Home > Store > Finance & Investing > Personal Finance
Your Credit Score: How to Fix, Improve, and Protect the 3-Digit Number that Shapes Your Financial Future, 2nd Edition
- By Liz Weston
- Published Jan 25, 2007 by FT Press. Part of the Liz Pulliam Weston series.
- Copyright 2007
- Dimensions: 6x9
- Pages: 224
- Edition: 2nd
- Book
- ISBN-10: 0-13-225458-1
- ISBN-13: 978-0-13-225458-8
Register your product to gain access to bonus material or receive a coupon.
Product Author Bios
Liz Pulliam Weston is a personal finance columnist whose twice-weekly columns for MSN Money reach more than ten million people each month. She’s also the author of the Q&A column “Money Talk,” which appears in the Los Angeles Times and other newspapers nationwide.
Weston’s regular TV and radio appearances include NPR’s Talk of the Nation and All Things Considered, American Public Media’s Marketplace Money, and NBC’s Today. For several years, she was a weekly commentator on CNBC's Power Lunch. Her advice on credit and finance has been featured in Consumer Reports, Marie Claire, Parents, Real Simple, Woman’s World, The Boston Globe, The Chicago Tribune, Associated Press, Forbes.com, and numerous other publications.
Formerly a personal finance writer for the Los Angeles Times, Weston has won numerous reporting awards. She was part of a three-member writing team that won a Gerald Loeb Award for coverage of the Comparator Systems penny stock scandal in
1997. She was a member of the Anchorage Daily News team that won a Pulitzer Prize for Meritorious Public Service in 1989 for coverage of the alcoholism epidemic among native Alaskans.
Weston is author of Deal With Your Debt: The Right Way to Manage Your Bills and Pay Off What You Owe (Pearson Prentice Hall, 2006). Her advice on budgeting is featured in The Expert’s Guide to the Baby Years.
A graduate of the certified financial planner training program at University of California, Irvine, she lives in Los Angeles with her husband and daughter. She can be reached via her Web site, www.lizweston.com.
“A great credit score can help you finish rich! Liz Pulliam Weston gives solid, easy-to-understand advice about how to improve your credit fast. Read this book and prosper.”
–David Bach, bestselling author of The Automatic Millionaire and The Automatic Millionaire Homeowner
“Excellent book! Insightful, well written, and surprisingly interesting. Liz Pulliam Weston has done an outstanding job demystifying an often intimidating and frustrating topic for the benefit of all consumers.”
–Eric Tyson, syndicated columnist and bestselling author of
Personal Finance for Dummies
“No one makes complex financial information easy to understand like Liz Pulliam Weston. Her straight-talk and wise advice are invaluable to anyone with a credit card or check book–and that's just about all of us.”
–Lois P. Frankel, Ph.D., author of Nice Girls Don’t Get the Corner Office and Nice Girls Don’t Get Rich
“In a country where consumers increasingly pay more when they have bad credit, Liz Pulliam Weston’s book provides excellent tips and advice on ways to improve your credit history and raise your credit score. If you just apply one or two of her insightful suggestions, you’ll save many times the cost of this book.”
–Ilyce R. Glink, financial reporter, talk show host, and bestselling author of
100 Questions Every First-Time Home Buyer Should Ask
“Your credit score can save you money or cost you money–sometimes a lot of money. Yet, most people don’t even know their scores, much less know how to make them better. Liz Pulliam Weston can help you fix that. In this easy-to-understand guide you’ll learn how to make sure your score helps you get the best deal on loans and insurance. You can’t afford not to read it.”
–Gerri Detweiler, consumer advocate and founder of UltimateCredit.com
Your credit score. It’s just three numbers. But it dictates whether you’ll get credit, and what you’ll pay. Insurers use it to set premiums. Landlords use it to make renting decisions. You need to understand it. In Your Credit Score, Second Edition, MSN Money personal finance journalist Liz Pulliam Weston gives you up-to-the-minute answers you can trust—and a proven action plan for building your credit, fixing it, and maintaining it, starting today!
Weston has updated this national bestseller with extensive new information, including an inside look at the new VantageScore credit scoring system, “Fast Fixes” that actually work, and powerful tips for first-time borrowers.
You’ll discover how your scores are affected by everything from applying for loans to closing accounts...how to cope with a credit crisis, and bounce back from bad credit or bankruptcy...how credit counseling really affects your score...why paying old debts can actually damage your score...how to reduce your exposure to identity theft, and much more!
Acknowledgments xvii
About the Author xix
Chapter 1: Why Your Credit Score Matters 1
Chapter 2: How Credit Scoring Works 13
Chapter 3: VantageScore–A Revolution or Just More of the Same? 29
Chapter 4: Improving Your Score–The Right Way 37
Chapter 5: Credit Scoring Myths 57
Chapter 6: Coping with a Credit Crisis 69
Chapter 7: Rebuilding Your Score After a Credit Disaster 89
Chapter 8: Identity Theft and Your Credit 111
Chapter 9: Emergency! Fixing Your Credit Score Fast 139
Chapter 10: Insurance and Your Credit Score 147
Chapter 11: Keeping Your Score Healthy 163
Index 179
|
92 of 104 people found the following review helpful
By
This review is from: Your Credit Score: How to Fix, Improve, and Protect the 3-Digit Number that Controls Your Financial Future (Paperback)
L.A. Times and MSN Money columnist Liz Pulliam Weston knows money and she knows credit, and in this information-packed, no-nonsense book she gives you just about everything you need to know about that "open sesame," that shibboleth of numbers, that Holy Grail of liquidity--your credit score!First, what is your credit score and why is it important? It's a three digit number ranging from 150 to 950 (p. 16) that creditors use to determine whether you are a good risk. If it is low, they won't lend you any money, meaning you can't buy a car or a boat or a house unless you pay cash; and if it is somewhere in the middle, you'll pay higher interest rates than those with a higher score. Second, how can you find out what your score is? As Weston explains there are three major credit bureaus, Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion that calculate "real" credit scores (either FICO or NextGen). You can contact them over the Net or by phone (Weston gives addresses and phone... Read more
97 of 110 people found the following review helpful
By Eric William (Michigan) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Your Credit Score: How to Fix, Improve, and Protect the 3-Digit Number that Controls Your Financial Future (Paperback)
This book only restates what the creedit industry wants you to know. It does NOT give you the truth about many aspects of the credit industry that you need to know.I am not a lawyer, but I have won cases against the three credit reporting agencies. They paid me over $7,000, and it only required $100 of fees on my part. To do this I needed GOOD information -- which I did not get from this book. The author Liz Pulliam Weston did not do any hard-nosed investigation to write this book. She has taken the credit industry PR, which is NOT an unbiased source. Most other books start with what Weston provides, and then gives you the other story. What people really need to know about your credit score, how it can be harmed, and how you can get the reporting agancies to fix errors. With all due respect, please do not buy this book. Look further. There are BETTER books. I suggest you look at the ones written by Privacy Times (a great unbiased book) or... Read more
31 of 34 people found the following review helpful
By
This review is from: Your Credit Score: How to Fix, Improve, and Protect the 3-Digit Number that Controls Your Financial Future (Paperback)
I picked up this book at the Airport, read it on the plane and then immediately ran my FICO - which was a very sorry 521! Using Weston's advice I was able to get to a much more respectable 680 and rising (over a nine-month period)! For the price, it is a much better guide than those kits (including Suzy's) offered on the Internet.
|
› See all 26 customer reviews...
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments xvii
About the Author xix
Chapter 1: Why Your Credit Score Matters 1
Chapter 2: How Credit Scoring Works 13
Chapter 3: VantageScore–A Revolution or Just More of the Same? 29
Chapter 4: Improving Your Score–The Right Way 37
Chapter 5: Credit Scoring Myths 57
Chapter 6: Coping with a Credit Crisis 69
Chapter 7: Rebuilding Your Score After a Credit Disaster 89
Chapter 8: Identity Theft and Your Credit 111
Chapter 9: Emergency! Fixing Your Credit Score Fast 139
Chapter 10: Insurance and Your Credit Score 147
Chapter 11: Keeping Your Score Healthy 163
Index 179
Downloadable Sample Chapter
Book
This product currently is not for sale.
Get access to thousands of books and training videos about technology, professional development and digital media from more than 40 leading publishers, including Addison-Wesley, Prentice Hall, Cisco Press, IBM Press, O'Reilly Media, Wrox, Apress, and many more. If you continue your subscription after your 30-day trial, you can receive 30% off a monthly subscription to the Safari Library for up to 12 months. That's a total savings of $199.

