I have a job offer to work at home stuffing envelopes. The company will provide me with the envelopes already addressed and with postage affixed. All I have to do is stuff the envelopes, seal them and deliver them to the post office. The company will pay me $4.00 for every envelope I complete. They are asking for a one time fee of $40.00 which they say is refundable if I don't like the job. What's the problem you say? It seems to good to be true. Anyone have any experience with these work at home schemes? Is there anyway to check out the company before I give them $40.00?
Is it a real company that you can check out through a web site, the local licensing authority or visit its headquarters? Will they give you a contract or a written agreement?
Sounds to me like it's a ripoff -- they'll take your $40 and you'll never see them again.
okay ,, first it is soo easy for bogus companies to get away with fraud,,here is how it works,
1)bogus company xyz.inc. uses Mail drop
2) place ad
3) suckers respond- pay small fee
4) about 6 weeks go by they collect cash
5) they split
repeat;;; use different name for bogus company and different mail drop different ad.
many folks don't complain,, more trouble than its worth to try to get a refund (small amount of cash ripped off) ( because the company was bogus to begin with)
these types of cons are hard for LE to trackdown plus; it is more important for cops to go after real crime like prostitution
here goes; how much free and clear cash can these crooks collect if they can fraud 10000 suckers to pay even 2 or 3 bucks in a few weeks??
2 full page ad in fashion magazine for a "cute outfit" i sent $65. allowed for 6 weeks delevery.. never got outfit, called magazine they explained the scam,i was furious that they knowingly sold a 2 page ad in a major fashion mag. allowing thousands of readers to get scammed,they made $65/a pop
dumb is dumb no company would ask there people to pay them for the job first. Lets say you give the money then what do think would happen.
I have a nagging suspicion you are a troll.
But for the enlightenment of other who may salivate over offers like this:
Use your head.
Why would a company spend money on labour to buy envelopes, acquire a mailing list, address and stamp them, ship them to you, but not stuff and mail it themselves?
Why pay someone $4.00 to do this when they can hire people at min wage who can do hundreds per hour or even offshore it then bulk the mail back here and out in in the USPS system (though I think the PO has sued and won against many remailers.)?
What are you expected to stuff the envelope with?
Who is paying them the $4.00 to pay you?
Where do you think they are making their money?
Besides, don't send your $40 to them. I have an envelope stuffing opportunity I need stuffers for too! But I pay $4.25 per envelope, all you have to do is stuff them and take them to the PO Just send me $35 and I'll tell you what you need to know!
How many envelopes can you stuff in a day. You could
easily do 100 (probably in just a few hours). That
would be $400/day which is $2000/week which is
$100,000/year. There's just no way.
They have carefully figured that the high pay versus the
low up-front fee would make it easier to scam people.
fr
-- Modified on 3/21/2004 10:46:17 AM
There was an ad in Cosmopolitan magazine, for the exact same deal, except at that time the "fee" was about $25 or $30 .
I duly sent in the money but did not hear back from them. I wrote again, heard nothing, then wrote a letter asking for the money back...Nada.
It was too small of an amount to go to any further trouble, but it did teach me at an early age that if it seems too good to be true......
hi sexxy cosmo girl, wow i was also scammed by an ad in cosmo, i called Cosmopolitan and they explained about scam ads , i said "you ran a full 2 page ad selling clothing and just let this knowingly go on" cosmo could care less that their readers get ripped off,,the scam was that "i was purchasing an outfit" by a fraudulent company that did not exsist