Author: David Gates
Avoiding Internet Scams When Searching For A Job
Thursday, July 17th, 2008 @ 8:06 am
If you have ever tried looking for a job you can do from home, you have probable experienced this situation: You type a job you are qualified to do into the search box. The results that come back are almost all obvious business scams.
Anyone with any common sense can basically ignore them all, so it was only a matter of time before the scammers found a simple way to work around it. They do this simply by making the job look official all the way until you send them your resume.
If you have applied for a job that is not what it seems, you will quickly find out as scammers do not waste time before replying to your email. Typically they will offer you a staggering amount of money for a promise of little or no work. The job you originally applied for will change before your eyes.
So how can you protect yourself from these schemes? What can you possibly do to assure that you are applying for a legitimate job and not wasting your time and engery on a scam? The options available to you are simple.
First, you can send an e-mail further clarifying the position prior to sending any personal information. If the \”company\” is a scam operation, you will know simply by their response. Secondly, when you do feel confident enough to send your resume, etc., be sure to remove any personal information (home or cell number, address, etc.)
The only information required to be on a resume is your name and your email address. Your qualifications will speak for themselves if you are applying to a legitimate company. If they decide to hire you, you can then give them any other contact information they may need.
Seeing the obvious scams that abound, you wonder how people can actually believe that they will be paid a hundred times more than their original $9 per hour job to do the same work. It makes you wonder how people can actually fall for such a blatant lie.
Another obvious scam is to solicit money from you in order for you to make a ton of money back. This should automatically send up red flags. Even if the website looks completely normal, do not let your guard down as you never know when a scam will find you.
In addition to all of this, keep this old adage in mind: If you think it is too good to possibly be true, you are most likely right. Free money does not exist. If you plan to work from home, you will have to do just that: work from home. Keep these tips in mind as your scour the Internet for that perfect stay-at-home job.

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