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Sweepstakes: Win a Car or Get a Call from a Telemarketer?

The Truth Behind Car Sweepstakes

By Janet Clarke, published Jan 10, 2006
Published Content: 150  Total Views: 232,372  Favorited By: 4 CPs
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Rating: 3.1 of 5
Have you ever been shopping in a mall and walk pass a brand new car that has a sign “Win a Free Car” on its windshield? Then next to the brand new car there is a booth where you can fill out a contest form and enter to win the car. The whole scheme behind this is that when a person fills out that entry form they aren’t really thinking about what will happen to the information on it. Instead, the applicant of the entry form is too excited thinking about winning the new car instead of anything else. What a lot of people don’t know about car sweepstakes is that most of them are just big advertisement ploys for telemarketers that try to sell people timeshares.

When people fill out entry forms to win a free car or a free trip they are giving there information to telemarketers. The information that most entry forms ask for are a person’s name, phone number, and address. The entry forms are then collected and distributed to telemarketers. Usually 2-3 months after a person has filled out the entry form they get a call from the telemarketer. The telemarketer usually congratulates the person on entering and tells them that they can win the trip or win one out of four prizes if they attend a meeting at a location that the telemarketer picks. There are actually a lot of people that decide to go to the meeting because the telemarketer persuades the person in going. The meeting that the telemarketer convinces a person to go to is actually a ploy for advertisers to sell timeshares. When a person goes to one of these meetings they usually go there and a speaker(s) comes out and starts advertising timeshares in hopes someone at the meeting will be persuaded to buy one.

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Who cares about crticizing someone's writing style when they were telling an important truth. What Janet wrote happened to me. I filled out the card to win a free car and started getting phone calls from TrendWest telemarketers telling me I won some really grat gifts and cash. I kew what was going on because my wife and I got sucked into a "90 minute" Timeshare presentation and believed that we were buying somthing of value. &17,000 check from our savings account. For us it never seemed t owork out so we tried to sell it several times for $500 fee each time, and nothig happened. Not a call. How do you get out of a contract that has you obligated to pay annual fees for the rest of your life? If you stop paing they ruin your credit and can garnish wages or put a lien on peoples homes. I think someone in this conversation is involved in the timeshare industry and does not want to hear an inconienient truth. Good work Janet Clarke.

Posted on 01/06/2007 at 9:01:00 PM

 
Poorly written, author should rewrite. Paragraphs ramble. Shorten sentences, use more periods, don't keep making the same point over and over (example: people are called and will have to listen to sales pitch about timeshares). Make that point once, then move to another point, etc. Whole piece could have been two or three short paragraphs, that's all.

Posted on 05/10/2006 at 9:05:00 AM

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