subscribe to the podcast at: https://www.creditrepaircloud.com/podcast

    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/creditrepaircloud/
    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/creditrepaircloud/

    Get your FREE trial of the Credit Repair Cloud software at: https://www.creditrepaircloud.com/freetrial
    #businesscoachonline #creditrepair #fixmycredit

  • The SIMPLE Steps to Removing Medical Collections from Credit Reports

    Medical debt is the most common collection item on American credit reports — and the most fixable. Between HIPAA-based disputes and major reporting changes the bureaus adopted in 2022–2023, most medical collections can come off or never appear at all. The video covers the HIPAA angle; here is the complete playbook.

    First: The Rules Changed in Your Favor

    Before disputing anything, know what the three bureaus already agreed to stop reporting:

    • Paid medical collections come off entirely. If you have paid it, it should no longer appear. Check your reports — a paid medical collection still showing is by itself grounds for deletion.
    • Medical collections under $500 are no longer reported.
    • Unpaid medical debt gets a one-year waiting period before it can appear, giving insurance time to do its job.

    A huge share of medical collections on reports today violate one of those three rules. Start there — it is the easiest win in credit repair.

    The HIPAA Angle

    HIPAA limits who can hold and share your medical information. When a provider sells your account to a collection agency, a validation dispute forces the collector to prove it legally holds the debt with accurate records — billing detail it often cannot produce without exposing protected health information it should not have. Collectors frequently delete rather than fight it.

    Step by Step

    1. Pull all three reports and list every medical collection: agency, amount, date, status.
    2. Apply the new rules first. Paid? Under $500? Less than a year old? Dispute with the bureau citing the current medical-debt reporting policies. These deletions are nearly automatic.
    3. Request itemized billing from the original provider. Errors in medical billing are rampant — duplicate charges, insurance that was never billed, wrong patient. Any discrepancy is dispute ammunition.
    4. Send a validation letter to the collector demanding proof they own the debt and an itemized accounting. No timely, complete validation? Demand deletion.
    5. If it is legitimate and over $500, negotiate pay-for-delete in writing, or simply pay it — because paid medical collections must now come off, payment itself has become a deletion strategy.

    What This Does to Your Score

    Collections suppress scores severely. Newer scoring models ignore medical collections entirely — but most mortgage lenders still use older FICO versions where they hurt. Clearing a single medical collection commonly moves a score 20–60 points, sometimes more when it is the only major negative.

    The Bigger Picture

    Clean credit is a means to an end — the mortgage, the refinance, the business loan. If you are clearing medical collections because you need financing, visit Funding-Advisor.com and I will tell you what you can qualify for and what to fix first.

  • How to Start a Credit Repair Business (Even if You’re Not a Credit Expert Yet)

    You do not need to be a credit expert to start a credit repair business — every one of the success stories I have covered started as a beginner. What they shared was a willingness to learn one process well and repeat it. The video below explains the mindset; this article gives you the practical roadmap.

    Why Credit Repair Is a Real Business

    Demand is structural: tens of millions of Americans have collections, charge-offs, or errors on their reports, and every one of them wants a mortgage, a car, or a business loan someday. The work is process-driven — audit, dispute, follow up, repeat — which means it can be learned, systematized, and staffed. And it is a recurring-revenue model: clients pay monthly while their file is worked.

    The Roadmap

    1. Learn the law before the tactics

    Two laws define this industry. The Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) gives consumers the dispute rights you will use every day. The Credit Repair Organizations Act (CROA) regulates you: written contracts, a 3-day cancellation right, no charging before work is performed, and no guaranteeing outcomes. Some states add bonding or registration requirements — check yours before taking a dollar.

    2. Do five files free

    Fix credit for friends and family first. You will learn the dispute cycle on real files, and their score improvements become your first testimonials — the single most valuable marketing asset in this industry.

    3. Set up the machine

    You need dispute-management software to track letters and deadlines across three bureaus per client, a simple onboarding flow (credit monitoring access, contract, ID documents), and a calendar discipline for the 30-day investigation windows. The tooling matters less than actually working every file every month.

    4. Price for recurring revenue

    The standard model is a modest setup fee plus a monthly fee while you work the file (typical range $79–$149/month). CROA timing rules matter here: bill after work is performed, not before.

    5. Market with proof

    Before-and-after score screenshots, deletion letters, and client stories outperform any ad copy. Post them consistently where your audience already is — and ask every satisfied client for two referrals. Realtors and mortgage loan officers are the best referral partners in the business: they lose deals to bad credit every week and will happily send those buyers to you.

    6. Systematize, then staff

    Once you pass roughly 30–50 active clients, document your process and hire your first dispute processor. The owners who hit seven figures all made the same transition: from doing disputes to owning a pipeline and a team.

    The Honest Caveats

    You cannot remove accurate, verifiable, timely negatives, and you should never promise to. Results take 45–120 days to show. Churn is real if you do not communicate — monthly update calls retain clients better than any contract clause.

    Your Unfair Advantage

    Credit repair pairs naturally with funding. A client whose score you just raised 80 points is now fundable — and helping them get capital is a second service most competitors never offer. If you want to add business funding to your offer (or fund your own startup costs), start at Funding-Advisor.com.

  • Try This SIMPLE Method to Delete Negative Items from a Credit Report

    Deletion is the fastest way to move a credit score — one removed collection can do more than a year of on-time payments. Yet most people never use it, because nobody teaches how. The video below covers the tip of the month; this article lays out every deletion method that works and when to use each one.

    Why Deletion Beats Everything Else

    Your score is calculated from what is on the report. When a negative item comes off, the model simply never sees it again — there is no “recovering” period. That is why deletion is instant while rebuilding is slow. The law that makes it possible is the Fair Credit Reporting Act: every item must be accurate, verifiable, and timely, and the burden of proof sits with the bureau and the furnisher, not with you.

    The Five Deletion Methods

    1. The factual dispute

    Find something wrong — balance, date opened, date of first delinquency, account status, duplicate entry — and dispute it in writing with the bureau. They have roughly 30 days to verify. Wrong or unverifiable? It must come off. With one in five reports containing an error, always audit before anything else.

    2. The verification demand

    Even when an item looks right, the furnisher must be able to prove it. Debts that have been sold and resold often arrive at collection agencies with nothing but a spreadsheet row — no contract, no statements, no chain of ownership. A validation letter forces the question. No proof, no tradeline.

    3. Pay-for-delete

    For legitimate collection debts, negotiate: payment in exchange for removal, agreed in writing before you pay a dollar. Collection agencies bought the debt for pennies; a partial payment with deletion is often a win for them. Never pay first and hope.

    4. The goodwill letter

    For late payments with an otherwise solid history, write to the original creditor and ask for a goodwill removal. It works more often than people expect — especially with credit unions and when the late was tied to a one-time event you can explain.

    5. The age-off audit

    Most negatives must fall off after seven years from the date of first delinquency (ten for Chapter 7 bankruptcy). Furnishers sometimes re-age debts — illegally resetting the clock when an account is sold. Check the dates; a re-aged account is a slam-dunk dispute.

    What Not to Do

    • Do not dispute everything as “not mine” — frivolous blanket disputes get flagged and ignored.
    • Do not pay a collection without a written deletion agreement (outside of medical, where paid collections must now come off).
    • Do not believe anyone guaranteeing removal of accurate, verifiable items.

    Where This Leads

    Every deletion raises the ceiling on what you qualify for — mortgages, auto loans, and especially business funding, where personal credit decides your starting limits. If you are cleaning your report because you need capital for a business, start at Funding-Advisor.com and I will map your fastest route to funding.

  • Secrets to Making a Million Dollars in Credit Repair with Bobby Richardson


    Sign up for our brand new 14-day Credit Hero Challenge: http://creditherochallenge.com/

    How important is credit repair? Listen to this story…

    Imagine you’re working 9-5 with a wife and a son to take care of. One day, driving home from work your car breaks down.

    You gotta head to the dealership to get a new car for you and your wife. They run through your credit score TWENTY times before coming back to you.

    So once you get the offer, you find that you’re going to have to pay double the original value of the car. That’s how bad your credit score is.

    This is the story of Bobby Richardson. But the happy ending for him is that he fixed his credit score, started his own business to help others do the same, and within just a matter of months he had made a million dollars from it.

    Isn’t that crazy? He’s gone through our program and is now a proud member of our Millionaires Club.

    So in today’s episode, he’s gonna share with us everything he has learned on his rollercoaster ride of starting a credit repair business.

    Everything from when he hit breaking point, to how he turned his life around so quickly will be covered in this episode.

    Make sure to check it out!

    Key Takeaways:

    Intro (00:00)
    Bobby’s amazing story in credit repair (03:34)
    How credit repair has changed Bobby’s life (07:53)
    How he has scaled so quickly (09:39)
    The importance of trial and error (12:43)
    The optimal follow-up strategy (13:41)
    The best way to grow a team (16:32)
    How to avoid Bobby’s mistakes (19:56)
    Rapid-fire questions (21:03)
    Episode wrap-up (23:05)

    #CreditRepair #CreditRepairBusiness #DanielRosen

    Be sure to subscribe to the podcast at: https://www.creditrepaircloud.com/podcast

    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/creditrepaircloud/
    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/creditrepaircloud/

    Get your FREE trial of the Credit Repair Cloud software at: https://www.creditrepaircloud.com/freetrial
    #businesscoachonline #creditrepair #fixmycredit

  • How Credit Repair Works: The Secrets to Credit Repair Made Easy

    Most people pay their bills, glance at their mortgage statement, and never think about their credit report until a lender says no. This post explains what credit repair actually is — the legal mechanics, what is realistically fixable, and how the process works step by step. The video below is a great primer; the article adds the detail.

    The Legal Foundation: You Have the Right to an Accurate Report

    Credit repair is not a trick. It rests on the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA), which says everything on your credit report must be accurate, verifiable, and timely. If an item fails any of those three tests, you have the legal right to dispute it — and the bureau generally has 30 days to investigate and either verify it or delete it.

    What Can Come Off a Report

    • Errors: accounts that are not yours, wrong balances, wrong dates, duplicate collections. Roughly one in five reports has a material error.
    • Unverifiable items: if the furnisher cannot produce records proving the debt within the investigation window, it must come off — even if it was real.
    • Out-of-date items: most negatives must fall off after seven years (bankruptcies ten). Items sometimes linger past their date.
    • Goodwill adjustments: a paid late payment can sometimes come off just by asking the creditor in writing, especially with an otherwise clean history.

    What stays: accurate, verifiable, current negative information. Anyone who guarantees they can make a legitimate repossession disappear is lying to you — that is a red flag under the Credit Repair Organizations Act (CROA).

    The Process, Step by Step

    1. Pull all three reports (Equifax, Experian, TransUnion) — free at annualcreditreport.com. The bureaus do not share data; an error can live on one and not the others.
    2. Audit line by line. Flag every account, balance, date, and status that looks wrong or unfamiliar.
    3. Dispute in writing with each bureau reporting the item. Be specific: which item, what is wrong, what you want done. Attach proof when you have it.
    4. Track the 30-day clock. No verification in time means deletion. Verified? You can escalate to the furnisher directly, add a consumer statement, or re-dispute with new documentation.
    5. Rebuild while you repair. Deletions raise the ceiling; on-time payments and low utilization raise the score. Do both at once.

    DIY or Hire It Out?

    Everything above can be done yourself with patience and a filing system. A good credit repair company earns its fee through volume, follow-up discipline, and knowing the escalation paths — not through any special access. If you hire one, CROA gives you protections: written contracts, no upfront fees before work is performed, and a right to cancel.

    Why It Is Worth It

    The payoff is not the number — it is access. Better mortgage rates, approved car loans, and for business owners, real funding. Lenders read your personal credit before they fund your business. If you are cleaning up your credit because you need capital, check Funding-Advisor.com to see what your profile can qualify for as the score climbs.

  • The Secret To Getting An 850 Credit Score

    Put 100 Americans in a room and on average just one of them has a credit score of 850. Not because the other 99 are irresponsible — most simply never learned how the scoring model actually works. The video below digs into what separates that one person, and this article breaks the habits down step by step.

    What Actually Makes Up Your Score

    FICO weights five factors: payment history (35%), amounts owed (30%), length of credit history (15%), new credit (10%), and credit mix (10%). Every habit below maps to one of those five numbers — there is no magic beyond them.

    The Six Habits of 850 Scorers

    1. They never miss a payment — ever

    Payment history is the single biggest factor. One 30-day late can drop an excellent score by 80+ points and stays on the report for seven years. 850 scorers put every account on autopay for at least the minimum, then pay the balance manually.

    2. They keep utilization under 10%

    Most advice says stay under 30% of your credit limits. The people at the top keep it in the single digits — and they know utilization has no memory. Pay the balance down before the statement closes and the bureaus see a low number that same month.

    3. They keep old accounts open

    The age of your oldest account and the average age across accounts both matter. Closing a 15-year-old card because you rarely use it shortens your history and shrinks your available credit at the same time — two hits from one decision. Put a small recurring charge on old cards and leave them alone.

    4. They apply for credit rarely and deliberately

    Hard inquiries cost a few points each and cluster on reports as a risk signal. High scorers apply when there is a strategic reason, not because a cashier offered 10% off.

    5. They carry a mix of account types

    A mortgage, an auto loan, and a few revolving cards demonstrate you can manage different kinds of debt. Nobody should borrow just for mix — but it explains why scores often peak in the years when a mortgage and cards are reporting together.

    6. They check their reports and dispute errors fast

    Roughly one in five credit reports contains an error. 850 scorers pull all three bureaus regularly (annualcreditreport.com is free) and dispute anything inaccurate immediately under the Fair Credit Reporting Act.

    Do You Actually Need an 850?

    No — and this is the part most people miss. Lenders top-tier you around 760–780. Past that, a higher number is bragging rights, not better terms. The real goal is a score that unlocks what you want to do: buy the house, get the business funded, qualify for the 0% card.

    Turn the Score Into Capital

    A strong personal score is the foundation for business funding — 0% APR business cards, credit lines, and loans all key off it. If you want to know what your current profile qualifies for, start at Funding-Advisor.com and I will tell you straight.

  • ClickFunnel Platinum and What you Need to Know

    ClickFunnel Platinum and What you Need to Know

    I just got done watching Russell’s big announcement from earlier today about the future of ClickFunnels…As I scroll through the CF Official FB Group, I see a TON of people are posting their summaries of what happened, but a lot of those posts have way too much info, going into every little story and micro-detail he shared……when all I really care about knowing is the bottom line…What’s changing at CF that I need to know about?So for everyone else like me, here’s a straight-to-the-point summary of what Russell announced on his FB live today:

    Changes to the CF platform & focus:

    1. ClickFunnel is putting all of its focus into the core software. That means they’re shutting down other things like Backpack & Actionetics (to be replaced by partnerships/acquisitions with category leaders in those areas). CF’s focus will be 100% on becoming the best sales funnel platform in the world & maintaining that.
    2. Existing members will still have access to Actionetics & Backpack. You don’t have to worry about losing everything if you’re relying on those features. They just won’t be available for new members.
    3. ClickFunnel is upgrading its support to resolve tickets faster. They’re introducing a new AI aspect to handle the most commonly asked questions which will serve as the first layer of support. The second layer will be their “community experts” program which they’re expanding. Then the third layer for all leftover tickets will be official CF support reps.

    Announcing “ClickFunnels Platinum” and “FunnelFlix”:

    As part of their goal to be the #1 sales funnel platform, they’re also investing heavily into the education they provide to help you get results.To do that, they’ve replaced the old pricing / membership of ClickFunnel. Now you’ll be able to join ClickFunnel under 2 different membership levels:

    1. ClickFunnels basic (the $97/month plan we’re already familiar with)
    2. ClickFunnels platinum (details below)

    With ClickFunnels Platinum, you get the following:

    1. Unlimited everything (funnels, visitors, etc)
    2. Access to daily virtual hack-a-thons. This is where you’ll get live support to get your funnels finished and ready to launch. Every day they’ll cycle through the different core funnel types (webinars, books, course, list building, etc) and work with you to get your funnel up and running in a single day. Super valuable considering people often go months without completing their funnels.
    3. Access to FunnelFlix 🔥 (this is a game changer & the primary reason I’m now going to be pushing this package as my go-to recommendation for my audience moving forward – details on what’s offered below)

    📽️ What is FunnelFlix? 📽️

    It’s basically the “Netflix of digital marketing & business.”Russell has loaded pretty much all of his best material and trainings for you to watch FREE as a bonus to your CF Platinum membership.This includes stuff like Funnel Builder Secrets (normally $2,997), Traffic Secrets, the OFA Challenge, the new Affiliate Bootcamp, Funnel U, and more.Not only that, but he partnered up with many other industry experts to add their own premium courses and content for free……including Tony Robbins to help you with mindset, AdSkills to help you master paid advertising and media buying, Garrett White’s The Warrior’s Way, and other courses around everything from mindset to marketing to business-building to give you tons of support at whatever stage you’re at.He’s also adding new content to it every month.In other words, it’s a priceless resource that you get as a part of your membership to CF…The price for ClickFunnels platinum is $697/month…BUT, right now CF is allowing us to get access to it for $297/month.If you’re already on the old $297/month plan, then you don’t need to do anything. You’re automatically going to get access to everything above.And if you don’t have a CF account already, then I have some good news for you

    :)It’s been a long time since I’ve offered any bonus stacks for CF’s recent launches (because honestly I don’t enjoy competing in all of the noise that goes on during these CF launches)……but because I’m genuinely impressed by this offer from CF & I know it’s going to help a LOT of people… I’ve decided to offer one this time

    :)I’m going to add some of my own stuff to sweeten this offer (but I’m only making it available to a limited # of people).I’ll be going live very soon to unveil what you’ll get if you decide to go with CF Platinum through me…So if you want a heads up before I pull the curtain on what I’m offering, then let me know below & I’ll update you with what time the live will be so you can mark it in your calendar.I’m pretty excited with this new direction CF is taking & can’t wait to see how it impacts the community!

  • 👑 types of entrepreneurs

    Much of the business world is kinda getting carried away with the word “entrepreneur”…

    And many are calling themselves an entrepreneur when they’re really not…

    AND, not everyone is an entrepreneur, nor should we expect everyone to be.

    Free Market Capitalism needs different roles…

    AND THAT’S OK!

    But –
    I wanna share some insights on the differences (because an “investor”, “fast food franchise owner”, or “copy cat” isn’t an entrepreneur).

    Here follows my small, non-definitive list of different types of business people:

    en·tre·pre·neur noun /ˌäntrəprəˈnər,ˌäntrəprəˈno͝o(ə)r/a person who organizes and operates a business or businesses, taking on greater than normal financial risks in order to do so. NOTE: the following definitions are purposefully stereotyping

    Entrepreneur, VC-Backed:

    Own: Partial

    Control: Partial

    Risk Tolerance: Highest

    PERSONAL Cashflow Level: Moderate until an IPO, if it happens

    Time to Personal Cashflow: Once funded, immediate
    They’re a creator, imaginary, disruptor, truly new Eg: Entrepreneurs that take cash on Shark Tank. I’m very against this. It’s freaky. I want the market to give me my paycheck when I’m selling something of worth, and not before that.

    Entrepreneur, Non-VC Backed:

    Own: Full

    Control: Full

    Risk Tolerance: High (less likely to lose their shirt if it fails, they own it all)

    PERSONAL Cashflow Level: Low for a while, then grows big

    Time to Personal Cashflow: Soon after traffic is consistent
    They’re a creator, imaginary, disruptor, truly new, and a bit more scrappy than the VC-backed chaps. Requires moderate skills in marketing and sales.
    Eg: Steve Jobs(He tried to get financing but was turned down. So he sold his car for $750 and Steve Wozniak sold his calculator for $500. Get after it)
    Eg: Russell Brunson(He used funnels to sell funnels (imagine that, a product of his product) so his own money wasn’t at risk. Get after it)

    Business Owner, Copy-cat:[not an entrepreneur]

    Own: Full, dependingControl: Full

    Risk Tolerance: Moderate (but they’re just copying someone else)

    PERSONAL Cashflow Level: Moderate, they didn’t create anything

    Time to Personal Cashflow: 
    They’re usually not very creative. They can make good money “hacking” all the time but I’ve found those that stay there usually remain worried about money. It’s not that they don’t make money, they just constantly need to see what others are doing so they know how to act next, which takes focus off their own creativity, so they stay in a “hacking” loop.
    Eg: Any product that was ‘second’ to a market or off-brand 

    Business Owner, Franchisee:[not an entrepreneur (includes all working under commission)]

    Own: Yes

    Control: “Yes” (but it’s an illusion, so no)

    Risk Tolerance: Low

    PERSONAL Cashflow Level: Low

    Time to Personal Cashflow: Slow, with little ‘perks’ 
    Franchise Owners, in my opinion, are most desperate to be included as an entrepreneur. They are stuck in a business model that focuses their role solely on the product and operations, not actual marketing as it’s out of their hands. They bought a job and ‘entrepreneur’d’ nothing. The original builder was the only entrepreneur here.
    Eg: Practically any fast food chain

    Investor:[not an entrepreneur]

    Own: Depends if it’s an equity, asset, or cashflow deal

    Control: Depends how the business was valued and what type of contribution the investor is making (cash, talent, assets, relationships, etc)

    Risk Tolerance: Low

    PERSONAL Cashflow Level: Willing for low, but secure, with big exit plan

    Time to Personal Cashflow: Usually needs cashflow back regardless of business health
    It’s the other side of the “Entrepreneur, VC-Backed” coin. I have no problem when someone chooses to take on an investor to move faster, but only AFTER the market has said yes to them by paying the business lots of cash. An investor doesn’t have the option of simply giving cash. I’ve heard investors say that the only time when their investments in existing companies has worked well is when they’re personally involved (not a fund-and-dash), or there’s a brand new talent brought in for the company. 
    Eg: Warren Buffet (who kinda ‘entrepreneur’d’ his style of investing)