Home Based Work: How to Avoid Work-from-Home Job Scams

Following are three things to look out for that will tell you if a home based work opportunity is real. If you keep this advice in mind, you should have no problem avoiding work-from-home jobs scams.
By: Yuwanda Black for InkwellEditorial.com
 
July 9, 2009 - PRLog -- With unemployment at its highest level in almost three decades as of this writing, many are looking for home-based work opportunities. Unfortunately, this also means work-from-home jobs scams are on the rise.

However, they are pretty easy to avoid if you know what to look out for.

Application Fees: You should never have to “pay for work.” Many scammers make their opportunity seem legitimate by asking for application fees (aka application processing fee). These fees usually range from a low of $9.95 on up to about $35 or $40 a pop.
Don’t fall for it. Legitimate home based work is fee free, ie, there are no fees of any kind – ever.

Yuwanda Black, who owned an editorial staffing firm in New York City from 1996-2004 (InkwellEditorial.com), states, “I was always surprised at the number of applicants who asked me how much it costs to get work via my firm.  I always told applicants, clients pay the fees. As a candidate, if anyone asks you for application fees, recruiting fees, etc., it’s a scam.”

Personal Information:  In some countries (most European), it is common to list personal information like age and date of birth on your resume (CV). This is not common in the United States. In fact, it’s discouraged. Giving out personal information like this (especially a Social Security number) can easily be used to steal your identity.

If a home-based work opportunity asks you to fill out an online application, don’t give out your social security number or any other personal information until you’ve done your due diligence (eg, do a web search on the company, check with the Better Business Bureau). When in doubt as to whether an opportunity is an online job scam or not, follow the guidelines outlined by major job sites like Monster and CareerBuilder.

A resume is enough initially – no personal information beyond what is provided there is needed. If a company is serious about hiring you, there will come a time where you will have to give out personal  information – but make sure there’s a real company behind it. Google them, find an address, get a telephone number, etc.

If a company is corresponding with you only by email and you never speak with an actual person or are able to find out any info about the company in a web search, don’t even consider “working for them.”

You Receive Money: Some home based work opportunities are so elaborate and seem so real that many are easily sucked in. One of the most popular of these is where you receive money. There are several variations, but it goes something like this:

You receive a check in the mail – usually for several thousand dollars. It looks authentic. It can be for anything from a foreign lottery you’ve won, to government benefits (eg, stimulus checks), to being a beneficiary of an estate.

It has your correct name, address, an official bank name – everything. You may even call and verify that the bank is real – and it may be.  

You are ALWAYS asked to call a number to verify/authenticate/get further instructions. And, this is the part that should send off alarm bells.

Once they get you on the phone, they’ll at some point ask you to wire funds back to them for “over payment, taxes, fees, etc.”

Remember, there is no legitimate reason for any employer to give you a check or money order, then ask you to wire money anywhere in return – ever. It is always a work from home job scam if this happens.

Did you know? According to the MSNBC article, “Easy check fraud technique draws scrutiny,” “. . . checking account numbers are just as valuable to criminals as credit card numbers. . .  Armed with just a checking account number and bank routing number [found on every check], criminals can create checks at whim, experts and law enforcement authorities say.”

Are you at risk for being scammed by a home-based work opportunity? Take the test at fakechecks.org/fraudtest-workAtHome.html.

Want a legitimate home based work opportunity? Become a freelance writer. Get everything you need to start at InkwellEditorial.com/bizguides.htm.

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InkwellEditorial.com is authority site on the web for those who want to work from home as a freelance writer. First-hand advice, freelance success stories, marketing tutorials, freelance writing workshops and more. We provide it all to help you succeed!
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Source:Yuwanda Black for InkwellEditorial.com
Email:***@inkwelleditorial.com Email Verified
Tags:Home Based Work, Online Job Scams, Work From Home Scams, Work At Home Scams, No Fee Work At Home
Industry:Career, Unemployment, Work from home
Location:United States
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