Discounted Gift Cards – Tips for Buyers and Recipients

Wondering to gift you buddy discounted best buy gift cards? But don’t know how to buy the right one. Here are few tips to help you in buying gift cards, have a look.

•    Before you buy the card, read the fine print thoroughly. If you don’t like the terms and conditions, buy elsewhere.

•    Ask about expiration dates and fees. This information may appear on the card itself, or on the accompanying sleeve, envelope and issuer’s website. If you don’t see it, ask for it in writing. Give the info to the recipient to protect the value of the card.

•    Check the purchase fees. Is there a fee to buy or activate the card? If you buy the card online, or on the phone, is there a fee for shipping and handling?

•    Consider fees for the recipient. Check where and how the card may be used.

Got gift card on your birthday? Then the below tips will help you in using the gift cards.

•    Record the card’s ID number and the customer service telephone number, and keep the information in a safe place until you’ve spent all of the money on the card.

•    If you didn’t get the card’s terms and conditions or original receipt, get it from the person who gifted you the card.

•    Take care to secure your card. If it is lost or stolen, report it to the customer service number immediately, provide the ID number and request a replacement.

•    If your card expires before you’ve had the chance to exhaust its value, contact the customer service number. It might be possible to extend the date, although you may be charge a fee to do so.

If you want to know more about discounted target gift cards, visit http://www.giftcardrescue.com.

Hey Guys: Let’s get Educated!

Huffingtonpost.com really outdid itself with its recent article about higher level educationrecently. While there has been the pendulum effect of backlash geared towards college education and the high debt rates associated with it, Michael Roth of Huffingtonpost.com gave a fresh perspective:

“It would be hard to find an American figure more devoted to a broad, liberal education than the author of the Declaration of Independence, Thomas Jefferson. He argued that the health of a republic depends on the education of its citizens because only an educated citizenry can push back against the tyranny of the powerful. His “frenemy” John Adams maintained that citizens of all walks of life deserve to learn the principles of freedom…”

But to avoid an “only game in town” rhetorical device, Michael Roth gave voice to his opposition and addressed their claims that vocational schools should be more emphasized:

“Hoping to capitalize on the anxieties of parents and students, many today are calling for a more vocational style of learning. Unfortunately, demands for a more efficient, practical college education are likely to lead to the opposite: men and women who are trained for yesterday’s problems and yesterday’s jobs, men and women who have not reflected on their own lives in ways that allow them to tap into their capacities for innovation and for making meaning out of their experience. Under the guise of ‘practicality’ we are really hearing calls for conformity, calls for conventional thinking that will impoverish our economic, cultural and personal lives.”

With the economy coming back, with the spirit of July 4th within us, now is a better time than ever to rejoice at the American Promise: that education raises the ceiling on possibility. A great hope for our children and for us, who share in that hope.

Frugality and hope can go hand in hand of course. Back to school sales will be here before you know it, and the best time to start planning is the present. Buy discounted gift cards online, from Giftcardrescue.com, and shop at stores like Walmart for all your school shopping needs.