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Home » Categories » Business » Work at Home » Work at Home Assembly Jobs - Learn to Be Discerning » Printer Friendly

Work at Home Assembly Jobs - Learn to Be Discerning

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Submitted Monday, May 01, 2006
Charles Fuchs (354)
Home Based Business World
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Go ahead. Type in “Work at Home Assembly Jobs" in a Google search. Do you know how many sites will come up? Over 86 million. First, there are not that many work at home assembly jobs out there. Second, you need to know what you are looking for, because a majority of those work at home assembly jobs are not legitimate at all.

Not all work at home assembly jobs are scams. There are some people out there that may really be looking for people to help make little crafts like necklaces or bracelets. However, there are some warning signs that will tell you if the business is legitimate or not. If you know how to avoid the work at home assembly jobs that will not pay you, you may have a chance at making a little extra money.

Money is the biggest part of the work at home assembly jobs scam. Many of the scam artists promise huge profits from making little things like baby clothes, jewelry, toys, and more. If someone is going to sell a piece of jewelry for $5, do you think they will pay you $30 or $40 an hour? Probably not. Legitimate work at home assembly jobs will pay you per piece, and it will not be much. You will not get rich doing work at home assembly jobs.

Scams that involve work at home assembly jobs will also require to purchase a “kit" that contains your supplies. Often the “kit" is slightly expensive and the supplies cost you more than what you would pay at your local craft store and they are of an inferior quality. The instructions inside will most likely be difficult to follow, or the assembly may require you to have specific tools. However, these work at home assembly jobs will never pay you for what you do. The point of the vague instructions is to keep you from “doing the job up to par," which means that they do not have to pay you for the work. All you end up with are some cheap supplies and less money than when you started out.

So, how do you know if work at home assembly jobs are legitimate. First, you will not have to pay for supplies. Legitimate work at home assembly jobs will have no fees or investments. Yes, they do exist. Also, you should have no quotas. Some companies require you to get so many pieces done in a certain amount of time – a quota you can never meet. Good work at home assembly jobs allow you to work at your own pace.

Another warning sign is the exaggeration. You already know that work at home assembly jobs that overstate your potential income should be avoided. However, you should also avoid work at home assembly jobs that exaggerate the sales potential or marketability of the product. Also, be sure you ask about how they market their product for sale. Certain work at home assembly jobs require you to not only make the product, but they also require you to sell it, too. They try to tell you that there is a guaranteed market, but there is little market at all for the products

Work at Home Assembly Jobs.

Visit our Home Based Business Opportunities Article Directory and receive valuable tips, strategies and techniques designed to grow a very successful Home Based Business.

Copyright © Charles Fuchs is an established online marketer who specializes in helping people start their very own Home Based Business. He specializes in showing people the Best Home Based Business Ideas.



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Comments on this article:


» left by julie (2 years 69 days ago.)
Reader Rating: 5 out of 5
Do you have any listing where no fee is required to begin working at home
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» left by Anonymous (1 year 285 days ago.)
Reader Rating: 3 out of 5
Wow! You really did a lot of research for this article. You even debunked specific scams and shed light on the one ligitimate opportunity or a least the one that used to exist but doesn't any more because it was outmoted by the internet. Oh wait no you didn't. My bad, you were just getting paid to gripe. Can I have your job?
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» left by Anonymous (1 year 139 days ago.)
Stop taking up space on the internet!
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» left by Grateful To Charles (1 year 37 days ago.)
Reader Rating: 5 out of 5
Thanks for the useful tips, Charles! I received an offer to assemble jewelry at home a few days back and was nearly convinced to send my hard-earned money to the company purporting to pay good money for the finished product. It's everything like what you have mentioned. I send them money, they send me a kit with everything I need together with instructions so simple that "even a child could follow".
 
Luckily, common sense prevailed and I ended up doing a name search of the company on the internet and found the Canadian Jewellers Association website. The company was not listed as a member. First warning sign.
 
The next search I did, I found your article. All the points you made about their claims and modus operandi was spot on.
 
As for the two Anonymous persons above, I'd say they're part of these kind of scams.
 
Thanks again, Charles!

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