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Can You Make Money
Through the Mail?
MAIL ORDER SCAMS
by Eddy Salomon
After spending the last few months
investigating certain types of mail order
businesses, it was obvious that some of them
were border line questionable, if not a
verifiable scam.
EXAMPLE 1. "Collect names for
us." We pay $20 each. Guaranteed! The
truth is, this company WILL pay you $20 for
each name you collect for them. What they
DON'T tell you is that each person has to
spend $100 or more by placing an order
before you get your $20.
The customer is led to believe that all
they have to do is get out their phone books
and start sending the company names and
addresses. In return, the company will send
them $20 for each name and address they send
them. When they send away for the details
they discover the scam and think everybody
in mail order is operating this way. Result:
Mail order is labeled as a scam and illegal
business activity.
EXAMPLE 2. "How to get 100,000
people to send you $5 each." Send $5
to..." This is cute advertising, but
you have to put a legitimate product behind
claims like this. One of the materials I
found was a book with this title. And you
get the book for sending $5 to the
publisher. Some so-called seasoned pros will
abruptly judge this as a scam. To some
extent, these people are not pros. They're
just jaded. For mail order neophytes, this
is very intriguing. Besides, it only costs
$1 to find out. What the beginner finds out
is that they are expected to run the same ad
in newspapers and tabloids. Other people
will send $1 for information and their
mailbox is "supposedly" flooded
with $1 bills. This ad is NOT illegal. It
asks you to send $1 for information and you
DO get the information. It's just something
you should keep in mind so your expectations
aren't high.
These types of ads are all a bunch of
paper-passing and can be classified under
the heading of a "Legitimate
Scam." You can't complain that your
order was not filled. You can't complain the
idea is not possible. You can't complain the
ad promised something it didn't deliver.
Likewise, do not confuse scam-sounding
ads with legitimate lead-generation ads. A
mail order company may run an ad that
states: "Want to make a lot of money?
Call (this telephone number.)" This is
NOT necessarily a scam or rip-off. Since
there is no cost involved it might be worth
your time and effort to call the number and
see what this dealer has to offer.
Also, some dealers run ads that don't
tell you what the product is because they
have an entire package of information they
want to send you. It would be too costly to
advertise the complete information in a
small 1" or 2" ad, so they run
"Lead-Generating Ads" to bring
them inquiries. This is also not illegal and
is common business practice. You'll also
find that real "Lead-Generating
Ads" DON'T ask you for a lot of money
up front. They only tell you enough about
the product to entice you to send in a SASE
(self-addressed stamped envelope) or $1 for
more information. They are unlike the
"Example 2" that basically tell
you the scam before you order it! (It may
take a little time for you to make the
distinction between these fine lines.)
Many people overlook the power of the
printed word. Instead of complaining, people
should be writing their mail order
publishers when they are ripped-off,
providing them with documentation and a
summary of these mail order scams.
Use wisdom. Get your facts straight. Have
documentation to back-up your findings and
submit them! Wouldn't it be great if
everybody in the world were honest? What a
wonderful world this would be!
This article was written by Eddy
Salomon of
www.WorkAtHomeCareers.com which provides
free work at home jobs, home business ideas,
articles, scam information and more.
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