Avoiding Common Work At Home Scams
Scammers are getting more creative every day, coming up with new
schemes to get your money (or sensitive information). Knowledge
is power! By educating yourself on the common scams and keeping
aware about new ones, you can stop the scammers in their tracks.
Remember, if no one fell for their tactics, they would be out of
business! Here are some of the most common scams today:
Stuffing Envelopes - There are no legitimate envelope-stuffing
jobs out there. Please don't fool yourself into believing there
are. Companies can very easily purchase a beautiful machine for
a few thousand dollars that will not only stuff the envelopes,
it will also fold, collate and apply postage to the envelopes.
Why would a company pay you thousands of dollars a month to
stuff their envelopes? They wouldn't. If you send in your fee
for this scam, you will receive a copy of the same ad you
responded to, and you will now have to scam other people by
placing the ad and having them send you their money. This is
illegal.
Typing and Data Entry - Similar to the scheme above, if you sign
up for this and pay your fee, you will receive a copy of the
same ad, and have to place ads to get other people to send you
their money. You earn $20 per "application processed" because
you are charging people $20 to get the information. Again,
illegal. There are some legitimate companies that will hire you
to do typing and data entry (such as transcription or coding) --
but they won't charge you a fee to work for them. If a fee is
being charged, it's a scam.
Craft Assembly - Most of these opportunities are scams because
they make their money by the start-up fees you pay. When you
receive your kit, you will assemble dozens of earrings,
potholders, magnets (or whatever), send them in for payment, and
they will not pass inspection. You can try to fix them as many
times as you like, they still won't be accepted. The company
doesn't want the items you assembled, they want your money for
the start-up kit. There are a few legitimate companies out
there, however. Disciple's Cross and New England Crafters are
two we've found so far. We are researching others.
Medical Billing - There are companies that will train you to
become a Medical Biller from home, as long as you purchase the
Medical Billing software for your computer from them. (Usually
costs a few hundred dollars at least) What they don't tell you
is that YOU will be responsible for finding your own clients
(Doctors/Dentists). This can be incredibly difficult to do,
since most medical professionals already use a billing service,
or do their own billing in the office. With the new Privacy
laws, medical professionals need to be extremely careful with
patient records, and most will not want to trust someone with no
billing experience to handle the office billing at home.
Payment Associate/Specialist - A company wants to hire you to
place auctions on eBay and accept customer payments using your
own accounts). You get to keep a portion of the money, and send
the rest to the company. The company is supposed to ship the
product to the customer, but they don't. (or they ship stolen
goods) You are now in big trouble with eBay and Paypal for
fraud. Don't do it! Don't ever use your own accounts for
anything other than your own business. Companies should be able
to set up their own accounts just as easily as you did for
yourself.
Pyramid Schemes - A pyramid scheme is when money changes hands
but there is no product or service being sold. "Joe" charges you
$200 to join the scheme, and then you in turn need to charge
others $200 to join, and they charge others, etc. This is
illegal. Remember, there must be a product or service being sold.
Gifting Programs - This is also an illegal pyramid scheme, but
they call it a "gifting program" -- in other words, you "gift"
Joe $200, and then you need to find others who will "gift" you
$200, and so on. Illegal.
Chain Letters - These have been around for years! They used to
come by postal mail, but now they also arrive via email. There
are usually 5 names on the list, you need to move each name up a
spot, removing the top name, and place your name at the bottom,
and then send $5 to each name on the list and send it out to
everyone you know. Highly illegal. There is also a version for
online payment services like Paypal, you send $2 or $5 (the
amount varies) to the people on the list, and others are
supposed to do the same for you. Don't get caught up in
something like this, it can ruin your life.
Surveys & Mystery Shopping - While not all survey and mystery
shopping companies are scams, there are quite a few that love to
charge you a membership fee, claiming you can earn hundreds of
dollars a day. When you sign up, you find more companies that
want to charge you a fee to join, and companies that will pay
you very little for your time and energy. There are some
legitimate companies out there, and you don't have to pay to
find them. Also be aware that you probably won't get rich from
doing surveys and mystery shopping, but it can certainly bring
in some decent pocket money.
These next few aren't necessarily work at home schemes, but they
bear mentioning because they're so popular:
Bulk email - Usually these offers are sent by email, but you'll
see ads like this around the internet also. You can purchase
tons of email addresses for a low fee. If you have a home
business and you're trying to get customers or subscribers to
your mailing list, sounds like a great deal, right? Don't do it.
Most (if not all) of those addresses have been harvested by
spambots. If you send out a mailing to them, you will likely be
reported for spam. You can lose your internet service provider,
your business, and even have to pay a huge fine for spamming.
Not worth it!
Phishing - You get an urgent email from Paypal, eBay or even
your bank stating that your account is in jeopardy and you need
to update your account info immediately! You click on the link
and go to a page that looks legitimate enough, but it's actually
a fake page. If you enter your login and password information,
the scammer can now access your accounts. Don't ever click on a
link in an email like this. Open a new browser window and type
the company website address yourself. Your account should show
whether there is a problem or not. (Most companies would have a
big notice in there if you need to update something.) These
companies usually have a spoof email address you can send these
"phishing" emails to. For example, spoof@paypal.com, or
spoof@ebay.com. Simply forward the email with full headers to
them. They will investigate and stop the scammer if they can.
Free merchandise - Have you gotten the emails claiming you can
earn a free computer, phone card or other merchandise? What
usually happens is you would have to pay a membership fee, and
then get a certain number of other people to join and pay the
membership fee also. Unfortunately, there is usually some little
clause you weren't aware of, and you never do get your free
stuff. It's a waste of time and money.
Nigerian scams - You get a long letter from someone claiming to
be the son or daughter of someone important, and they need to
have you deposit a huge sum of money into your own bank account,
and then wire most of it to them by Western Union. You get to
keep a nice chunk of the money for your troubles. The problem is
that the check is fake, and takes a few days or even weeks to
bounce, and you now owe that money back to the bank.
Unfortunately, you don't have it anymore, you wired most of it
out to those people! Another Nigerian scam targets business
owners. You receive a large order at your website, or they email
to ask if they can order a large amount of goods, and they ask
if you accept credit cards. Do not fall for this, the credit
cards are stolen and if you ship the goods, you will be out the
money AND the goods.
In closing, remember that scammers are after only two things:
your money, or your sensitive information. If you refuse to give
either willingly, you put them right out of business. For more
information on common scams, do an internet search on the FTC
Dirty Dozen.