Buying Cell Phones
What you need to look for
when buying cell phones.
Well if you watch TV, or check the
newspaper and the ads that come through your email, then you
know that you just must have the newest, shiniest, smallest,
cell phones that have a 2 inch by 2 inch screen with 10 million
colors, and takes movie pictures!!! It must be so, that´s
what all of the ads tell us.
Well there is an old adage that says, "a lot of things were meant to sell, not to
buy". Its just maybe that newest,
brightest, etc, etc cell phone is one of them.
Lets go through a few things you should consider before
going to get one of the new cell phones.
- Coverage
- Monthly Cost
- Length of The Contract
OK, now that we have given the essentials a once over,
its time to look at what you really need in your cell
phones.
- Emergency Use Only
- Camera
- Text Message
- Call Waiting
- Caller ID
- Memory Storage
- No Roaming
- Number of Anytime Minutes
- Roll Over Minutes
When considering a cell phones the first thing you need to
look at is your coverage. You can have the smallest, brightest,
and anything else you can think of, but if it won't work where
you need it to work, then you've got a problem. Where do you
need it? At the office, the kid's school. Do you
travel out of town? Maybe have a small farm or lake
property. Your cell phones have to work where
you are going to use them, so before you purchase anything,
find out what the coverage is.
Monthly cost. You should look at all of the fine print. Make
sure you know how much you are going to be paying each month
for your coverage. If the carrier is giving you this great
cell phone if you take service "A", over service "B" or
"C", watch out. You may be able to go online and buy the
cell phone as a separate item. Yes, it may cost you a few
bucks, but that is only a one time charge, you may have to make
that monthly payment for your service contract for three or
four years just to get one of their free
cell phones.
Now most carriers offer free cell phones as part of the
contract, yes it may not be the latest and greatest, but it may
do all you need. Try for a low-cost contract with a short
term. You know they have specials on three or four times a
year. Six months from now you may be able to get better
coverage, better cell phones and pay less too.
How will you use cell phones? Do
you travel? If you stay local, why would you need nationwide
service? Is the phone only for emergencies when
traveling? Want to take pictures at the ball games or maybe
sell real estate. If so a camera may be great.
Do you really need call waiting and caller ID? Whoa, what is
text messaging all about? Is that something you will be using
every day? What about roll over minutes?
You really need to take a good inventory of your
needs and your wants when picking out
cell phones and who your carrier is going to be.
Think it over for a few minutes before you sign on the
dotted line.
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