July 15, 2009

Credit Proofreading: A Referral Strategy
Although Funding Suite introduced credit proofreading tools to the mortgage industry almost two years ago – its seems that it only recently caught on. I imagine that tightening credit requirements require mortgage originators to help more and more applicants legitimately and quickly raise credit scores.
This is impossible without good credit proofreading technology. I’m happy to see a lot more originators embracing these tools and using them to offer a valuable service to their applicants.
In a recent article published in The Niche Report magazine, I wrote about a strategy to significantly increase referral business by correctly positioning credit proofreading to each and every loan applicant. By the volume of e-mail I’ve already received, it appears to be the right strategy for these challenging times.
I’ve posted a copy of the article for you here.
Good luck and please e-mail or comment here with any success stories you may have.
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Funding Suite, credit proofreading, credit reports, mortgage broker | Tagged: credit proofreading, credit reports, credit rescoring, mortgage broker, rapid rescoring |
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Posted by Caped Crusader
July 19, 2008
In occasional fits of literal despondency, I question whether the world really needs another blog – especially one as banal as this one.
Yet, in the course of a typical business day I’m reminded how little mortgage professionals truly understand about credit and credit scoring. And naturally, if those in the business lack understanding, how much more the typical mortgage loan applicant. So once again, I find myself behind the keyboard pounding out banality, hoping to educate the world one blog at a time.
This month my company signed a rather large mortgage origination shop. This company is doing well in a very difficult market, and as I’ve come to know some of the executives, I can understand why. Loan applicants are treated with respect, and the company pays for all prequalifying expenses. The company has solidly trained loan officers and even an executive solely responsible for corporate strategy. Its an honor to be supplying their credit management software.
Yet, in an operation this adept, this talented and this experienced, I must admit I was not overly surprised to discover how little they knew about credit proofreading – and the legitimate process of credit rescoring. It’s a fact that 15% of this company’s loan applicants that walked out the door without a mortgage each month could have been approved. Why? The sad fact is that the loan officers had no idea that these applicants credit scores were calculated incorrectly due to errors in their credit files. Errors they could have resolved in less than three days – providing the applicant with an accurate, properly calculated credit score.
The very good news is that this mortgage origination shop now “gets it” – and they are rapidly embracing the credit proofreading concept. Top management is taking the time to learn how to use Funding Suite’s credit proofreading tools which instantly identify harmful credit errors. And they are creating business practices to teach their loan officers to properly communicate this new capacity to borrowers.
So it goes, that each month this firms loan applicants will be served by loan officers possessing state of the art credit proofreading tools. And each month, 15% more of them will qualify for a home mortgage.
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credit proofreading, credit reports, mortgage broker | Tagged: credit proofreading, credit reports, mortgage broker, mortgage loan, rapid rescoring |
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Posted by Caped Crusader
March 27, 2008
I’ve got a headache. Literally.
In a mortgage market that is arguably one of the most difficult we’ve seen in decades, you’d think today’s mortgage originators would use every available resource to increase their applicant’s qualifying ability. Too often however, they do nothing but order a credit file, glance at the scores and decline the applicant.
[Head throbbing]
For the past six months I’ve been talking with broker after broker in webinars, on the phone and via magazine articles about the simple and very real fact that FICO is punishing applicant credit scores because of errors and issues in their credit files. I could say the same thing this way: “Don’t trust the credit scores on your applicant’s credit report, their probably lower than they should be”. Yet in all this, it seems I’m the only one that’s learned anything and that being how true the saying, “old habits die hard”, which is to say they don’t really die at all.
Ok, so I’ve given my self a headache by beating my head against wall after wall – but I’m amped up on Advil, so here I go again. Mortgage qualifying depends (to a great extent) on the credit score. While the paper credit report reveals your applicant’s current credit scores, it doesn’t reveal the data used to calculate those scores. The credit report is a composite (merged data from three different sources) which makes it near impossible to understand how the account tradelines relate to the credit scores. But what we do know is that over 70 percent of the time credit scores are wrongfully lowered because of bad file data or the applicant’s improper use of available credit.
So what to do? Since the odds are that the scores you see on a printed credit report are lower than they rightfully should be, it would be helpful to know A) what the scores actually should be and B) what issues need be corrected. You can pour over the paper credit report for hours on end and never answer any of these questions. But, run the file through some good credit proofreading software and you’ll get your answers instantly. You see, you need software to sift through the data solely from TransUnion in order to understand where errors are pulling down its score. Ditto for Equifax and Experian. You can’t use the merged tradeline data in a printed report since it may be a mash-up of data from all three sources. When it comes to qualifying, paper credit reports aren’t enough.
The ironic thing about this… and perhaps the root cause of my headaches is that credit proofreading software doesn’t cost anything since these tools come free when you purchase a paper credit report. All it requires is a change of habit. Most mortgage originators connect to their credit agencies through loan management software like Calyx Point or Encompass, which only pass through a paper (PDF) credit file. Left behind are all the credit proofreading tools that can help them increase file accuracy and raise credit scores. This is the habit that needs breaking. Instead, order the credit file directly through the credit agency’s software so that you can see the true qualifying potential. Then retrieve the existing file into the loan management software (rather than ordering it). There is no extra cost to do this – and it doesn’t add much time to the process. It will however, help you qualify significantly more applicants.
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credit proofreading, credit reports, internet software, mortgage | Tagged: credit proofreading, credit reports, increase fico scores, rapid rescoring |
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Posted by Caped Crusader