Avoiding Common Work at Home Scams
by Wendy Betterini
Published on this site: February 10th, 2006 - See
more articles from this month

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, [email protected], or [email protected]. 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.

Wendy Betterini is a freelance writer, web designer
and owner of http://www.CreativeWorkAtHome.com,
a resource center for home business owners and telecommuters.
Visit today for information on how to make your work at home
experience successful

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