Beware
Home Business
Scams
Now maybe the reason you’re interested in
setting up a home business is because you’ve seen an ad
somewhere, or you’ve been approached by someone. It was
all about a great work-from-home money-making
opportunity, and you’re excited. Finally, you can quit
your job!
If you’re thinking of working from home
by someone else’s rules, though, you have to realise that
at least 99% of the offers out there are scams – after
all, if it was that easy to pay a few dollars and make
thousands, wouldn’t everyone be doing it by now? Here are
the biggest scams out there, how to recognise them, and
how to avoid them.
Location, Location,
Location
Where did you see that work from home offer? If
you got it in the post, or by email, or saw it on a
poster taped around a telephone pole, then I can
guarantee you right now that it’s not a legitimate offer.
If you saw the ad in a newspaper, in a jobs magazine or
on a jobs website, then it’s a little more likely to be
legit – but not much. Always check out any offer, and
assume it’s a scam until you have iron-clad proof to the
contrary.
Envelope Stuffing
This is the most established
work-from-home scam, and it’s been going for decades now.
Basically, once you pay your money and sign up to work
from home, you’re sent a set of envelopes and ads just
like the one you responded to. You might make some money
if someone responds to your ad, but eventually there just
won’t be a market for it any more. Anyway, work from home
offers like this are illegal pyramid
schemes.
You won’t make any money putting letters
in envelopes – get over it.
Charging for Supplies
The practice of charging for supplies is hard to
pin down to any one scam – it’s the way almost all
work-at-home scams work (including the envelope stuffing,
above). You’ll be asked to make a small ‘investment’ for
whatever materials would be needed to do the work – and
then you’ll be sent very shoddy materials that aren’t
worth anything like what you paid, and you’ll find that
there’s no market for the work anyway. If anyone asks for
money upfront, run. A real company should be willing to
deduct any ‘fees’ from your first paycheque – if they
won’t do that for you, then that’s because they don’t
ever plan to pay you.
Working for Free
This variation on the scam is common with
crafts. You might be asked to work at home making
clothes, ornaments or toys. Everything seems legitimate –
you’ve got the materials without paying out any money,
and you’re doing the work. Unfortunately for you, when
you send the work back, the company will tell you that it
didn’t meet their ‘quality standards’, and will refuse to
pay you. Then they’ll sell on what you made at a profit,
and move on to the next sucker.
Never do craft work from home unless
you’re selling the items yourself. Note that you don’t
need to be selling to consumers (you could be selling to
wholesalers), but you still need to be the one deciding
what you make and getting the money.
Home Typing, Medical Billing, and
More
There are lots of work-from-home scams
that involve persuading you that some industry has more
work than it can handle, and so has to outsource to
people working from home. For example, you might be told
that you’d be typing legal documents, or entering medical
bills into an electronic database. These scams have one
thing in common: they all say that all you need is your
computer, and they all then go on to say that you need to
buy some ‘special software’.
This software might appear to be from a
completely unrelated company, but don’t be fooled – the
whole reason the ‘work-from-home’ ad was there to begin
with was simply as cynical marketing for the
software.
As you can see, running a ‘home business’
that just involves ‘working’ for one company is a bad
idea. You don’t know who you’re dealing with. Here’s the
clincher, though: even with entirely legal work-at-home
offers that do pay you for your work, you still won’t
make anywhere near as much as you can with your very own
home business. So why bother with them at all?
Joe
The-Big-Why
Home Business Main
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