Work at Home Angel

Friday, September 14, 2007

Caution Flags on Work at Home Programs Part III

5. Unsolicited offers or offers that arrive by email, that you did not specifically request, should be handled with caution. Legit companies do not do business that way, these are usually always a scam.

6. If a web site that is promising you big earns looks cheap and thrown together, most likely it can not be trusted. Look for obvious indicators, such as obvious spelling errors, poor site layout, or uses free services. If a site has a supportive parent company, the parent company would provide such simple things as a quality site template, newsletter software, or auto responder software. Further, if a company really knew how to make money, they would be making it too, and they would at least have a regular domain name and their own software.

Major spelling or language errors are a dead giveaway that something is probably not right. Everyone makes a mistake sometimes (search my posts, I am sure you will find a couple), but if the parent company is supporting the business, then the website template would not have obvious errors! If someone tells you that you all you have to do is enter your email address and click here to be rolling in the dough, and the above indicators are present on the site, then obviously they are not making money for themselves.

2 comments:

Unbalanced Libra said...
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Unbalanced Libra said...

Adwords or Adsense?