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Home > > Starwood Preferred Guest Business Credit Card

Starwood Preferred Guest Business Credit Card

Earn 10,000 Starpoints with your first purchase - that's good for up to 3 free nights!
Earn 1 Starpoint for virtually every dollar you spend on the Card and double Starpoints at participating Starwood hotels and resorts
Redeem at over 825 participating Starwood hotels and resorts worldwide with no blackout dates. Starwood hotels include Sheraton®, Westin®, W Hotels®, St. Regis®, Luxury Collection®, Le Meridien®, and Four Points by Sheraton®.
Transfer to over 30 frequent flyer programs, most on a one-to-one basis.
Save on business purchases at companies like FedEx® and Hertz®
Winner of 2006 Freddie Awards: Voted Best Travel Rewards Credit Card by frequent travelers.

ADDITIONAL STARWOOD PREFERRED GUEST BUSINESS CREDIT CARD BENEFITS
Turn Starpoints into miles with over 30 frequent flyer programs3
Complimentary enrollment in the Starwood Preferred Guest program
Fee-free Additional Cards for employees — earn Starpoints on the business purchases they make4

OPEN FROM AMERICAN EXPRESS
OPENSM the small business team at American Express is all about small business. It provides you the resources to help you run your business, including:
Financing
Get unlimited fee-free Additional Cards, 2.9% APR for purchases in the first six months, and pay no annual fee.

Savings
Save at AT&T, FedEx, Hertz®, 1-800-FLOWERS.COM® and more by using your Business Card and see the savings on your statement. No coupons or codes are needed and the savings are in addition to other discounts your business may already receive.5

Online management
Manage your account with Summary of Accounts and track charges with Expense Management Reports.

Community
Chat, pose questions, get insights from other small business owners, and attract new business.

Advice
Ask an expert a question, use an online tool, and read articles by other business owners.
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DID YOU KNOW?

If you're one of those lucky people who have never missed a single credit card or loan repayment, then you don't need to worry about the term ‘adverse credit'. In this article, we are discussing the ins and outs of the term ‘adverse credit', something that describes people who have defaulted on credit repayments to a significant extent. The terms ‘sub-prime and ‘poor credit' are also used to describe the same situation. What we are here to ascertain is: what do you have to do to be called an adverse credit customer, and where does the lender get their information about you?

To start off, we will discuss the credit reference agencies, companies such as Experian and Equifax who collect and store information about all your financial dealings, and sell this information to lenders. Other parties that can see your credit history are insurance companies, banks, landlords, government agencies and employers, they are allowed, by law, to see your past financial details.

They know a lot about you, you may be surprised at just how much. Apart from the obvious (your name, date of birth, social security details), they also have your addresses (past and present), records of all the jobs you have had and with who, your entry on the voter's roll, your mortgage, credit card, loan and hire purchase details, records of any unpaid County Court judgements, and most surprisingly, details on all the loan and credit card applications you have ever made.

So where do the credit agencies get their information from? They get it from the Public Records offices and the financial institutions themselves – banks, credit card companies etc. Once you've got a bank account, you're on the computer records and the credit agencies start collecting information about you.

Experian, Equifax and the other agencies also offer another service to the lenders, they have the facility to give you a credit score, using the lender's own criteria to score your eligibility for credit. If you don't score high enough, you may not get the credit you have requested, which is why your credit score is so important. The credit score works by matching your financial details against different criteria. You could score well for having met all your credit card repayments for example, but score badly because you have moved address or employer a number of times. In any case, the higher score, the more likely you will get the credit you asked for.

The eventual credit score is providing an estimate on your eligibility to receive the credit, making the general assumption that your future repayment habits will be the same as your past. As extra insurance, they also compare your information with other applicants with similar characteristics as you, to see how they fared. In the end, the decision whether you can be offered credit is automated, and based on statistical analysis. If your score is close to the pass level, then the lender may choose to offer you a lower level of credit, or a higher interest rate.

All the lenders have different ideas about what is and isn't acceptable, and some will refuse your application without giving you a reason why. It's their decision, and it is not up to the credit reference agencies, they merely collate the information in the first place. It is the lender who gives you the label of ‘adverse credit' customer.

We have collated here a list (in no particular order) of the situations that will, either alone or with others, make it difficult for you get to credit with a lender: if you're behind on payments for a loan, credit card or mortgage, if you have made a few late payments on the above, outstanding and unpaid County Court or High Court Judgements, if you are not on the electoral roll at the address you gave on your application form, and if you have made more than a usual number of loans and credit card applications. Two situations would normally result in automatic refusal: having had your home repossessed, and recent bankruptcy.

If you are aware of any of the aforementioned problems in your recent credit history, then don't be surprised if your application for credit is turned down, especially by the big, mainstream lenders. Some of the mainstream lenders are a bit more forgiving about mortgages, especially if you already have a mortgage and are meeting your repayments.

This article should contain most of the information you need to know about ‘adverse credit', and help you understand what the lenders consider to be a bad risk, and why. If the worst happens, and you find yourself unable to get credit because of an adverse credit history, then you will probably have to seek credit from a sub prime lender. If you fit their criteria, they will offer you credit, but it will be more expensive.

The most important thing to remember is: always keep up do your loan, credit card and mortgage repayments, don't pay late or even more importantly, don't build up arrears. The financial consequences of getting behind could be both extensive, and expensive.

Finding information about government grants online is not hard. There are many websites claiming to provide you with all that you need to know to get the grants that are out there. But, in most cases, you’ll need to pay a fee to access it. But, before you head off to grab a credit card to do just that, do you know just what these funds are and how they can be used? For many, this is an area where there are funds that could be used that just are not taken advantage of because not everyone knows they exist.

What Are They?

Government grants are awards of financial assistance. They are provided in the form of money and by the federal government. These funds are to be used for a specific purpose, but those purposes range widely. Grants do have one wonderful feature about them. Normally, you will not need to pay a grant back. It is simply a way of providing funds to you to get your education or your business off the ground. You will find that the government is the best location to find a wide range of grant opportunities. While in financially difficult times other scholarships and grants may not be available, in cases of the federal government, they will be.

There are many types of grants available. Most of them fall under two major categories. For the college bound student, federal grants can provide the tuition, the lodging, the cost of supplies and other elements to the student. In most cases, only tuition will be covered. But, this is an excellent way for many individuals that qualify to get into a school that they could not otherwise afford.

The other method in which government grants is often used is through the development of business. Small businesses need funds to get moving. For those that are purchasing or getting started in a small business, government grants can provide you with the funds needed to get started, to buy products, assets or other necessary products.

While there are many qualifications and much competition for the grants that are available, there are fewer better ways to get the funds needed to get a start in life. And, government grant information can be found under the federal government’s website quite easily too.






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