Refund Policy
It’s important to us that you’re happy with your purchase of Your Marketing Kit. If you discover within seven (7) days of your purchase that the program is not right for you, you may request a full refund.
After seven days, all purchases of Your Marketing Kit are non-refundable.
If you experience any technical issues with your product or download, please email hello@yourmarketingkit.com and we will get you sorted.
Privacy Policy
We value your privacy. Your contact information is collected when you purchase one of our products or sign up for one of our mailing lists or free downloads, or through other forms on yourmarketingkit.com. Your behaviour may be tracked through the use of cookies. We don’t sell contact information to third parties. We use a secure payment gateway to transmit and protect your payment information.
You may unsubscribe from our mailing list(s) at anytime by using the “unsubscribe” link at the bottom of any newsletter you’ve received from us. If you would like to have your information removed from our database, please email hello@yourmarketingkit.com.
Copyright
All content on this website (which includes text, graphics, logos, icons, images, audio and video clips, digital downloads, and software) is the exclusive property of Your Marketing Kit. Our content is protected by Canadian and international copyright laws and we reserve all rights contained therein.
Use Of this Site Signifies Your Agreement to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy
We reserve the right to change these policies at any time. Such alterations do not nullify our rights if infringements or breaches occurred under a previous version of these conditions.
About Canada’s Personal Information Protection and Electronic Documents Act (PIPEDA)
Enacted on 1 January 2004, Canada’s Personal Information Protection and Electronic Documents Act (PIPEDA) regulates the collection, use and disclosure of ‘personal information’. The term ‘personal information’ is defined broadly in the law to include “information about an identifiable individual, but does not include the name, title or business address or telephone number of an employee of an organization.” Thus, this law protects the privacy of financial information, health information and other types of personal information. Notably, PIPEDA protects not only personal information collected after January 1, 2004, but also information collected prior to that date that is used or disclosed after that date.
The fair information and privacy protections in PIPEDA have their source in a voluntary set of principles (Model Code for the Protection of Personal Information) issued by the Canadian Standards Association. This voluntary code was developed with input from a range of stakeholders, including businesses and consumer organizations. PIPEDA incorporates this voluntary code into the law itself. Drawing on the model code, PIPEDA requires that organizations notify individuals about why an organization collects personal information and how the organization uses and discloses such information. Organizations will generally need to obtain the individual’s consent to collect, use and disclose personal information (subject to certain exceptions). PIPEDA also gives individuals certain new rights with respect to personal information in the hands of regulated organizations. For example, individuals have the right to access personal information held about them and the right to an accounting of how personal information has been used or disclosed. PIPEDA also requires that personal information be secured by measures appropriate to the sensitivity of the information.