Work at Home Angel

Tuesday, August 17, 2010

Are Work At Home Jobs Legitimate?

Well the short answer is yes. The longer answer is yes & no. Sorry about that.

I don’t think there can be any doubting the legitimacy of working from home while answering phones for a large established company that just wants to tap in to the more flexible, and usually cheaper, WAHM or retired market. A professional job without the overheads for the company or the travel costs for the telecommuter. The problems arise when the company isn’t in the FTSE or NASDAQ.

If ‘Bobs Gardening’ in Vegas wants an out-of-hours customer support agent he can put a post on a site like ours and reach the very people he needs. But is Bob evil? Will Bob take a months worth of your work and then decide to fire you without pay? Is Bob legitimate?

Here are a few litmus tests to use when asking are work at home jobs legitimate -

1. What kind of email is the job poster using? Is it a free gmail account or is it acompany.com? If it’s acompany.com check that the address has a website. If its a gmail or yahoo don’t fret, they may not want their company inbox jammed up, just send them an initial message or resume but after reaching the negotiation stage make sure you do so through their bona fide email address.

2. Once you’ve checked that their methods of communication are legit then check that the company itself is. You can go through government bodies to check credentials but this is usually overkill. Just google the company name and see if any red flags go up.

3. Get paid fast. The above suggestions are fine when working for people that have some sort of registered company, but what about those that need you most. The one-(wo)man-band that is juggling 10 different aspects of his/her business at once that desperately needs a flexible hand.
They may only have a gmail account! The simplest test is to get paid early and often. If you’ve just started working for someone insist on getting paid weekly, or even daily, until you build that trust between each other. This way if Bob is evil you’ll only have lost a little time and cash.

So – are work at home jobs legitimate? Yes, but take a few initial steps to make sure your employer is the good sort, they’ll understand, and as the trust grows you’ll become their telecommuting right hand and there’s nothing like being indispensable.

hiremyparents.com – vetted & screened work at home jobs

Thursday, August 12, 2010

Become a Tutor at Tutor.com

Becoming a tutor with Tutor.com is simple and everyone is an expert at something.

Step One: Completing an online tutoring application
Step Two: You will be asked to take a subject exam in the subjects you are interested in.
Step Three: If you pass the subject exams, you will be given a mock session with an online tutor. Step Four: You have to pass a background check and final exam

Now you are ready to be a tutor!

Tutor.com gives preference to tutors who are approved in more than one subject.

Remember:

There are no fees or costs associated with applying to become a Tutor.com tutor.
If your application is accepted, but they do not have availability for your approved subjects, you may be placed on a waiting list. As soon as an opening is available, they will contact you to complete the remainder of the screening process. You can minimize your time on the waiting list by taking the exams for our high-demand subjects.

More information and how to apply