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Archive for February, 2008

• Feds Target Work At Home Scams—Part 1: Scambusting

Posted by Tom on 15th February 2008

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Earlier this week we announced that we’d be starting a new blog series dedicated to helping you sniff out work-at-home and home-based business scams.

We’ll start with some of the diabolical schemes the Federal Trade Commission uncovered in its Project False Hope initiative. While these low-lifes were captured in the sweep, if you’ve been searching for home-based work for any length of time, you’ll undoubtedly recognize that some of their tactics continue to make money by preying on the hopes of others.

Take a look:

• The Results Group – Working out of a boiler room in Phoenix, the operation charged between $99 and $599 to build and host Web sites “affiliated” with the Web sites of Fortune 500 retail companies such as Amazon.com and Overstock.com. Consumers were told they would make money when those retailers paid commissions for sales made through the consumers’ sites. In fact, the large retailers were unaware of any such affiliation, and consumers made no money. The FTC charged that the operation falsely represented that purchasers would receive substantial income as well as substantial assistance from an expert staff, and used false and misleading statements to encourage consumers to buy the business opportunity.

• HBG Publications – Consumers were told that for their $40 “registration fee” they would get everything they needed from HBG to earn $7 for every envelope they stuffed for them, and that their $40 would be refunded after the first 100 envelopes. Instead, consumers received instructions on how to buy their own ads, and to collect $7 from each person who responded. The FTC’s complaint charged that HBG misrepresented that consumers were likely to earn a substantial amount of money and that they would pay consumers $7 for every envelope they stuffed. The court granted the FTC’s request for a temporary restraining order against the defendants, halted their misrepresentations to consumers, and froze their assets.

• EDI Health Claims Network – The FTC alleged that EDI made material misrepresentations when it sold consumers its work-at-home electronic medical billing business opportunity. Consumers reported that EDI promised they would provide them their first medical billing client or a list of potential clients. In addition, EDI told them they could earn $1,200 per month with just one client. Once the consumers paid them almost $6,000, EDI said they had to find their first client on their own, and to start by looking in the yellow pages. The vast majority of purchasers never found a single client, never processed a single claim, and never made a dime. The FTC also alleged that EDI failed to provide interested consumers with information required by the Franchise Rule. The court granted the FTC’s request for a temporary restraining order and asset freeze. Soon after, the defendants agreed to a preliminary injunction that bars EDI from selling its business opportunities.

• Money Making Secret – These defendants put a new spin on an old scam by promising “Top 12 Programs to Make Big Money!” and charging consumers between $47 and $129 to access their “members only” Web site with their “money-making secrets.” The Internet-based programs were varied, including online survey programs, free government grant programs, mystery shopper programs, and online data-entry programs. However, these programs did not exist, or did not offer quick and easy money with little time or effort as promised. The FTC’s complaint charges the defendants with making false and unsubstantiated earnings claims.

• Business Card Experts – BCE claimed in advertisements that consumers could earn $150,000 in their first year, and its sales representatives told consumers they could recoup their initial investment – between $10,000 and $25,000 – within three to five months. The FTC alleged that BCE used false and deceptive earnings claims and phony references to lure consumers into buying the dealerships.

• Wholesale Marketing Group – According to the FTC, the operation promised to pay consumers a substantial income, for stuffing envelopes or mailing brochures, without having to sell anything. After consumers invested $60 to $180, they learned they would be paid only if their mailings resulted in sales (and, even then, consumers never received any income). Four of the seven defendants charged in the complaint have settled the charges, cannot make misrepresentations during the sale or advertising of any product or service, and will give up essentially all of their assets.

• Stefanchik – According to the FTC, this operation deceptively telemarketed and sold a business opportunity. They represented that consumers would quickly earn substantial money in their spare time by using Stefanchik’s method for buying and selling promissory notes. The FTC alleged that, contrary to defendants’ claims, virtually no one made money from the program, regardless of the time and effort they invested. The FTC charged the operation made false and unsubstantiated earnings claims, and falsely told consumers that their personal coaches had experience in the business and would be readily available to assist consumers with the program. Four of the six defendants charged in the complaint have settled the charges, agreeing to an order prohibiting future misrepresentations and violations of the Telemarketing Sales Rule.

• Medical Billers Network – The defendants offered a medical billing business opportunity. The court recently entered a contempt order against all of the defendants. It found them liable for violations of the preliminary injunction and expanded financial discovery was ordered.

• QTX – The defendants offered a work-at-home craft assembly business opportunity building bead houses. The court entered a preliminary injunction against one of the defendants which halted the misrepresentations.

• McLain – A purported former preacher, his two sons, and his companies sold a healthcare business opportunity promising consumers millions of dollars if they participated in an alleged network of Medicaid providers. The FTC charged the defendants’ business model would have required participants to break numerous state and federal laws. In addition, the FTC charged that defendants did not provide consumers the assistance they promised and that they violated the Franchise Rule. The defendants agreed to a preliminary injunction, halting their operations.

• Sun Ray Trading – The defendants sold fraudulent work-at-home envelope stuffing schemes via spam and multiple Web sites. A judgment was entered against two individual defendants barred future misrepresentations and violations of the CAN-SPAM Act, and required them to turn over frozen assets.

• Internet Marketing Group – The defendants offered phone card and Internet kiosk business opportunities. The settlement prohibits future misrepresentations and violations of the FTC Act, the Franchise Rule, and the Do Not Call provisions of the Telemarketing Sales Rule. The corporate defendants turned over all of their remaining assets, and two individual defendants paid more than $197,000.

• World Traders Association – The defendants offered a surplus-goods business opportunity. Consumers paid for access to overstocked or discontinued merchandise, training, and lists of clients who would want to purchase the goods. The FTC charged that the defendants never made good on their promises. Judgments were entered against two of the six individual defendants. The FTC’s case against two of the remaining defendants was stayed pending criminal prosecution.

Grrrrr. Makes your blood boil doesn’t it? Strangle ‘em. Tar and feather ‘em. Whack ‘em where it hurts—in their bank accounts.

Project False Hopes is a good place to start, but given the number of scams out there it’s a bit like putting a Band-Aid over a spurting artery. What’s really needed is a tourniquet on the flow of money that supports these miscreants. As long as people fall for their schemes and scumbags are making money, they’ll continue to exist. So the trick is to separate the wheat from crap, the dough from the dung, the headlines from the horsepucky. In future posts we’ll help you do just that.

Stay tuned each Friday for more in this Work-At-Home Scambusting series.

Future posts will include:

• 22 Ways to Spot a Work-From-Home Scam or Home Business Opportunity RipOff

• 10 Questions To Ask Before You Sign Up for a Home-Based Job or Business

• How to Use the Web to Investigate Prospective At-Home Work

• Getting Even—What to Do If You’ve Been Scammed

If you missed the Scambusting intro post, click here.

And if you haven’t been following our Finding Work At Home series, you can always catch up here:

How To Search For Work At Home Jobs—Intro

Part 1: Finding Work At Home Jobs On Monster.com

Part 2: Finding Work At Home On CareerBuilder.com

Part 3: Finding Work At Home Jobs On Yahoo HotJobs

Future posts in the Finding Work At Home series will include:

• Jobster.com

• Indeed.com

• SimplyHired.com

• MomCorps.com

• DreamJobs.com

• Tjobs.com

• Dice.com

• IT Toolbox.com

• ComputerJobs.com

• Cybercoders.com

• JournalismJobs.com

• Jobs.Problogger.net

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Home-based business owners stay tuned for posts about how to make the most of these and other project and freelance job boards:

• Elance.com

• RentACoder.com

• Guru.com Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Find Work At Home, Freelance Jobs, Home Based Business, Home Based Job Advice, Scams, Work At Home | No Comments »

• Finding Work At Home: Part 3—Yahoo HotJobs

Posted by Kate Lister on 14th February 2008

This is the third post in our “How To Find Work At Home” series. Yahoo’s HotJobs is today’s topic.

Through partnership deals with over 350 newspapers, HotJobs reaches almost 12 million users. Job searches are free because the employers pay around $370 per 30-day listing. Like Monster and CareerBuilder (see links to earlier posts below), HotJobs lets you enter keywords, pick a job category, and refine your search. But looks are deceiving.

While none of the large job boards manage to weed out all the junk, I’ve found you have to kiss more than the usual number of frogs on HotJobs. However, there are some legitimate work at home positions listed on HotJobs so let’s take a look at how their search engine works.

As usual, start your search on the advanced search page.

In the Keyword section, put these words in the “Any of These Words” box: telecommute, telecommuting, telecommuter, telework (include the commas). As we’ve suggested in the past, don’t bother searching on “work at home” or similar phrases because your results will be almost entirely junk. Note also that HotJobs does not support wildcard or Boolean searches in the primary search box so be sure to place your AND, OR, and NOT keywords in the lines provided.

Work At Home Search on Yahoo HotJobs

Enter up to 3 job categories you want to search (you can leave any or all of them blank if you’re just shopping).

Leave the Location section blank unless you’re willing to commute some of the time.

Fill in the Salary and Experience fields if you like.

Choose whether you want only job posting that come directly from employers, or if you also want to see those that come from employment agencies. For more about that, there’s at good post at Job-Hunt.org.

It’s probably best to limit your search to listings from in the last 60 days unless, again, you’re just trying to learn more about who the work-at-home employers are.

Click “Search Jobs” and let ‘er rip.

You’ll notice the interface looks a lot like CareerBuilder’s. You can quickly refine your search by clicking on any of the sidebar boxes. I find the “Jobs By Company” section the most useful place to start.

Work At Home Jobs By Employer HotJobs

The number of job posts per company is in parentheses next to the company name.

Our scam detector is beeping wildly at the first entry here: “CLICK HERE NOW. . . “. Say no more, we don’t need to go there to know they’re trying too hard. Hot Potato Promotions is on my radar as well. A quick web search and I see they’re selling a “business opportunity.” Wait a minute, I thought a job was where someone paid me, not the other way around. Next.

Skipping over IBM for the moment, I’m curious about the 575 openings for Online Administrative Management Consulting Ltd, as well as the next 675 listings for the same thing (except those have the LTD capitalized—maybe they’re upper management positions). Knowing I’m gonna be disappointed, I click on one of their jobs (which is posted in all capital letters—the web equivalent of screaming at someone). And guess what? More screaming:

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Wanna bet the only thing that’s gonna change in my life if I go any further here is that I’ll be $9.95 poorer? This junk really ticks me off!

In a matter of minutes we’ve eliminated 1400 of the 1900 work at home job hits and further clicking will send another 500 or so to the trash. Even IBM’s posts, while they do reflect real jobs, require extensive travel. True, you don’t have a real office, but that’s because you’re expected to spend most of your time in other people’s and are rarely at home. You’ll find many other sales-type jobs among the work-at-home listings that are similarly unsuitable if being on the road most of the time isn’t your idea of telecommuting.

Here’s my best advice for using HotJobs. At the bottom of the “Jobs By Company” box you’ll see “more companies” in small print. Click on that and start your search with those that only have a few listings. This is where I’ve found a few work-at-home gems buried.

Nobody ever said looking for work you can do from home would be easy. If it was, everyone would be doing it and Starbucks would be out of business. What would we do then?

Prior posts in the “Find Work At Home” series:

Part 1: Monster.com

Part 2: CareerBuilder.com

Future posts in this series will include:

Jobster.com

Indeed.com

SimplyHired.com

MomCorps.com

DreamJobs.com

Tjobs.com

Dice.com

IT Toolbox.com

ComputerJobs.com

Cybercoders.com

JournalismJobs.com

Jobs.Problogger.net

________________________________

Home-based business owners stay tuned for posts about how to make the most of these and other project and freelance job boards:

Elance.com

RentaCoder.com

Guru.com Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Find Work At Home, Finding Work Series, Home Based Business, Home Based Job Advice, Scams, Telework Employers, Work At Home, Work From Home Jobs | 1 Comment »

• Scambusting Work-At-Home “Opportunities”

Posted by Kate Lister on 13th February 2008

If you’ve spent any time looking for home-based work, you’ve no doubt already been exposed to the pandemic of false opportunities that plague the Web. All of our posts in the How To Find Work At Home series remind you to be on the look out for scams and virtual boogie men who, unfortunately, lurk where legitimate employers go to find home-based workers. So how do you recognize a scam when you see one?

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Some might say, if it walks like a duck, and it quacks like a duck, it’s probably not a cabbage. Ah, were it only that simple. Sure, while some scams have “SUCKER” written all over them, but others are cleverly disguised decoys that bleed consumers of millions of dollars every year.

The problem is so pervasive that even Uncle Sam has stepped into the fray: “Bogus business opportunities trample on Americans’ dreams of financial independence,” said FTC Chairman Deborah Platt Majoras. “If a business opportunity promises no risk, little effort, and big profits, it’s almost certainly is a scam. These frauds offer only a money pit, where no matter how much time and money is invested, consumers never achieve the riches and financial freedom promised.”

Determined to remedy the situation, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) launched a federal and state law enforcement sweep targeting bogus business opportunities and work-at-home scams. The crackdown involved more than 100 law enforcement actions by the FTC, the Department of Justice, the United States Postal Inspection Service, and law enforcement agencies in 11 states. In four FTC cases alone, consumers lost more than $30 million. Their 2006 sweep led to sentencing of 25 defendants to a total of over 160 years imprisonment for the $86 million in consumer losses they caused.

Starting this Friday (February 15th) we’ll launch a series of blogs called Home Business & Work-at-Home Scambusting to help our readers keep from losing their shirts as work to undress4success.

Here are some of the topics we’ll cover in the weeks ahead:

• Top Scams Uncovered By the FTC

While many of these scammers are wearing striped pajamas these days, their schemes live on. Do any of these “opportunities” look familiar: affiliate web site marketing, envelope stuffing, medical billing, online surveys, free government grants, business card sales, healthcare insurance, phone cards, internet kiosks, craft assembly? Same scam, different name.

In future scambusting posts we’ll look at:

• 22 Ways to Spot a Work-From-Home Scam or Home Business Opportunity

• 10 Questions To Ask Before You Sign Up for a Home-Based Job or Business

• How to Use the Web to Investigate Prospective At-Home Work

• Getting Even—What to Do If You’ve Been Scammed

Next Up:

• Finding Work At Home: Part 3—Yahoo HotJobs

Posted in Freelance Jobs, Home Based Business, Home Based Job Advice, Scams, Work At Home | No Comments »

• Finding Work At Home Jobs—Part 2: CareerBuilder.com

Posted by Kate Lister on 12th February 2008

This is the second in a series of posts about how to find work-at-home positions using the Web’s largest job boards. A list of past and future posts in this series is provided at the bottom of this page.

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Career Builder is jointly owned by Gannett, Tribune, McClatchy, and Microsoft. Here are some details about their site:

• They boast 21 million users per month.

• They’re jobs come from thousands of sources including newspapers (no big surprise there given their ownership), recruiters, and even other online job boards.

• Their job search is free.

• The interface is straightforward.

• Their Advanced Search allows you to specify keywords, job categories and other criteria.

• They allow you to save your search criteria and will email job posts to you as they are added.

• You can exclude certain companies or keywords from the results (which helps you sift out the junk).

Pajama-Meter

Our search on CareerBuilder turned up 1043 hits for telecommuting jobs. Of those, only 16% were what we consider to be scams or junk*, but fifty percent of their legitimate posts were from 2 employers who include telecommuting as a company benefit on all their jobs.

For content, we give CareerBuilder a 4 (out of a possible 5) on our Pajama-Meter.

For ease of use, we award them a 5.

Next up: Searching Yahoo’s HotJobs for work at home and freelance positions.

*For advice on how to sniff out a scam, check out this video from Chris Durst at the Rat Race Rebellion.

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Prior posts in the “Find Work At Home” series:

Part 1: Monster.com

And stay tuned for future posts about how to use the following job boards to search for at-home jobs:

Yahoo HotJobs.com

Jobster.com

Indeed.com

SimplyHired.com

MomCorps.com

DreamJobs.com

Tjobs.com

Dice.com

IT Toolbox.com

ComputerJobs.com

Cybercoders.com

JournalismJobs.com

Jobs.Problogger.net

________________________________

For home-based business owners stay tuned for posts about how to make the most of these and other project and freelance job boards:

Elance.com

RentaCoder.com

Guru.com

Posted in Find Work At Home, Finding Work Series, Home Based Job Advice, Telework Employers, Work At Home, Work From Home Jobs | 1 Comment »

• Work-At-Home: Weekly News

Posted by Kate Lister on 11th February 2008

We’re delighted by how much ink working-at-home and telecommuting topics are receiving from the press. Starting today, and each Monday hereafter, we’ll share links to the best articles we’ve seen on the topic in the past week. Let us know if you find it as fascinating as we do.

Tomorrow—stay tuned for the next in our series of articles about how to use the Web to search for work-at-home jobs, home businesses or freelance opportunities.

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Weekly News Alert: Work At Home & Telecommuting

 


Highway project costly and futile

Waterbury Republican American - Waterbury,CT,USA

But gateway tolls and public-private strategies that promote
telecommuting, spreading out rush-hour traffic and encouraging
people to live closer to their

 

Bird Flu Pandemic: Will Telecommuting Work on Wall Street?

Wall Street & Technology - Manhasset,NY,USA

While most large financial institution firms plan to rely on
telecommuting in the case of a pandemic - new results of a financial
industry drill show that

 

Regional editorial [Feb. 3] — Commuters pay twice for use of computers

The Stamford Times - Norwalk,CT,USA

The problem — outside of the unfairness of the double taxation — is
that telecommuting is good for the environment, it’s good for
the economy and it’s a

 

When weather turns, embrace telecommuting option

Statesman Journal - Salem,OR,USA

Telecommuting still is feared by bosses and human-resource workers
who cling to the antiquated notion that people working from home will cause
the workplace

 

Changing careers? Highlight skills that are transferable

Cincinnati Enquirer - Cincinnati,OH,USA

I am aware that there are some companies that list telecommuting as
a benefit on their Web site and some that do not. I do not want to limit
myself with

Posted in Find Work At Home, Freelance Jobs, Home Based Business, Home Based Job Advice, Telework Employers, Work At Home, Work From Home Jobs | No Comments »