New Online Tool Revolutionizes Bill Paying
The shopping is done; the feasts have finished — and now you're left to prepare for the bills that will arrive in the new year. Well, I'm about to show you a bill-paying system that will absolutely change your life — freeing you from mounds of paper and getting you financially organized in a way that never existed before.
The U.S. Postal Service estimates that businesses mail nearly 48 billion account notices, statements, offers and bills to their customers every year. Online bill payment cut into the volume of mail, as we all have learned to click and pay. But here comes the next step: online bill presentment!
It all starts with Manilla, a new free online service that collects and organizes your bills — everything from credit card and mortgage payments to student loan debt and auto payments. It's better than scurrying around the Internet to find the companies that already post your bills online at their websites. Now all the bills come to you in one place — electronically.
Signing up for Manilla marks the end of most paper bills, return envelopes and all those annoying bits of paper stuffed into the bill. Instead, your bills will be presented to you online, in your secure account at http://www.manilla.com, and on your smartphone, with a free Manilla app.
This is truly the next step in the paperless economy — saving millions of trees and even more money for both you and the companies that no longer have to pay to send all that paper through the mail. In fact, that's why Manilla's service is free — because the billing companies pay for it, still saving money over sending out paper bills. And they can post important notices, such as required privacy forms or billing practices, online for each customer to read in his or her own account.
No more going to your mailbox or post office box or risking late payments because you were traveling. Now the bills arrive in your Manilla account, where you can see the exact bill that would have arrived in paper form. You can see the exact details — even more than many billers send in the mail. And you can reach out to contact the biller or dispute a charge, just as if you had received a paper bill.
Manilla will notify you when bills are coming due, so all you have to do is click and pay securely. And if you have several bank accounts (for business and household, for example), you can choose which account to pay from when you are paying your bill.
There's a handy calendar on your secure home page, showing you regular monthly bills that you receive and the date by which they must be paid. Plus, Manilla will send you reminders by text or email when regular bills are scheduled to arrive — or if you've failed to pay a bill on time.
The service started in early 2011 and already has all major banks, credit card issuers, cable companies, department stores and utility billers available, with the numbers growing monthly.
The venture funding for the company comes from Hearst Corp., which has made a huge commitment to its success.
Manilla is about more than current bill payments; it is about free records storage, too.
If you save every paid bill for years — as I admit to doing — this new paperless process will be revolutionary. Yes, you might want to look back at year-end to see how much you spent in various categories. And you can do that online, because Manilla securely stores your paid bills for years. In fact, it allows you to search bills faster than you could by going through a stack of rubber-banded envelopes.
It can track all your financial accounts, including credit cards and bank loans. Amazingly, it even can keep track of your travel rewards at various airlines and credit card issuers, so your points or miles never expire worthless! And it tracks expiration dates of all your subscriptions.
Your home page becomes your own searchable file box — dividing accounts into various categories: Household, Financial, Subscriptions, Travel & Rewards Points.
It's never too late to try something new, so why not start with just one or two companies, perhaps receiving your cable bill and credit card bills through Manilla? I'm guessing that you (and I) will expand to using many more billers.
No, Manilla won't make your credit card balances go away! But it will make your credit card bills a thing of the past. That's a step in the right direction. And that's The Savage Truth.
Terry Savage is a registered investment adviser and is on the board of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange. She appears weekly on WMAQ-Channel 5's 4:30 p.m. newscast, and can be reached at www.terrysavage.com. She is the author of the new book, "The New Savage Number: How Much Money Do You Really Need to Retire?" To find out more about Terry Savage and read her past columns, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.
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Thanks for this information. I was not familiar with Manilla but went to their site to look around. It seems user friendly. Do you know if they allow payments to individuals for personal loans or can I make payments towards my cash advance loan through their site? I think the record keeping would be most helpful to me.