The “owner” will be invisible because he or she
does not exist.
Unless fraud is involved, I believe this practice to be entirely legal. Let’s suppose your name is Anita B. Chavez, Golda A.Goldstein, or Bashiyra Binte Nur Um Lifti. You resolve to start a business via the Internet, and you
decide that, in the particular fi eld you have chosen, a generic-type man’s name would look better.
First, choose a three-word business name with the same initials as yours. Then invent a man’s name with the same initials. For example:
. . . . . Your actual name: Anita B. Chavez
. . . . . Bank account name: A. B. Chavez
. . . . . Business name: Awesome Birthday Cards
. . . . . “Owner” name: Albert B. Caldwell
. . . . .
Checks made out to: A.B.C.
The opposite is true, of course, if you are a man who wishes to sell merchandise that will appeal to women. Choose a woman’s name that will seem best to go with the product.
The above information is taken verbatim from SKIP COLLEGE: Go into business for yourself. This e-book has many more tips and tricks for those are--or hope to be--self-employed.
Labels: anonymous bank account, business name, go into business, nom de plume, pen name, skip college
Privacy blog post by JJ Luna at 12:20 AM
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So says Hernan Castillo, 30, who owes $30,000 in student loans and $5,200 in credit card debt. (He has an accounting degree but can't find a job in that field, so he works in a warehouse in California.)
“Sometimes,” he says,
“I wish I had gone to prison instead of college. At least I would have learned a trade or two and started being independent once I got out."
How things have changed since I entered the University of Minnesota in 1946! What ever happened to
working your way through college? What ever happened to
low tuition? What ever happened to
paying cash or doing without? What ever happened to
common sense?
In 1949, about to enter my senior year, I decided that, for personal reasons, I would not, after all, be able to spend the rest of my life working for the U.S. U.S. Forest Service. Common sense dictated that there was therefore no reason to pursue a degree. I dropped out—one of the better decisions I’ve made over a long lifetime.
Note to parents:
Your son or daughter may be better off in a trade school or a two-year tech school. But even if you believe they must borrow money and must get a degree, take out a $17 insurance policy. Order, read, and study (with your kids) SKIP COLLEGE: Go Into Business for Yourself.
1. On or before next Monday, May 25, 2009, order
SKIP COLLEGE.
2. Read and discuss it with your teens.
3. If you do not think it may change the lives of your children, send me an e-mail not later than June 25, 2009. Tell me what part you didn’t like.
4. I will then not only return your money but will send you a free e-report as well — either Crash-Proof or Least-Worst.
To paraphrase Hernan Castillo: “Not reading SKIP COLLEGE might be the biggest mistake of your life!”
Labels: education, go into business, hernan castillo, prison instead of college, skip college, trade school
Privacy blog post by JJ Luna at 12:12 AM
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