Tuesday, August 11, 2020

11 Signs a Work from Home Job Offer is a Scam

By Mike Haaren – Rat Race Rebellion Co-Founder – Aug. 11, 2020

Work from Home Jobs – 11 Signs of a Scam

You just found a fantastic work from home job. Great pay, flexible schedule — just what you’ve been looking for! But before you give out any sensitive information, make sure you don’t see any of these red flags. That “job offer” could be a trap.

— High-pressure sign-up tactics. If the job offer is featured on a page with prominent “pressure text” — “ONLY 3 OPENINGS LEFT!!!” — it would be best to move on. Also, don’t click on any links, as these pages often contain malware, too.

— You’re contacted by an “employer” you didn’t apply to. We often hear from people who’ve gotten job offers out of the blue, asking if the offer is real. An “interviewer” will have your resume, but you never applied to the company for a job. A big red flag!

Scammers harvest resumes from CareerBuilder, Indeed and similar job sites and use them to find victims. They’ve also infiltrated LinkedIn and other networking sites. If you get an email or phone call from an “employer” you haven’t contacted, it’s almost certainly a scam.

— “Beaches, Benjamins and Bling.” Scammers know that many job seekers are desperate for work. So they decorate their come-ons with the trappings of wealth. If the ad features Bentleys, beachfront villas, and $100 bills fanned out across the page, watch out.

— The job offer involves a “program,” a “system,” etc.  A job is a job. The employer needs you for a specific role. There’s no “program” involved, no system, no kit, no membership fee. If someone offers you a program for working from home, it’s not a job; it’s a program.

♦♦ Screened Ad: Get Paid Up to $50 to Download Nielsen’s App – Nielsen (The TV/Radio ratings company) – “For each mobile device you register you will receive up to $50 a year,” the company says. For consumer trend data, Nielsen will pay you to install an undetectable app on your smartphone, computer or tablet. The app follows your web use. Your name is separated from the data, and devices run as usual. User IDs and passwords are not collected, the company adds. ♦♦

— Your contact is using a Gmail or other non-corporate email address. This is not an ironclad rule, since some newer companies and smaller players may occasionally use non-corporate email. But on the whole, legitimate employers have corporate email accounts. If your contact has a non-corporate email address, be more cautious than usual, as scammers frequently use these accounts.

— High pay for entry level work. This often appears in data entry scams. If the “employer” is promising a high hourly rate for basic administrative work — especially when they emphasize “No Experience Necessary!” — you’re almost certainly in scamtown. Many people are looking for entry level work, so employers don’t need to offer high pay to get help. Steer clear!

— You can’t find much about the “employer” online. Real companies do more than just hire people. They’re online to do business, take care of customers, etc. If the website looks thin (or worse, there isn’t one) — and/or there’s little or no social media presence, or it’s very outdated — you’re probably looking at a scam. You can also test by clicking through links on the website. Do they go where they ought to? When you mouse over the links, do the URLs look like like they do on other sites?

— The “job” involves wiring funds. This often shows up in mystery shopping scams, where victims are sent a cashier’s check. You’re told to deposit the check, and keep a generous fee — this is the worm on the nasty hook — plus money for the shopping you’ll do. Then wire the rest to your friendly hirer.

When the check bounces, you’re on the hook — with your bank for all the funds you withdrew. And since the scammer is usually overseas, the money you wired is gone forever.

The scam may also involve an offer to pay for your home office equipment. But again, the check will be bogus, and any funds you wire will be lost.

♦♦ Screened Ad: Get Paid for Your Opinions – YouGov: YouGov’s surveys are quoted in all the major media. They cover trending topics like race relations, politicians, the state of the economy, sports and much more. Get paid in cash or (if you prefer) gift cards for Amazon, Walmart, Target and other leading brands. Not for core income, but can help with frills or bills. ♦♦

— The “employer” wants to interview you via text on Google Hangouts. Scammers always try to conceal their identity. Through text, they can create an illusion of legitimacy and urgency that would be hard — or impossible — for them to do with video. So they stick to text, and if you ask, they’ll refuse to move to video. Time for you to move, too — away from their offer!

— Typos and bad grammar in the offer. A legitimate employer will prepare an ad or job listing that typically has few if any errors. But English is often not the scammer’s native language, or he/she is simply recycling an old (crude) scam text.

— Your intuition is sounding alarm bells. If you’re looking at a job offer and feeling uncomfortable about it, go with your “gut”! We’ve all seen the posts at some point online, “Something seemed fishy about the whole thing, but I needed the money and went ahead with it anyway…” If it seems “fishy,” bail!

For legitimate work from home jobs and side gigs, check our Newest Jobs & Gigs page. Good luck in your work from home plans, and safe searching!

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The post 11 Signs a Work from Home Job Offer is a Scam appeared first on Work From Home Jobs by Rat Race Rebellion.



* This article was originally published here

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