F.Y.I. ~ Please Beware of SCAMS! Info Inside on what to Watch Out for!
Please be very Careful on your search for Work at Home... If you have any questions, ask here, I have years of experience and pretty much have tried everything. I am now very SUCCESSFUL with Ameriplan®, but I lost alot of money during my search before Ameriplan®!!! Here are some Information on a Typical WAH SCAM...
Assembly Work at Home: Typical Ad -- "Assembly work at home! Easy money assembling craft items. No experience necessary." This scheme requires you to invest hundreds of dollars in instructions and materials and many hours of your time to produce items such as baby booties, toy clowns, and plastic signs for a company that has promised to buy them. Once you have purchased the supplies and have done the work, the company often decides not to pay you because your work does not meet certain "standards." You are then left with merchandise that is difficult or impossible to sell.
Online Business: Typical Ad -- "Turn your Home Computer into a Cash Machine! Get computer diskette FREE! Huge Selection of Jobs! No experience needed! Start earning money in days! Many companies want to expand, but don’t want to pay for office space. You save them money by working in the comfort of your home." This is typical of advertisements showing up uninvited in your e-mail—an old scheme advertised in a new way. You pay for a useless guide to work-at-home jobs—a mixture of computer-related work such as word processing or data entry and the same old envelope-stuffing and home crafts scams. The computer disk is as worthless as the guidebook. It may only list free government web sites and/or business opportunities which require more money.
Reading books for pay: A variation on the job’s list is the Make Money Reading Books” list. This list names publishers who pay to have individuals review their manuscripts. As with the lists in #5, you can find this information for free on the Web yourself. And, while it is true that some publishing companies pay people to review manuscripts, they will advertise these positions carefully. They are not typically happy about receiving unsolicited resumes.
Email processors: Email processing is the e-version of envelope stuffing. Typically, you pay person 1 a fee of between $5-30 and then person 1 sends you your 'information kit'. This typically tells you how to take the exact same ad you replied to and send it out by email or on newsletters to convince others to send you the same fee you sent Person 1.
START YOUR OWN HEALTH BENEFITS INTERNET BUSINESS!
ASK ME HOW!
Join one or all of my groups! Let's have fun!
www.cafemom.com/group/everythingtuscany
www.cafemom.com/group/healthanddentalbenefits
www.cafemom.com/group/angieslists (free classifieds)
www.cafemom.com./group/wahmdirectory
Here is an article from CNN about a woman who got scammed looking for a work from home job. Make sure to educate yourself!
http://www.cnn.com/2009/LIVING/worklife/01/07/home.scams/index.html
START YOUR OWN HEALTH BENEFITS INTERNET BUSINESS!
ASK ME HOW!
Join one or all of my groups! Let's have fun!
www.cafemom.com/group/healthanddentalbenefits
www.cafemom.com/group/angieslists (free classifieds)
www.cafemom.com./group/wahmdirectory
I have 2 jobs/businesses I am not sure if these are scams or not. I wanted to have these checked into before I put any money into them:
http://globalmarketingsystem.info/emailprocessingjob.htm (This one I am pretty sure is a scam)
http://www.thesecretpays.com/cgi-bin/d.cgi/changeyourlife/home.html (This one I have actually talked to a mom from right here on cafemom, and she loves it, I was going to join it under her this Friday, and I wanted to check in on it)
If you could please tell me if either one of these are worth the money to do. I was going to join the second one under an actual person (a mom here on cafemom), but I want to make sure I am going to make money if I join a business. Thanks!
Also, if these are scams, can I get some advice on a home business/job that I can start for a low start up fee (preferably under $100, but will go as high as $150), and no monthly fees, or quotas? I am not interested in melaleuca (I am not fond of the products) and I am still debating on Ameriplan (With the exception of the monthly fee, which has me worried). I am also not interested in direct sales, I have tried this before, and I am not good at selling anything, not a salesperson at all! Thanks for any advice, I appreciate it!!!

Check out these Tasty Treats from The Stir's partners:



- angelafisher
on Oct. 11, 2008 at 9:47 PM