Investigate First To Avoid Work At Home Business Scams
- Date: 2007-04-23 - Word Count: 1016
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Do you ever feel like you know just enough about a topic to be dangerous? We will try to fill in some of the gaps with the latest info from experts.
The following article covers a topic that has recently been of high interest, work at home scams. If you have been considering a journey down this road, take the time to learn more before you start. Yes, before you start.
As you first start to consider work at home opportunities, you have to be aware that at least 99% of the offers you see are scams. Logically, if is so easy to pay just a few dollars and easily earn thousands, why would they even share that information? Here are some of the biggest scams, both online and offline, plus ways to recognize and avoid them.
First pay attention to where you saw the Get Rich Quick offer? Email offer, a poster on a bulletin board or a sign along the road will be a scam. Legitimate offers for high earnings are not posted casually for drive by traffic. Newspaper or magazine ads are more likely to be honest jobs, but not for certain. Take care and ask questions. Website advertisements are everywhere. This is a huge area where fraud is abundant, and a few honest offers may be found. Presume that it is a scam until you have actual proof that the offer is real.
Envelope Stuffing is one of the oldest work at home scams. And, yet it is still promoted, and people do still send in their money. After you spend your money and sign up, you are shipped a supply of envelopes and advertisements just like the advertisement you enrolled with. Now, you will spend your time to stuff your envelopes and you again spend your money to send them out. There is a very tiny possibility you might actually earn a little. But it is a small possibility, and only after someone else responds to the advertisement you mailed. Just stay far away from this scam.
Home assemblers wanted, and you will earn big money doing what you love, from the comfort of home. Yes, we have all seen it. The scam involves seriously over-charging you for supplies. First you will be required to purchase their materials. And you will be sent some assembly materials, but extremely poor quality, and not materials as described, or the expected value for what you are charged. So first you have invested your money for cheap materials, and then you spend more, in the form of your labor. Now you to start earning, all you have to do is find buyers for your items. And to your surprise, no one wants to buy your cheap-quality finished product.
If a business, or program or anyone asks you to spend money to start work for them, just walk away. Every honest and reputable business will deduct their enrollment or startup fees from your first paycheck. There is only one reason any business would not deduct legitimate, reasonable fees from your first or future pay. They have no intention of ever paying you.
If your fraud knowledge and facts are out-of-date, how will that affect your actions and decisions? Make certain you do not let important fraud information slip by you, or take you in as the next victim.
If you base your actions on inaccurate information, you might be unpleasantly surprised by the consequences. Make sure you get the whole story from informed sources.
A variation on the scam that is very common with crafts is that you might be asked to work at home making jewelry, doll clothes, decorations, or toys. Everything may appear honest. You would actually receive the materials without first spending any money, and you would then do the specified work. But, regardless of your skill, care taken, and attention to detail, when you send the completed items to the company, you will not receive payment. The business will notify you that, unfortunately, the items do not meet their quality standards, and therefore, they will not issue payment. If you want to do craft work from home, select your own projects, buy your own quality materials and then market and sell items yourself.
Another common area of fraud involves data entry, home typing, plus medical coding and medical invoicing scams. These types of work at home scams will tell you they currently have high volume of work to process, and they prefer home workers to avoid overhead expenses. You will be offered position to enter data, or type documents, or medical coding and then process medical invoices into a computer. The requirements for the job are only that you have access to a computer. But you first have to do is buy their job related special software. What they do not tell you is that you will also need to find your own work assignments.
This unique, and required, software will appear to be sold through a completely unrelated company. This is just one more deception. Selling you the software was the only reason the work at home advertisement was placed.
Remember to consider the points presented above, and also the time to investigate the online offer. After you selected a program of interest, take the time to type in another search. But this time, search for the name of your program, plus the word scam, or the word fraud. If others have had a problem, most likely you would encounter that same problem.
I hope this information helps you see running a home business that involves you working for one company can be a risky idea. You do not really know whom you are dealing with. Then consider, even with entirely honest work at home positions that do actually pay you for your work, your work is earning money for someone else, and you are only receiving a small portion. By working for yourself with your own home business, you keep the rewards of your own efforts.
Do not limit yourself by refusing to learn the details first. The more you know, the easier it will be to determine and focus on your real goal.
The following article covers a topic that has recently been of high interest, work at home scams. If you have been considering a journey down this road, take the time to learn more before you start. Yes, before you start.
As you first start to consider work at home opportunities, you have to be aware that at least 99% of the offers you see are scams. Logically, if is so easy to pay just a few dollars and easily earn thousands, why would they even share that information? Here are some of the biggest scams, both online and offline, plus ways to recognize and avoid them.
First pay attention to where you saw the Get Rich Quick offer? Email offer, a poster on a bulletin board or a sign along the road will be a scam. Legitimate offers for high earnings are not posted casually for drive by traffic. Newspaper or magazine ads are more likely to be honest jobs, but not for certain. Take care and ask questions. Website advertisements are everywhere. This is a huge area where fraud is abundant, and a few honest offers may be found. Presume that it is a scam until you have actual proof that the offer is real.
Envelope Stuffing is one of the oldest work at home scams. And, yet it is still promoted, and people do still send in their money. After you spend your money and sign up, you are shipped a supply of envelopes and advertisements just like the advertisement you enrolled with. Now, you will spend your time to stuff your envelopes and you again spend your money to send them out. There is a very tiny possibility you might actually earn a little. But it is a small possibility, and only after someone else responds to the advertisement you mailed. Just stay far away from this scam.
Home assemblers wanted, and you will earn big money doing what you love, from the comfort of home. Yes, we have all seen it. The scam involves seriously over-charging you for supplies. First you will be required to purchase their materials. And you will be sent some assembly materials, but extremely poor quality, and not materials as described, or the expected value for what you are charged. So first you have invested your money for cheap materials, and then you spend more, in the form of your labor. Now you to start earning, all you have to do is find buyers for your items. And to your surprise, no one wants to buy your cheap-quality finished product.
If a business, or program or anyone asks you to spend money to start work for them, just walk away. Every honest and reputable business will deduct their enrollment or startup fees from your first paycheck. There is only one reason any business would not deduct legitimate, reasonable fees from your first or future pay. They have no intention of ever paying you.
If your fraud knowledge and facts are out-of-date, how will that affect your actions and decisions? Make certain you do not let important fraud information slip by you, or take you in as the next victim.
If you base your actions on inaccurate information, you might be unpleasantly surprised by the consequences. Make sure you get the whole story from informed sources.
A variation on the scam that is very common with crafts is that you might be asked to work at home making jewelry, doll clothes, decorations, or toys. Everything may appear honest. You would actually receive the materials without first spending any money, and you would then do the specified work. But, regardless of your skill, care taken, and attention to detail, when you send the completed items to the company, you will not receive payment. The business will notify you that, unfortunately, the items do not meet their quality standards, and therefore, they will not issue payment. If you want to do craft work from home, select your own projects, buy your own quality materials and then market and sell items yourself.
Another common area of fraud involves data entry, home typing, plus medical coding and medical invoicing scams. These types of work at home scams will tell you they currently have high volume of work to process, and they prefer home workers to avoid overhead expenses. You will be offered position to enter data, or type documents, or medical coding and then process medical invoices into a computer. The requirements for the job are only that you have access to a computer. But you first have to do is buy their job related special software. What they do not tell you is that you will also need to find your own work assignments.
This unique, and required, software will appear to be sold through a completely unrelated company. This is just one more deception. Selling you the software was the only reason the work at home advertisement was placed.
Remember to consider the points presented above, and also the time to investigate the online offer. After you selected a program of interest, take the time to type in another search. But this time, search for the name of your program, plus the word scam, or the word fraud. If others have had a problem, most likely you would encounter that same problem.
I hope this information helps you see running a home business that involves you working for one company can be a risky idea. You do not really know whom you are dealing with. Then consider, even with entirely honest work at home positions that do actually pay you for your work, your work is earning money for someone else, and you are only receiving a small portion. By working for yourself with your own home business, you keep the rewards of your own efforts.
Do not limit yourself by refusing to learn the details first. The more you know, the easier it will be to determine and focus on your real goal.
SadieJane is the owner and webmaster of a few sites on the internet. She has been marketing online for some time now, and is also the author of articles on marketing, the internet, and finances.
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