1. Do Not Believe Unbelievable Guarantees
"We pledge you will make $1000 per day with our technique in only 1 hour per day!"
It sounds good - too good to be true. If you can bring in a large sum of cash with no effort, should the person selling you the idea not be far better off as an alternative employing 1 person to spend 8 hours per day running the secret technique?
Yes, maybe there are one or two programs out there that the owner is running to the max and they want to found a new line of earnings by selling it on.
2. Why pay To Start Working?
"Get started in this magnificent line of returns for only $35 one off payment."
If they are giving you an prospect to sell their product, why do you have to pay? Yes, with drop shipping they want to make sure that it is a tight nit club, but if someone is offering you a position as an partner, why do you have to compensate them for you to do the work? Surely, any outlay could be covered by a reduced initial payment?
These offers quite often work out to be scams. A $35 charge might not seem much, but get 100 people across the world signing up per day and that one person running that scheme is made exceedingly rich.
3. Is There Too Much Belief?
"We need honest, unfailing workers to handle our customer payments."
Yes, right. We have most likely all received this same email and frequently. Some business somewhere, maybe even a respectable name that you have heard of, is having trouble accepting payments from abroad and wants you to receive the payments into your account and pass them on.
The problem is that these programs are totally illegal and if you take part in them, you are assisting someone in a money laundering system. Avoid these at all costs. Not only could you be charged with cash laundering, when discovered you would have to repay all of the cash you have handled.
If these were really law-abiding, they should not be coming to people through spam lists.
4. Moving Items Unnecessarily
"Straightforward work at home prospect stuffing envelopes!"
Why should any ongoing company want to send items about the country for you to stuff in an envelope for them? Why would they want to send part made products round the country to be made up at home?
With either variation, there is a huge risk that you might not do the work to a sufficient standard, or that you should not do the work at all and run off with the basic products. Why should they want to send the basics to you, for you to then send them back, made up? might it not be easier for them to recruit people to work locally, either in their premises or near to their premises where their driver can get about to see them all?
merely consider all of these bring in them up offers as scams. Almost certainly there is a big catch somewhere, from unsure ethics to paying a lot to get involved.
Author Resource:-
If you want to know more about home working, call over to our website - http://www.myhomeworking.com. There you will find load more ideas, and you can get yourself a free copy of our home working ebook.