Thursday, August 16, 2012

THE COMMON MISCONCEPTIONS ABOUT BBB ACCREDITATION


THE COMMON MISCONCEPTIONS ABOUT BBB ACCREDITATION

Hi folks, this is Eric Macklin again. Some of you have probably read my recent Blogs promoting the self-employment/work from home opportunities that are being offered by the Motor Club of America. Both of those blogs were written from a purely experiential perspective. I tasted the fruit, determined it was good, and then decided to share it. However, I now see that a lot of good and needy people are missing out on this great opportunity simply because they are stuck on the fact that their personal research fail to find anything confirming Better Business Bureau (BBB) accreditation for Motor Club of America. For that reason, and to assist some of my Motor Club of America co-workers who find a need to claim BBB accreditation, I find it necessary to write this blog because falsely advertising BBB accreditation is against advertising and licensing laws.

Unlike many people think, the BBB is NOT a Governmental regulatory agency. It is simply a private sector organization that rates a company’s credibility by the manner in which that company relates to its consumers and handles their complaints.

Now, as far as BBB accreditation goes, a company must pay BBB for accreditation and in return must make an oath to uphold the standards of integrity, fair dealing, and several other Codes of business practice that the accreditation is based on. It is altogether a company’s decision as to whether it wants or needs BBB accreditation. Some companies might already have integrity and fair dealing standards built within their infrastructure and don’t need the BBB to validate their reputations.

So, just because a company is not BBB accredited that doesn’t mean the company is a scam or untrustworthy.  To determine that, you must consult the BBB’s “rating” report on that particular company. Even companies that haven’t applied for BBB accreditation are still rated by the BBB, and the rating is based on how the company conducts business and deal with consumer issues and complaints.

If you go to the BBB website and input Motor Club of America and its address you will see that even though the company is not BBB accredited, there has been zero consumer complaints filed against it.

The BBB website even tells you that the only reason some businesses are not BBB accredited is because they haven’t sought accreditation. And there is no legal or business requirement that a company seek accreditation in order to be a trustworthy company.

            For all of you out there who are allowing this accreditation issue to stand between you and financial success, I have inserted a link here so you can see for yourselves the information that the BBB has posted concerning the Motor Club of America:
http://join-mca.com/emacklin /mackchill327@gmail.com/www.facebook.com/eric.macklin.54