Testimonials - Does the website feature testimonials?
These are usually glowing reviews from people who are allegedly working at
home for this company. Why would a company want to do this? Remember this:
testimonials are most often used in sales copy. They are trying to "sell"
you something if they use testimonials. Legitimate companies will rarely use
them. I have seen a couple of real companies with testimonials on their
websites, so it does happen, but not often.
Excessive income claims - "Easy work, great pay!" That's
a big red flag. No legitimate employer is going to flaunt easy work for
great pay. Instead they usually say, "Salary commensurate with experience."
Meaning, if you have experience in that field, you will probably earn more
money than someone who doesn't. If an ad claims, "No experience necessary!"
- be wary. There are certainly employers who will train you and don't
require experience, but if an ad is flaunting the fact that you don't need
experience and will earn great money, watch out. Especially for jobs you
would expect to need experience for, like typing or data entry. If the job
is extremely simple (like stuffing envelopes), ask yourself why a company
would pay so much money for someone to stuff envelopes when they could buy a
machine to do it for far less money? Use common sense. Compare the job to
the income. Does it sound near what you'd earn in your local area? (Most
work at home jobs pay LESS than what you'd earn outside the home, not more.)
Targeting particular groups - Does the ad focus on one
particular group of people like Moms, retirees or college students? This is
usually a warning sign. Why would a legitimate employer care if their
employees are moms, dads, grandparents or anything else? The only exception
I can think of is perhaps contracts for models and actors. Obviously
sometimes agencies have a need for people with a certain look, or from a
certain age group. Otherwise, beware of any company advertising only to Moms
or other groups.
Involving your personal accounts - This is a biggie.
There is a common scam going around right now that involves an overseas
company wanting you to sell products on eBay using your own account, and
accept payments from the buyers. You then subtract your "commission" and
forward the rest of the money onto the company and they ship the product out
to the customer. Wrong. What actually happens is the company takes the money
and never ships the products, and you are now in big trouble with eBay for
taking the money and not delivering the product. It is incredibly easy for
legitimate companies to get a merchant account nowadays, there is no reason
why they would need you to use your own account and forward the money to
them. Don't fall for it. Another similar scam is a company (or individual)
needing to send a large amount of money by check to you, they ask you to
deposit the money into your account and then withdraw most of it (you get to
keep a portion of it for your troubles) and send it to them by Western Union
or other money transfer system. Unfortunately, the check takes a few days or
even a few weeks to bounce, and you now owe that money back to the bank.
Except you don't have it, because you already wired it out to the person who
sent you the check! Steer clear of any type of "job" that requires you to
use your own accounts.
Asking for too much information - Does the application
ask personal information like your marital status, how many children you
have, your age, ethnic background, etc? Employers have no business asking
these questions. It is illegal for them to base your eligibility on these
factors, and you are not required to give this information. Also do not give
your credit card number, social security number or banking information to
any company unless you know they are legitimate. The company will only need
this information if they are actually hiring you. I recommend leaving that
blank when applying for jobs. If you get hired, they should furnish you with
a real tax form to fill out, where you will supply your social security
number. (Don't just send it through email to them.) For banking information,
they only need that if you are signing up for direct deposit, and they
should give you an actual direct deposit form to fill out and fax or mail
back. They should not need your credit card number for any reason. If they
are paying you through Paypal or another online payment system, you can
provide your Paypal email address to them, but do NOT give them the
password! (Yes, I've actually seen a "company" requesting that of applicants
before.)
Whois Search - Go to http://www.whois.com and search for
the domain name (http://www.company.com). Who comes up as the Registrant?
The company name, or an individual? It is possible that the website domain
could be registered under the owner's personal name instead of the company
name, so this alone doesn't mean they are a scam. Is it a private
registration (you can't get the details)? Again, that alone doesn't mean
it's a scam necessarily. Finally, look at the date the domain was
registered. If the website gives details about how long the company has been
in business and the domain registration differs greatly from that, be wary.
If they claim they've been providing work at home jobs for 10 years, but
upon looking up the domain name you see they've been online for a couple of
months, that's a red flag.
Do some research - Write down the company name and the
name the domain is registered under (if applicable). Go to
http://www.google.com and type the company name in quotations, plus the word
Scam, like this: "Company Name"+scam - see what comes up. Any negative
experiences detailed on message forums? Do the same with the individual's
name that the domain is registered under. (Also try replacing the word
"scam" with the words, "scheme" or "fraud.") You can also search for pages
that mention the company domain name, like this: "www.companywebsite.com" -
Google will return results on any page that mentions that term. Then go to
http://www.BBBOnline.com - http://www.RipoffReport.com - and
http://www.ScamBusters.org and search for the company and individual's name.
Ask around - If you still haven't found any negative
information (or any information at all), ask around. Visit work at home
message forums and ask about the company. Use the forum search function to
search for the company name and individual's name. If it's a scam, surely
someone has heard about them.
Finally, compare any work at home position with positions
available in your local area. Does the online job seem like something you'd
do in an office setting? Does the pay match the level of experience needed?
Does the pay match the complexity of the job? Could a company automate the
job functions rather than paying you thousands of dollars to do it? Remember
that most companies are trying to save money, not make their employees rich.
Most importantly, listen to your gut. If something seems
too good to be true, it probably is. I hear so many people say, "I had a bad
feeling about it, but I wanted it to be true, so I took a chance." Don't do
it. If you have ANY doubts or concerns, pay attention to them. You'll save
yourself a lot of grief later on. |