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How to Avoid Scams and Fraud
© Kristie Tamsevicius
People
who are eager to start a home business are often new to
the Internet and filled with hope. Unfortunately, that can
make them easy prey for con artists. The lure of easy money
can serve as a difficult lesson for those who fall for it.
If you are looking at job opportunities online, it’s
important to watch out for scams and get-rich-quick schemes.
Many scams are cleverly packaged, making it hard to determine
the legitimate work opportunities from the fraudulent ones.
"If you are looking at employment or business opportunities
online, watch out for scams," Tamsevicius says. "Many
get-rich-quick schemes are cleverly packaged, making it
hard to sift legitimate work opportunities from the swindles."
Common cons include Nigerian letter schemes asking for money,
pyramid schemes, Ponzi schemes, and "work at home"
offers that involve stuffing envelopes or assembling crafts.
1. If it sounds too good to be true, it probably
is! Any offer that promises to make you rich overnight
with a business that works while you sleep is a rip-off.
Watch out if a company promises large profits for little
or no work, or claims no experience is necessary. If anyone
can do it, why should you pay to learn about it?
For that reason, multilevel marketing (MLM) has gotten
a bad rap. Granted, there may be some legitimate money-making
programs out there, but there are also a large number of
overhyped, overpromising, underdelivering scams too.
2. Be especially wary of any company that requires
an initial investment to get involved.
3. Be leery of anyone who uses hard-sell tactics
or pushes you to sign up right away. Take your
time to think about opportunities. If you do find a program
that intrigues you, do yourself a favor and check it out
first.
4. Double-check the reputation of a company before
signing up for its program. Get at least three
references from people who are currently involved in the
program to get the real story. Find out what strings are
attached, how much money it will take to get started, and
what the “fine print” says. Also find out how
long they have been in business. Ask what their experience
has been working with them. How long have they been in business?
What kind of training will the company provide? Do they
have a good support system for their sales representatives?
5. Read the fine print before you sign anything.
If you don't understand an agreement, have a lawyer or an
accountant review it before signing.
6. Make sure there is an out. Before you
sign ANYTHING, find out what the procedure is to withdraw
if you change your mind and what, if anything, it will cost
you. If you have to pay startup fees, pay with a credit
card rather than cash or check. That way if things go awry
you can cancel payment or dispute your credit card charges.
1) Contact your local Better Business Bureau (BBB).
The national BBB web site is www.bbb.org/. There
you will find a link to locate the BBB for your area and
information on work-at-home scams and how to file a complaint.
2) Check the Scambusters
3) Go to WorldWideScam,
offers a funny insight into some of the more outrageous
scams in circulation.
4) Visit the MLM
Survivor Site. Here you can check out any potential
MLM opportunities to see how reputable they are.
5) The United States Postal Inspection Service
offers several pages on its web site about scams, including
work-at-home schemes, multi-level-marketing schemes, distributorship
and franchise fraud, and how to file a mail fraud complaint.
www.usps.com/postalinspectors/
6) The Federal
Trade Commission offers information on work-at-home
schemes, medical billing, business opportunity schemes,
the top 10 Dot Cons, and how to file a complaint.
7) The National
Consumer League’s National Fraud Information Center
offers information on pyramid schemes, MLM, and how to report
a fraud.
If you fall victim to a scam let others know so that you
can protect them from falling prey too! Here’s how
to report a fraudulent business:
1) Contact the attorney general in your local
state.
2) File a complaint with the Better
Business Bureau in the fraudulent business’
native state. You can find contact information for that
individual state at the BBB web site at .
3) Report it to the Federal Trade Commission.
Call them at 1-800-876-7060 or visit their web site at www.ftc.gov/
to file a complaint.
4) List them with the Internet Fraud Complaint
Center at www.
ifccfbi.gov
5) Take action by reporting any spam emailers to
www.Spamcop.net and
www.abuse.net
Article by: Kristie Tamsevicius, is the
author of "I Love My Life: A Mom's Guide to Working
from Home"! Thousands of aspiring entrepreneurs
have used her step-by-step home business system to earn
money working from home. Get a free ecourse Home
Business Success Secrets at http://www.Webmomz.com
| NOTE: Like this article? Feel free to “reprint”
this home business article online as long as it remains
complete and unaltered (including my “about the
author” section at the end), and you send a copy
of your reprint to kristie@webmomz.com. |
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