
27 August 2007 | 11 replies
Property Ladder is one show that will highlight failures.
29 February 2008 | 16 replies
From one that speaks to people in foreclosure on regular basis, one repeating emotional trend I see is embarrassment---in general, folks in this position often act too late because they are embarrassed (pride is another good emotional anchor) with admitting failure...Although I don't market to these individuals, I understand the mindset all to well and believe any marketing campaign to these folks should include the following components:- Discretion/Privacy: Give them an opportunity to learn more without revealing themselves initially---offer a white paper or recorded info-message which would allow these distressed homeowners to learn without the need to speak to somebody. - Hope: Too many marketers are appealing to fear---although fear is a compelling emotional trigger, the majority of people don't want to be reminded what they will lose, they want to be reassured that there is a chance for recovery

8 October 2007 | 16 replies
When they ran the tests she showed to be going into renal failure.

21 September 2007 | 8 replies
This rehab just went from being a deal to a total failure.
3 November 2007 | 16 replies
If you fail to follow through and the state can prove intent then you are committing fraud (intent to deceive and otherwise not deliver what you have promised).If you sell using a L/O and you can not control the property's title then you have another failure to deliver issue.Some deals are fine.

3 October 2007 | 2 replies
Failure to operate correctly can compromised the LLC's legal standing.

21 October 2007 | 5 replies
Failure to respond will result in them becoming a Holdover Tenant, subject to double the existing rent (per local law).

13 May 2011 | 37 replies
The author is rather raw in his outlook on things, and learned from failure, so it makes a good read. :) Jonathan

5 November 2018 | 25 replies
This brings up a very important point that can mean the difference between success and failure.

11 February 2010 | 19 replies
Failure to correct within the time period, or repeating the same breach after the period, typically is grounds for lease termination, or some other step according to local law, and the tenant may be required to pay costs/damages as well.I would be quite surprised if the landlord were able to convince a judge to deduct the cost of mowing your yard under the circumstances you suggest.