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WorkAtHomeSpace
April 6th, 2009, 11:13 AM
Safeguarding Your Personal Information When Applying For Work At Home Jobs
By: S McIntyre

When I find a good job lead, I will post it on several work at home forums with the word "Unresearched" in bold. Of course it simply means the job lead hasn't been well...researched. A lot of scammers are very good at making a not-so-legitimate job very legitimate sounding which is why doing your own due diligence is so very important. A lot of times people will respond to my post with "Thanks for the great job lead! I applied." Wait a second! Back up! You said you applied?

At this point, I'm hoping they saw the first and bold word Unresearched at the top of the page before jumping in with both feet and shooting off an email with all their personal information on it.

First, you should only have your first and last name and email address on your resume unless you're 150% sure it's a reputable and legitimate company. Too many times people have provided sensitive information that ended up in the wrong hands. It's much too late to think of it after the fact.

Finding a telecommuting job is a huge and stressful task as is and you don't need to deal with the extra stress of not knowing where or who has your personal information.

In no particular order, here are some ways to conduct your research.

1. Check with BBB.org to see if there are any complaints. If they aren't listed it doesn't necessarily mean they are good to go.

2. Check with Federal Trade Commission - ftc.gov

3. Check the company for a physical location. A legitimate company will freely provide street address and telephone number.

4. Check if they have a website. Sometimes a website will have warning signs if it isn't legit such as grammar and spelling errors, poor English and so forth.

5. Ask around various work at home forums if anyone has/had any experience with them.

6. Check the company's references. Request a list of their employees or ICs or contractors and then contact them and ask how it has worked for them.

These are just a few ways and the most important one to live by? If it sounds too good to be true, then it usually is.

Remember, never give your social security number, credit card, passport information or drivers license to anyone unless it is requested and you know for sure the company is reputable and legitimate.

S McIntyre owns www.WorkAtHomeSpace.com a free work at home resource focusing on work at home (http://www.WorkAtHomeSpace.com/wahcompanies.php) companies, daily telecommute job leads, articles, business resources and other work at home related topics. Come network with Sophia on her work at home forum (http://www.workathomespace.com/forum).

dana67
April 28th, 2009, 05:58 PM
Wow. Lots of great advice in this forum. One thing I'd recommend too, is doing a Google search.

Search for:

"the company name"

or

"the company name, scam"

Chances are if it is a scam, or if there have been problems, it will come up in your search.

WorkAtHomeSpace
April 30th, 2009, 08:30 AM
Great tip! Scammers can't hide on the Internet for long before someone knows how to dig up dirt on them .

:)

zenvicky
May 11th, 2009, 02:26 AM
Nice tips for newbie people looking for telecommuting job :)

Chilolu
May 30th, 2009, 07:41 AM
Wow. Lots of great advice in this forum. One thing I'd recommend too, is doing a Google search.

Search for:

"the company name"

or

"the company name, scam"

Chances are if it is a scam, or if there have been problems, it will come up in your search.

True. Another one is to search for review about the company to make sure they have paid someone before and they paid on time.

krish2
June 2nd, 2009, 09:23 PM
Nice thread! I really like your provided information. It's really helpful for me.
Thanks a lot!




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