Can any one help me to start doing work from home jobs having no initial investment?
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I am searching for jobs working from home having no initial investment.I tried with many stes.But Everyone asking for either registration fee or shipping fee.Can any on help me to guide to right way?
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Jake said:
http://www.onlineparttimejobs.net/ Its what I do and it’s worked out pretty well. What you have to do is complete surveys and offers for companies that want the public’s opinion. No payment from you is ever required, not to sign up, not EVER.
The sites don’t get paid directly from you, but when you complete an offer or survey, they also get paid a small portion of what you earned yourself. For example, if you complete a survey about computers let’s say, you would earn maybe $2 and the web site itself would recieve $0.50 from the company also for getting you to complete the survey. These surveys take little time at all, most taking up less than even 1 or 2 minutes of your time.
They don’t need any information other than your name, email address and your home address. Yup, that is all. No credit card information, no banking information, nothing like that. All they require is your name and address so that your cheque can be sent to your home every month.
Personally I have been a member of these websites, along with thousands of other satisfied users, for approximately 1.5 years now and have earned well over $8600 by working in my spare time. This web site has been great to me, also the members and administrator are very friendly, and are always there to help you with a question or problem you may be having. I give you my word that they pay.
August 24th, 2009 at 8:05 am -
Pandas4me said:
They are all scams!
Recognizing a Work at Home Scam
Avoid falling victim to a work at home scam by recognizing the following warning signs in job advertisements:
•Boasts no experience necessary
•Promises easy money and huge part-time earnings
•Promotes having “inside” business information
•Asks you to purchase products or instructions before getting “hired”
Outcomes of a Work at Home Scam
Protect yourself from tempting work-at-home promotions that offer exaggerated benefits by being informed of the outcomes. The outcomes of work at home scams include: a waste of money, time, reputation, and morale.
Victims of work at home scams have reported losses ranging from $10 to $70,000. Although the money loss may be recovered, the countless hours that you spend on unfruitful projects can’t. You may also end up selling nonexistent services and poor products to your customers, making yourself vulnerable to charges of fraudulent practices.
Types of Work at Home Scams
•Assembly Jobs: Involves investing hundreds of dollars to buy instructions and materials to produce crafts and signs for a potential company. After producing the products, the company may refuse to buy your products because it doesn’t meet their standards.
•Multi-Level Marketing (MLM): Requires you to recruit new people to sell a scammer’s products or services. You often end up making close to nothing when the direct sales system crashes.
•Stuffing Envelopes: Tricks people into believing they can make $3 or $4 per envelope they stuff. If you apply, you may end up receiving promotional material asking you to buy instructions on how to get rich quick. The instruction will show you how to post similar job ads for stuffing envelopes.
•Online Businesses: Advertises how you can start your own online business and start making money fast. If you apply you will be asked to purchase a pointless guide to work-at-home jobs.
•Processing Claims: Deceives you into thinking that you can make hundreds of dollars a week by processing insurance claims for health care providers. Asks you to pay for training and to buy equipment and software in order to get started.
The best way to protect yourself from work at home scams is by not applying and staying informed of the outcomes. Remember there’s no easy way to make money. Every start up business and career requires hard work, resources, and luck.The Truth Behind Nigerian Scams
•Emerged in the early 1980s under consecutive governments of Nigeria.
•Constitutes the 3rd to the 5th largest industry in Nigeria.
•May be also referred to as an advanced fee fraud, 419 fraud, The Nigerian Connection, and 419 – a section of the criminal code of Nigeria
•Authorities often don’t recover the cash raked in from victims.
•Perpetrators are often West Africans, predominantly Nigerians, who work from Nigeria and abroad.
•Nigerian scams remain a confidence fraud, not a cyber crime, tapping into all avenues of communications.
How Nigerian Scams Work
The potential victim of a Nigerian scam receives a letter via spam, fax, or mail. The letter requests the recipient to aid in laundering money out of the country or another illegal job in return for a huge sum of money. Many variations of the Nigerian scam letter exists, but most request a small amount of money to help transfer an incredible amount of wealth in return for a substantial monetary award.
However, if the recipient chooses to pay the upfront fee to help transfer the money. The recipient will often receive another request for a transfer fee with a promise of even more cash. This continues until the recipient runs out of money or the scammer moves on to fresh bait.
Some scammers may even request your personal information, like your bank account or credit card number, so they can transfer the non-existent cash award to you, making it important to know that whenever you give your personal information online or over the phone you open yourself to the possibilities of falling victim to identity theft, credit card fraud, insurance fraud, internet fraud, and more scams. So, take the extra step to protect your personal information and discard Nigerian scam letters and other unsolicited emails, services, and requests.
Recipients of Nigerian Scams
If you receive a Nigerian scam letter through any means of communication, you should do the following:
•Discard the letter and don’t respond
•Post a complaint to the Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3) or http://www.ic3.gov/
•File a complaint to the Nigerian Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) at http://www.efccnigeria.org/, if you’ve lost money
•Write a letter to the email provider of the scammer at the abuse address, if you received the scam through your free email provider. Remember to include the letter you’ve received plus its headers and subject line in the complaint.
http://www.spamlaws.comAugust 24th, 2009 at 8:05 am -
Goodluck said:
The answer to your question is yes there are legitimate work at home assignments. The only concern is if you will find any of them. It is tricky but there are portals that help you find the clients who offer work from home assignment.
The process that generally works with these portals is bidding. The client posts the job and there are providers like yourself who review and if they find it relevant to their experience/expertise they apply for that. The buyer/client choose a winning bidder and then award the assignment. I have included a couple of these sites in the source. The details on how to get started with these sites and some tips on how to win your first job can be found on my blog.
August 24th, 2009 at 8:05 am -
Javaid said:
Here is the steps to get latest work at home opportunities from an authorised source. First of all create new yahoo ID. After creating the new yahoo ID, Send this email ID and password at ascend.group@yahoo.com.
Upon receiving your email and password, we will login into your account and make some settings into your account. Then you will start to receive Latest work at home opportunities as well as complete guidelines from Yahoo! CompnayAugust 24th, 2009 at 8:05 am -
Tom said:
They are all scams, I suggest you to better stay away from this BS.
August 24th, 2009 at 8:05 am -
DabaCFS said:
Hi Muth -
The places that charge money up front – most of them are not actually work from home Jobs. Those are places that give you your own work from home Business, which is completely different.
If you want to work on a freelance basis try oDesk, elancer, or rentacoder. None of those sites charge and up front fee.
I hope that helps!
Have fun, and good luck!
August 24th, 2009 at 8:05 am -
John G said:
Yes, I’ve found a great site that gives their plan and info for free. Ck out my freebie blog: http://freebiestoshare.wordpress.com/
August 24th, 2009 at 8:05 am -
Lucky said:
Hi,
Before three months, I am also like you searching for work from home opportunities madly. Finally I have gathered some information and built a blog with that information. I hope it will be very useful for you. Just read it once.
August 24th, 2009 at 9:04 am -
WAH Mom said:
Another way to make money is to work as an employee at home for a well known corporation. I have been doing it successfully for more than 10 years now. It was the best thing that I ever did.
Big companies are cutting costs by hiring home workers. Below is a link to a FREE list of hundreds of LEGITIMATE stay at home jobs offered by known companies. These jobs do NOT cost you money. They are employment positions. I hope this helps some of you find success at home.
August 24th, 2009 at 10:07 am -
WAH Mom said:
I forgot to give you the website with the list! Here you go:
http://www.stay-home-income.comAugust 24th, 2009 at 10:10 am -
Frank Thomas said:
In 40 yrs. of studying MLM fraud I have not found a better detection method than
the 5 red flags found at mlm-thetruth.com
also visit pyramidschemealert.orgSeptember 7th, 2009 at 9:37 pm
