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| Page: Avoid The Scam |
Don't Get Scammed
Home working scams can fall into three categories these are; directory scams, recruitment scams and craft work scams.
Stay well clear of so called get rich quick schemes, the only person who will get rich quick is the seller. If their was a magic system to make yourself a fortune overnight, don't you think the whole world would be full of very rich people?
Avoid The Scam
Directory Scams.
If a company is claiming to offer a
variety of different types of work it is usually not offering
any work at all, but is selling a directory of other companies
claiming to offer work. Sometimes the company will actually
tell you it is selling a directory of hundreds of companies
offering homework, but what you will actually receive for your
money is a list of companies who almost all want their own
registration fee, assuming that is they still exist. More than
often these list or well out of date. Also, don't be taken
in by companies offering to refund your fee if you don't find
work. Their conditions make this virtually
impossible.
Avoid The Scam
Recruitment Scams
You've probably seen these in newsagents'
windows among other places offering homeworking opportunities.
You are told that you will be paid for envelope filling, or
redirecting envelopes at anything from 25c per envelope to
$1.50 per envelope. You usually pay a registration fee in the
region of $15 and may get a homeworking directory for this
price.However it is dressed up, all you are doing is trying to
recruit other people into the same scheme, so you only earn
your money by riping off other people.
Avoid The Scam
Craft Scams More often these will appear in
local and national newspapers. You send a registration fee to a
company for a start-up kit for making up items, to return to
them on completion. When you receive the kit you will either
find sub standard or wrong materials, or missing
instructions and that they take considerably longer to complete
than the advert suggested. This however, is largely irrelevant
as the company will reject your finished goods on the basis
that they fail their high quality standards. It will not
be possible to meet these standards as the companies have no
intention of paying out any money.
Paul Alan.
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