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Like many people, you probably have heard or seen the John Cummuta "Debt to Wealth" commercial and wondered, “What’s the catch?” “Can it be true?” or “Is it a scam?” The reason you found this Web site is because your curiosity is piqued.
The course is produced by Nightingale-Conant, a company that for 40 years has produced similar products for heavy hitters like Zig Ziglar, Steven R. Covey and Tony Robbins. In that well-known group, the John Cummuta Debt to Wealth program has been a top seller for years.
The John Cummuta Debt to Wealth program will show you how to set financial goals you can attain that are at the same time reasonable. The basic strategy is to pay off debt in the shortest amount of time, using only the income you already make, by prioritizing payments.
The course is meant for the average consumer who is looking for a solid solution while not having to search the Internet to the ends of the World Wide Web to find it. A specific income number is not required to work towards freedom from debt. Anyone can be debt free using the John Cummuta Debt to Wealth program, which may take up to seven years, depending on the level of debt you have incurred, the producers claim. At the end, people who successfully complete the program will own all of their possessions outright, including their home.
The John Cummuta Debt to Wealth program does not work by itself, so it will only work for consumers willing to follow through with the entire program for however long it takes to complete.
“I remember when I received my first letter from a struggling couple who were deep in debt and considering divorce,” Cummuta writes on the company Web site. “Their decision to ‘come together’ one more time and give my program an honest try was a last-ditch effort to save their marriage and even their children's future. You can't imagine how wonderful it's been to keep in contact with them over the years and watch them follow the steps in my program and finally get out of debt. Their financial situation is now rock solid and their marriage is better than ever.
“I certainly wouldn't take credit for saving their marriage—because they did the work,” he writes. “Nor would I suggest that you wait until you're DEEP in debt before you take action or that my program is necessarily the best program for every person and every circumstance. But, if you have felt the strains of debt in your marriage or your family to ANY degree, I am pleading with you to not let it go any further.”
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