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7 Tips To Avoid Costly Surprises When Travelling Abroad
Author: Zahid Saddique

==> Try to buy your vacation travel package from a business you know.

If possible, deal with businesses that belong to professional associations such as the American Society of Travel Agents, the National Tour Association or the United States Tour Operators Association. If you're not familiar with a company, get its complete name, address and local telephone number.

==> Be cautious if the names of the seller and travel provider differ.


You may be dealing with a telemarketer who has no responsibility to you after the sale. And be wary of ads in the newspaper, on the Internet or that you receive by unsolicited fax that offer deeply discounted vacations. These "deals" often contain hidden costs or don't tell you that you may have to attend a sales presentation to qualify for the discount or the travel. Avoid buying from a firm that wants to send a courier for your payment or asks you to send your payment by overnight delivery. The business may be trying to avoid detection and charges of mail or wire fraud.

==> Verify arrangements with your travel agent before you pay.

Get the details of your vacation in writing and a copy of the cancellation and refund policies. Ask if the business has insurance and whether you should buy cancellation insurance. Get the names, addresses and telephone numbers for the lodgings, airlines and cruise ships you'll be using. Don't accept vague terms such as "major hotels" or "luxury cruise ships." Call to verify specific reservations, too.

==> Use a credit card to make your purchase.

If you don't get what you paid for, you may be able to dispute the charges with your credit card company. Some telemarketers may claim they need your account information for identification or verification. They don't. Your account number should be used only to bill you for goods and services.

==> Be wary of prepaying for long-term arrangements.

Timeshares, campgrounds or travel clubs may offer to sell membership vacation accommodations for five years or more, or until you resell your interest. Unless you're certain you'll stay healthy, both physically and financially, and that the company selling the memberships will stay in business, prepaid vacations may not be right for you. In addition, annual membership and maintenance fees may rise. If the seller claims the fees will stay the same, beware. Beautiful properties today may be run-down in five or 10 years without sufficient maintenance. If you decide to buy a timeshare or membership in a vacation club, be aware that resales are difficult, if not impossible, because there's no secondary market. As for timeshares as investments: they rarely appreciate in value.

==> Learn the vocabulary.

"You have been specially selected to receive our SPECTACULAR LUXURY DREAM VACATION offer" doesn't mean you'll get a free vacation. It means you'll be offered an opportunity to pay for a trip that may fit your idea of luxury - or not. "Subject to availability" means you may not get the accommodations you want when you want them. "Blackout periods" are blocks of dates, usually around holidays or peak season, when no discount travel is available.

==> Watch out for "instant travel agent" offers.

Companies may offer to sell you identification that will "guarantee" you discounted rates. These companies have no control over discounts. Only suppliers of travel - cruise lines, hotel companies, car rental companies, or airlines - can decide to extend professional courtesies, and to whom.

For more information and resources related to travel check out our web sites at http://www.Finest-Cruises.com and http://www.Greatest-Travel-Resources.com.

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News For Time Share Condo Or Other Time Share News:

Blaggers : Adventures Inside the Sun-Kissed but Murky World of Holiday Timeshare
Customer Review: Nice cage but no bird
An amusing read about the misadventures of a Time Share OPC [ off premises contact ] mainly over in Tenefife, Spain. The main character from England tells about some of the different ways he talks vacationers into taking timeshare tours, and the compensation for each tour taken . It seems that they make good money and spend it fast as well with alot of partying. Partly and probably due to the high stress nature of the job. Not too much, however, on how timeshares work, who buys them, the role of sales, trading, the long term advantages etc.
Customer Review: you�ve GOT to read it...
I GUARANTEE YOU WILL NOT BE ABLE TO PUT THIS BOOK DOWN! BARRY IS ONE OF THOS SHIFTY CHARACTER THAT YOU GO OUT OF YOUR WAY TO AVOID ON HOLIDAY - BUT YOU HAVE TO ADMIT YOU MUST HAVE BEEN CURIOUS AS TO HOW THE HELL THEY EARN A LIVING? HE�LL TAKE YOU THROUGH THE HIGH AND THE LOWS OF THE MURKY WORLD OF TIMESHARE. BARRY - THANKS FOR A FANTASTIC READ!

Are timeshares set to break out - or break down?(Column) : An article from: Cornell Hotel & Restaurant Administration Quarterly
This digital document is an article from Cornell Hotel & Restaurant Administration Quarterly, published by Cornell University on October 1, 1998. The length of the article is 776 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

From the supplier: Timeshare companies that can cut sales expenses, develop second-time purchasers and respond to the risk of resales may see auspicious future prospects. Nonetheless, the industry continues to be unproven by an economic decline, said Schroders analysts. Vacation-ownership-interval points provide members greater adaptibility than the more typical method of swapping units of time.

Citation Details
Title: Are timeshares set to break out - or break down?(Column)
Author: Glenn Withiam
Publication: Cornell Hotel & Restaurant Administration Quarterly (Refereed)
Date: October 1, 1998
Publisher: Cornell University
Page: 9

Article Type: Column

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Handbook for timeshare buyers

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