Beware! Of “Work from Home” Wolf Tickets
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Title: Beware! Of “Work from Home” Wolf Tickets
Word Count: 916
Author: Tara Brewer
Email: homebasedagents@telerepsathome.com
Article URL: www.submityourarticle.com/articles/easypublish.php?art_id=3910
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Beware! Of “Work from Home” Wolf Tickets
Copyright 2005 Tara Brewer
New job seekers and veterans are buying them every day.
What are they? “Wolf tickets”, better known as lies, false
promises, scams. The strategies of saling them is becoming
more clever everyday, infact they are much more clever than
when I first started seeking work from home. I remember it
like it was yesterday. Reading the ad, and sending my
payment to start working from home. The first couple of
weeks were filled with anxiousness, eagerness and
anticipation. As the 3rd week came a sinking feeling begin
to creep into my stomach, but I was still trying to hold on
to hope as I checked the mail box everyday. Finally as the
fourth week came and went, a feeling of disappointment
overwhelmed me, followed by stress and anger as I begin to
think about how some one had tricked me and took my money.
That was 1993, like many of you; I bought these lies many
times since then, always hoping that this one would be the
one. I’m sure the majority of home based job seekers have
experienced all these feelings, and if you haven’t
hopefully you never will. I was 19 yrs old when I bought
my first wolf ticket, to process HUD refunds at home, they
made it sound so simple and easy all I needed to do was
send $40.00 for materials, but this money would be making a
round trip, because I was suppose get it back plus the
extra money I made when I started working. The tactic that
the scammer used here is called Profiting from
Power—Scammers will often use some kind of powerful company
or agency like the government or Better Business Bureau in
their ad, to deceive you into thinking they are a credible
company.
2 more Wolf Ticket Tactics
• 2nd Tactic - Screening for Serious Candidates Only
Tactic: This tactic is usually found at the end of the ad,
it is made to appeal to your intelligence. It comes in the
form of a registration, membership, or application fee. The
following are 2 examples of how the sales pitch may be
worded—
a. We must charge this one time fee to insure you're
serious in joining our program. Please understand we can
not give access to just anyone just to satisfy their own
curiosity. Our company will not charge you anymore fees.
Once there are enough data entry workers, we may
discontinue this offer at anytime.
b. We can ONLY allow so many members to do this work.
Positions are very Limited IN ORDER TO GET STARTED
IMMEDIATELY AND RECEIVE YOUR program, we require a one-time
only registration fee of only $37 the one-time registration
fee covers the cost of materials. Although we would like
to send you our program without the small fee, we must
protect ourselves. No business can afford to send out
costly materials to everyone who asks for it. This small
fee assures us that you are serious about wanting to earn
money from home.
• 3rd Tactic - Milk You Till You’re Dry Tactic: Before the
internet, you would order your work from home kit. After,
waiting for the mail person and sprinting to the mail box
everyday, it finally arrives. You tare open the huge white
envelope and there it is about ten sheets of paper stapled
together, with a homemade cover. Thinking this can’t be
it—you turn the envelope upside down and shake it.
Accepting that this is it, You read it from cover to cover
thinking you must have missed the section that tells you
how to start, You read the last page again, your eyes zoom
in on an invitation to send $25.00 for your start up kit
and then the next time there’s an even better reason to
send more money and it goes on and on.
Now, that the technology of the internet is here, scams now
consist of paying an application fee; then after the
application fee you need to pay a fee for the training
material that will be sent via email as soon as you enter
your credit card number into the order form. No, this is
not up-selling, up-selling consist of the customer getting
the product or service they paid for, then being offered
another product or service to complement or give the
original purchase added value. Please do not confuse this
tactic with a legal business practice. It’s the same milk
you till you’re dry tactic, but they are able to get your
money quicker, and you can’t turn the computer upside down
and shake it.
Today, Scammers are able to conceal there identities even
more and reach an even wider source of people to prey on.
Scammers have always had the same target market-- they prey
on; College Students, Senior Citizens, Moms and the
disabled. Their biggest target market is stay at home
moms, but in recent years this group has become schooled on
scams, and have developed a network among each other to
make sure one doesn’t slide by. With moms being equipped to
fight scams, scammers are now trying to slither into the
wallets of a new target.
There are 3 steps to resisting wolf tickets.
• Avoid
• Identify
• Report
Just remember--(AIR) because that’s what scammers are full
of. Follow along with me in Wolf Tickets Part 2 as I break
each word down for you and reveal the new target of Wolf
Tickets.
About the Author:
Tara Brewer, is the founder of TeleRepsathome. Tara has
researched work from home jobs for 12 years and has a
successful track record of helping job seekers find home
based employment. You can read more articles by Tara on
InnoVisions Canada and Yahoo!News
Visit www.telerepsathome.com/index.html Today!
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