T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
67.1 | I think the books are worth the bucks | HSOMAI::HARDMAN | Life's too short to drive a Honda | Mon Feb 17 1992 18:12 | 21 |
| The books have lots of good info and are *lots* cheaper than the
'seminar tapes' that basically (as I understand it) contain the same
info. He does give lots of good tax reducing tips, several of which
I've successfully put into action. The latest one also has tips on how
to save money when purchasing a car. FWIW, I found the latest one "More
Wealth Without Risk" at a local wholesale club for $12 vs. $24 at a
regular bookstore.
If you attend one of the free seminars (which pitch their video tapes)
you'll be contacted soon afterward by phone with a *very* high pressure
sales pitch to enroll for some kind of 'investment advice' service
which lets you call your 'personal adviser' anytime to discuss your
financial matters. They affer advice on stocks, binds, real estate,
etc. At ~$2K/year, I told 'em thanks but no thanks!
I think that the best piece of advice they could offer is for you to
buy and read the book rather than the video tapes. It would save you
nearly $500!!! :-)
Harry
|
67.2 | Easy money | RAVEN1::TMOORE | Ol'Qual Hog | Tue Feb 18 1992 02:38 | 30 |
| I saved almost $400.00 in insurance premiums for house and car by following the
guidelines in the book. The agent I dealt with wanted to know where I got
my information from, so I told him "Wealth without risk". He went out and
bought his on copy. I would also advise the same as .1. You can do it
yourself with a little education.
<<< Note 67.1 by HSOMAI::HARDMAN "Life's too short to drive a Honda" >>>
-< I think the books are worth the bucks >-
The books have lots of good info and are *lots* cheaper than the
'seminar tapes' that basically (as I understand it) contain the same
info. He does give lots of good tax reducing tips, several of which
I've successfully put into action. The latest one also has tips on how
to save money when purchasing a car. FWIW, I found the latest one "More
Wealth Without Risk" at a local wholesale club for $12 vs. $24 at a
regular bookstore.
If you attend one of the free seminars (which pitch their video tapes)
you'll be contacted soon afterward by phone with a *very* high pressure
sales pitch to enroll for some kind of 'investment advice' service
which lets you call your 'personal adviser' anytime to discuss your
financial matters. They affer advice on stocks, binds, real estate,
etc. At ~$2K/year, I told 'em thanks but no thanks!
I think that the best piece of advice they could offer is for you to
buy and read the book rather than the video tapes. It would save you
nearly $500!!! :-)
Harry
|
67.3 | The tapes are good, but the books are cheaper | TOOLS::DENNY::PERIQUET | Dennis Periquet | Tue Feb 18 1992 12:02 | 22 |
|
I bought his second book called "Financial Self Defense" and
save some money on car insurance; I was impressed and purchased
the tapes for about $500. I used the information enough to
pay for the price of the tapes and more. There is also a quarterly
membership fee of $20/quarter; you get a monthly newsletter that
contains lots of hype, testimonials, and some reasonable financial
advice. Like the previous replies say, everything in the tapes
is in the books. In fact, the tapes come with video tapes; the
video tapes contain the same information as the tapes. As a
starting point to learning how to manage your money, these
materials are good. However, don't waste your money on the
tapes because the books are sufficient.
He sells other more expensive courses like the real estate
investment course he sells for about $1100. You can really pour
a lot of your money into CJG strategies, but I think a library
or local bookstore can teach you the same information at a much
smaller price.
Dennis
|
67.4 | Check with your agent for details | HSOMAI::HARDMAN | Life's too short to drive a Honda | Tue Feb 18 1992 13:04 | 18 |
| One thing to consider about his insurance tips. My dad has been in the
insurance business for quite a number of years. I asked him about the
'tip' that says to drop your uninsured motorist coverage, because you
already have collision coverage and medical coverage. He told me about
the things that uninsured motorist covers that isn't in your other
coverage. Things like maid, cook and lawn service are paid for while
you're unable to perform these tasks, as well as several other
not-so-obvious benefits that Givens has apparently overlooked.
With all the uninsured (and illegal alien) Mexicans drving around
Texas, (Gov't figures around 45% of the drivers in Texas are
uninsured!) I've kept my coverage. BTW, they have just passed new laws
here to crack down on the folks that have no insurance. Perhaps once
more of the population is paying premiums, rates will drop a bit.
Nah.... ;-)
Harry
|
67.5 | Givens: Maybe a little too simplistic? | PISMO::PRICE | W-phoria | Tue Feb 18 1992 16:06 | 18 |
| I borrowed a set of the videotapes from a friend of mine who swears by them.
Since Givens is a born salesman, he can get you really fired up about certain
strategies he suggests. Some of the stuff he tells you might be easier said
than done. The one that is very much oversimplified in my opinion, is the way
Givens suggests for parents to pay for some college costs.- Buy a house
near your kid's college campus and rent out rooms to defray mortgage costs.
Sounds so easy, but there is a lot more complexity than just collecting rent
checks and building equity. There were also some things about buying a
car- like "refuse to pay for dealer prep" - a sure way to get a knowing smirk
from your friendly car dealer.
Most of what he says makes sense, I suggest buying the books, and separate the
"meat" from Givens infectious hype in the videos.
Gary
|
67.6 | | SELL1::WELLS | Cakes useless if you can't eat it too! | Wed Feb 19 1992 14:51 | 12 |
|
There's another whole note or 3 in the old Investing notesfile.
I also strongly suggest getting the books from the library for free
rather than $500 for video tapes.
Tim
PS Got one of the books for my Dad for Christmas and now that's all
he talks about every time I see him!
|
67.7 | Try the Wholesale Clubs | DNEAST::STEVENS_JIM | | Fri Mar 13 1992 12:37 | 4 |
| At the Wholesale Clubs, like BJ's and Wholesale Depot, I've seen
two books of his for about $13 each...
Jim
|
67.8 | One place to show no mercy! | HSOMAI::HARDMAN | Common sense isn't very common | Sat Mar 14 1992 18:17 | 17 |
| Re .5
>checks and building equity. There were also some things about buying a
>car- like "refuse to pay for dealer prep" - a sure way to get a knowing smirk
>from your friendly car dealer.
I've refused to pay dealer prep and it worked just fine. I waited until
we were doing the financial papers and asked about the 'extra' $249 for
the 'consumer protection package'. The dealer said "We add that to all
the cars we sell". When they refused to remove it, I said "See ya!" and
started walking out of the office. Less than 30 seconds later the
computer was spiiting out new forms with the $249 removed! (Actually, I
think it was $263 total, since they added the $249 to the value of the
trade in, which reduced the sales tax owed on the difference! :-)
Harry
|
67.9 | Books: Good Stuff | DPDMAI::VETEIKIS | | Tue Mar 17 1992 22:14 | 17 |
| Here is another vote for the books.
For someone just getting started in financial planning, I found the
books to be a tremendous help, especially his explanations of financial
matters in simple layman terms. Go for it.
However, I found that as I became more financially educated some of his
advice did seem a bit oversimplified (ie. I still question his
money-movement investment strategy).
However this detracts very little from the overall benefit of so many of
his financial strategies. And you get a good education at the same
time.
CV
|
67.10 | < At Least Read the Chapters on Planning!> | ODIXIE::GELINEAU | | Fri Apr 03 1992 19:38 | 8 |
|
If the books do nothing else for a person but motivate them to set some
personal financial goals they are worth while. All money and investing
strategies are not designed for everyone alike. But we can all use a
good plan, not necessarily requiring that we have a hired 3rd party
CFP, to help us take advantage of the money and investing opportunities
that fit our individual comfort level.
|
67.11 | Givens was on CNN... | DENVER::DAVISGB | Gil Davis in Albuquerque | Mon Aug 17 1992 16:34 | 6 |
| Givens was on Larry King Live a few weeks ago and I caught about 10
minutes of it. He seemed to have an evangelistic style that really got
you worked up. After checking this note, I think I'll go buy the book.
A lot of what I heard in the 10 minutes made real sense....
|
67.12 | New money mgt services. | CSCMA::LABAK | | Sun Jan 24 1993 11:24 | 7 |
| Anyone attend the free Charles Givens seminar in Worcester MA. this
weekend? My brother attended and said that he is now offering some
money management services. Anyone sign up?
Rick L.
|
67.13 | | VINO::ESCHOTT | | Mon Jan 25 1993 09:19 | 2 |
| I believe his organization has always offered those services. Buy
his book, that's all you should need....
|
67.14 | Buy the book! Don't purchase anything more! | PACKED::PACKED::PERIQUET | Dennis Periquet | Mon Feb 01 1993 10:48 | 9 |
|
I agree with .-1 100%. Please just buy the book! I bought the tapes,
video, etc, when I was "financially an infant". They cost about $500
or less depending on if you get a discount. Everything in the tapes
and notebook is in the books you can buy at the bookstore. There are
also dozens of good books you can buy for cheaper than what you'll
spend on his materials.
Dennis
|
67.15 | Givens Organization | AOSG::AFD | | Tue Mar 16 1993 16:17 | 9 |
| In the book Financial Self Defense, Givens refers to the Charles J
Givens organization and gives a phone number to call if you want to
join. All it says that you get is a monthly newsletter.
Has anyone joined his organization?
What does it cost and what do you get?
Is it worth it?
- Al
|
67.16 | GIVENS INFORMATION IN THE NEWS | WFOV11::CERVONE | | Mon May 10 1993 11:02 | 90 |
| JUST A WORD OF CAUTION
Hi Fellow noters
Last week in the Union News here in the Springfield area there was an
article about Charles J. Givens Jr. It was titled:
"Wealth without risk" guru leaves his followers in lurch
It proceeded to describe the situation of a married couple which attended the
seminar in July 1989, sponsored by C J Givevns Jr. and that they believed they
were building a life. Ron then a factory worker earned $33,000 in Clear
Rapids, Iowa. His wife Sally stayed at home with the kids.
They didn't see the master himself, but heard the clone - son Charles III,
billed as "following in his fathers footsteps as America's leading educator."
Inspired by Charles III's motivational talk, and by the dream of building
wealth, Ron and Sally proceeded to join the CJG organization for $400 and get
its finical books and tapes. Following its advice, the couple canceled their
$20,000 uninsured motorist policy - derided by Givens as "auto insurance you
don't need" (even though it was costing them just $8.40 a year). They also
decided to let a $50,000 cash value universal life insurance lapse (it cost
$396 a year, including a $50,000 term rider for the wife Sally). Givens has
called universal life "without exception, deceptive."
Today Ron is dead, killed in an auto accident by a man who was driving
uninsured. The wife Sally was left with around $55,000 on term insurance
benefit from the husbands employer to raise three children. Last month a jury
in Cedar Rapids decided that the family had been victims of fraudulent
misrepresentation by both the Givenses and their organization. The next part
of the trial coming up in May 12, will determine what the defendants will have
to pay. Givens testified on the stand that if the family followed his
strategies correctly, they'd have been ahead. When they dropped their other
insurance policy they should have replaced it with additional term insurance.
The jurors, however, found that both Givens, father and son, weren't
qualified to serve as expert insurance advisers and had made false statements
about the family's policy. Charles III, they found, failed to disclose that
their existing life insurance should be kept until new policies were obtained.
Their lawyer says that that level of detail normally wouldn't be provided in
the initial lecture. Whether the Givens appeal, he adds, depends on what the
jury decides in May.
One reason the family relied so strongly on Givens Jr's advice to drop
their coverage, Sally testified, is the rags to riches story he tells about
his past. He claims that as a young man, he made three separate million
dollar fortunes - one in a music-business conglomerate, one in stocks and one
in a luxurious yacht club. He lost them all, he says, because of bad advice
from financial professionals. He says that when he made his forth and final
fortune - in "leveraged business and real-estate investments" - he retired in
order to spend his time teaching others how to succeed.
The Iowa jurors concluded that the story was false. Givens' former partner
in the music business, as well as the person who tried (and failed) to sell
him land for his yacht club, both testified that no million dollar fortune
existed nor, for that matter, did a functioning conglomerate or club. Givens
conceded at the trial that "a large part" of his wealth had in fact come from
selling get-rich seminars and literature. His lawyer says that, as a result
of the jury's decision, Givens will now say "I lost everything I had three
times," instead of saying he lost $1 million.
Uninsured motorist insurance pays if you're hit by an uninsured driver
who's at fault. Givens' rap on these policies is that they're "duplicate
coverage" high priced (if you call an $8.40 expenditure a high price) and
waste of money. Supposedly, the cost of your injuries will be covered by your
existing life, disability and health insurance. But few people have enough of
such coverage, especially to cover the risk of becoming disabled for life. In
Iowa, as in many other states an uninsured motorist policy covers other
economic losses, such as the lifetime income sally and the children have now
been deprived of.
Givens rap on universal life is that you'll make more money with a
combination of term insurance and other investments. Sometimes that's true
but sometimes not, and Givens doesn't discriminate. One thing for sure:
Givens can make money if you follow his advice. He advises his followers to
buy term policies and tax-deferred annuities through the Insurance Clearing
house, in which he has a financial interest.
Another lawsuit has been filed against Givens in Indiana, also by a
follower who canceled his uninsured motorist coverage and lived to regret it.
"Wealth without risk" is an empty promise, from a man who, the jury says,
hasn't been telling the whole truth.
Reprinted without permission
Frank
|
67.17 | Unbelievable | ZENDIA::SCHOTT | | Mon May 10 1993 11:18 | 15 |
| The man that died in the auto accident dropped his Universal
Life policy and failed to replace it with term (which is clearly
written in Givens' book). He had dropped his Universal Life
8 months before he was killed in the auto accident. You would
think that was enough time to get a new policy???
For those of you that don't know, Alan Press (president of
Guardian Life) and Charles Givens have been at each others throats
in Givens' newsletter and Press' newsletter for many months. Sounds
like Press finally got something he could go after Givens with...
Where's all the people that went to an investment seminar, put
money into funds and have lost some of it??? Can they sue too???
Lawyers.....
|
67.18 | To Tell the Truth | ASDG::WATSON | Discover America | Mon May 10 1993 13:36 | 8 |
|
I think the important aspect of this trial is not the blind faith
and lack of execution of Givens' "plan", or that a tragedy befell this
poor family but that Givens, like most other get-rich-with-me people
are mis-representing themselves and thier product. The FCC just ran
Dave Del Dotto off the air for "mis-representations" as well.
Bob
|
67.19 | | ZENDIA::SCHOTT | | Mon May 10 1993 14:17 | 4 |
| Ok folks. Who's a Givens member (past or present). Fess up.
Who's read his book(s)? Anyone find his information misrepresented?
I've only skimmed through a few of his books and found nothing
misreprented in it?
|
67.20 | This week in TIME [or was it Newsweek?] | CPDW::ROSCH | | Tue May 11 1993 18:37 | 4 |
| This weeks TIME [or is it Newsweek] has a GREAT story on Givens.
According to the story he's exaggerated his background [lied like hell]
and never did one-tenth of what he said he did, or so exaggerated his
life story that it bears no resemblence to reality.
|
67.21 | pay up,Charles! | CSC32::K_BOUCHARD | | Tue May 11 1993 19:13 | 6 |
| You've got to be really astute and want badly to succeed in order for
any advise given at such a seminar to be of any value. How many of
these hucksters make that clear right up front? Not many. That cuts in
to their profit. I personally hope the jury makes Givens pay a bundle!
Ken
|
67.22 | | MSBCS::HURLEY | | Fri Jan 28 1994 12:23 | 48 |
| I went to the "FREE" seminar held in Lowell Mass last night. I agree
that there is lots of info provided but I was shocked at the Price.
There package now which conists of I think it was 32 planning systems
for financial wealth comes to U READY...
$2,495
I have 19 of the topics written down so here they are..
1. Financial Library ( books, tapes etc.)
2. Six telephone hotlines to answer any question you have.
3. Success insight every month (monthly newsletter)
4. Family Financial Profile.
5. Personal Member Manager (A financial specialist who is assigned to
you)
6. Investment Analysis
7. Insurance Review
8. Mortgage refinance Analysis and Clearinghouse.
9. All three major credit reports.
10. Real estate workshops
11. business success symposiums
12 Financial Planning Career Seminars
13. Discont buying benefits Package
14. Tax preparation/tax planning (they do your taxes 1st three years)
15. His/her wills
16. Durable power of Attorney
17. living trusts
18. New member Activation kit.
19. Year statement of Accomplishment
The payment consist of a $395 down and $175 per month for 1 year. They
$2495 covers you for 3 years. If you want to remain a memeber after the
3rd year the charge is $25 per year.
They do have a money back gaurentee that stats that if they can not
save you $100 per month of what your expenses are now that the will
give you back the $2495 after using there methods for 25 months.
Sorry for any typo's in this reply but my fingers are going as fast as
they can..
So what are the thoughts out there now??
|
67.23 | | CADSYS::CADSYS::BENOIT | | Fri Jan 28 1994 12:44 | 3 |
| Given's is currently under indictment regarding this program....walk away.
michael
|
67.24 | | MSBCS::HURLEY | | Fri Jan 28 1994 12:52 | 1 |
| Why is he under indictment with this program?
|
67.25 | | CADSYS::CADSYS::BENOIT | | Fri Jan 28 1994 12:55 | 7 |
| apprently for not honoring the money back guarantee. The "trained" consultants
were trained to stall the customers untill after the time period for refunds
were up. This report was on the radio just the other day. Does anyone know
if there is a place to call to find more "offical" news...ie. consumer affairs
office or something?
/michael
|
67.26 | | CADSYS::CADSYS::BENOIT | | Fri Jan 28 1994 13:17 | 5 |
| oh, and the other thing I remember was that he mis-represented how he made his
fortune....apparently he's made most of his money.....you guessed it....selling
the Charles J. Givens finanial program!
/mtb
|
67.27 | | ZENDIA::FERGUSON | Red X | Fri Jan 28 1994 13:42 | 3 |
| try calling the better bus. bureau for the city where that place is... i've
done this for 'questionable' companies in the past...
|
67.28 | | MSBCS::HURLEY | | Mon Jan 31 1994 09:17 | 6 |
| Question: Does somebody have a ball park figure what it would cost to
go out and get a will and a trust drawn up? This is part of his package
and I'm trying to weigh everything before I decide. I'll admit I'm
playing with fire at them moment as I have no will or trust and I do
have a wife and 2 kids. Its on the top of my "list to do things" this
year.
|
67.29 | Do the will(s) no matter what | TLE::JBISHOP | | Mon Jan 31 1994 09:32 | 11 |
| A simple will, along the lines of "all to my wife" runs
about $100 or less; simple trusts around $300.
If your guru is advising more complex arrangements, then
the cost will go up.
By the way, it's worth asking for a better rate if you're
doing two wills (husband and wife) and a trust at the same
time. Quantity discount sometimes works!
-John Bishop
|
67.30 | Don't fall for his "dream-selling" pitch ! | BAYES::MITTAL | | Mon Jan 31 1994 13:50 | 19 |
|
Given's tapes and advisors will not offer you much more than the books
he has in the market. Get them from your library and go through them.
Remember that his advice is extremely aggressive and in some instances
(as some people have claimed) pushes the boundries of the law.
His newsletter is mostly a 6-8 page description of how his beautiful
wife is the object of everyone's envy and how how he lives his life as
a fairy tale ... (just my opinion; and I am not kidding). His wife also
writes articles which educate you on things like how long should your
tie be and how it should match with the type of collar on your designer
suit.
You would be much better off investing $2K in a go mutual fund
and buying a few books with the remaining $0.5K or so ! Just my
opinion.
Nitin
|
67.31 | DO NOT BUY FROM GIVENS | TLE::PERIQUET | Dennis Periquet, DEC BASIC compiler development | Tue Feb 01 1994 13:36 | 36 |
|
All of the Givens materials are O V E R P R I C E D -- I know, I
bought them. Long ago, I knew nothing about finances and wanted
very much to make more money or to be able to say "Yes, I invest".
I bought his binder with investment information in it including
some cassette tapes and a video tape. They were useful. The cost
was about ~$500. I said that I'll buy it if I could make my money
back -- I did and then some. Then I went to the bookstore and
saw his books (about ~30 a piece) and found that everything I
learned in the ~$500 package I could have learned from the books.
I called the hotline (always very busy and hard to get through).
I paid the membership $20 quarterly (conveniently taken from your
checking account automatically); these got me nothing. After two
quarters, I became an inactive member. I no longer receive the
newsletter or pay the quarterly $20.
DO NOT buy anything from this organization. You can get the info
elsewhere (as noted in the previous replies). The only added value
of the binder is the cassette tapes you can listen to on your way
to work (if you commute a lot, this is very, very useful). I think
I got my money's worth out of it only because I was able to listen
while I drive.
If anyone wants the tapes, I will sell them at a fraction of the
cost -- I no longer need them. But, again, I recommend only the
books -- and please understand the information before you take
his advice. For example, he will say make your deductible on your
car insurance the maximum; if you cannot afford the large deductible,
don't do it! Again, make sure you understand the implications of
his advice before doing anything. And again, don't buy anything from
this organization.
Dennis
|