Legitimate Work From Home Opportunities

WORK AT HOME 101

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Feb 02 2009

Tips on how to tell a scam from a legitimate work from home opportunity – Part 5

Published by twinendeavors at 9:37 pm under Work from Home Edit This

9)  Be thorough and read everything on their website very carefully.  If they’re unclear about exactly what you will receive or would be expected to do, that’s a sign that they’re trying to hide something. Be on the look out for disclaimers and the “fine print.”

10)  You’ve seen them before, those Google Adsense ads (sometimes just text ads or banner ads) that advertise a link which promotes work at home jobs.  They’re everywhere.  I’m betting there are a few right next to this blog post that you’re reading, right?  Know that just because something is advertised in an Adsense type ad (or Bidvertiser or any other type program), don’t assume it’s legitimate.  In my opinion, if a company was truly legitimate and looking for employees, they’re extremely unlikely to do so using pay per click advertising.  They’d probably use something like Craig’s List or CareerBuilder.com if they were looking for free advertising of a job opportunity.

11)  Bottom line?  Just use your common sense!

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