Home is a our clearinghouse, the place from which we go forth lessoned and disciplined, and ready for life. It is a place where we grow up wanting to leave and grow old wanting to get back to. "LOVE BEGINS AT HOME, AND IT IS NOT HOW MUCH WE DO... BUT HOW MUCH LOVE WE PUT IN THAT ACTION." - Mother Teresa

Saturday, July 24, 2010

Internet Business Opportunity Scams

Dot-Com or Dot-Con?
About Internet Business Opportunity Scams


There are many Internet business opportunities that exploit the novelty of the Web as a lure. If you nibble, they'll further bait you with promises of freedom, esteem, high income and the good life. For a fee, they'll set you up with a company-sponsored, duplicate Website, along with products or services to sell. But many will also offer you incentives to recruit others to pay the fee, which is really what these so-called opportunities are all about. They are among what the U.S. Federal Trade Commission cleverly calls Dot Cons.

The real business of these types of dot-cons is not wholesaling products or services. It's selling the concept of the scheme itself, and duping you into reselling it for them. But by law in most U.S. states, one can't profit from recruiting, with nothing changing hands but fees and commissions for the scheme itself. That's illegal pyramiding. To get around it, these dot-cons sell tangible, "distributorship" Websites on which to seemingly resell their products or services. But a closer look reveals that, what's really for resale, is the distributorship itself over and over again.

It's all just a guise for a relatively new twist on an old scheme called multilevel marketing (MLM) or network marketing. One of the latest twists is exact method marketing (EMM). It's touted as a revolutionary idea that eliminates the flaws in MLM. But it's little more than refurbished hype for the same ol' scheme. They all use some form of pyramiding to resell the scheme itself, some by exploiting loopholes in the law to recruit through a backdoor, others by breaking the law until they're busted. Regardless, they are often formulas for failure, except for the people who created them. They're at the very top of the pyramid, the only place to be―if you're going to run a scheme, that is.

Even if products and services are more than just a hook to resell the scheme, often the dot-cons are not really wholesalers as they might claim. They are extra middlemen between wholesale distributors and you, and you can bet they're taking an extra cut too. Another dot-con trick of the trade, is to "borrow" the reputations of well-known merchants, financial institutions and such, by offering referral (affiliate) deals with them. But affiliate deals are all over the Web, and just about anybody with a Web site can sign up for free. Again, the dot-cons are often unnecessary middlemen taking an extra cut. As a result of these tricks, you'll likely have to gouge absurd retail prices from your customers to earn any margin at all, share your meager referral commissions with unnecessary middlemen, or both.

Web-savvy shoppers would likely be hesitant to submit their credit card numbers to reputation-unknown shopping sites, especially those that also hype get-rich-quick schemes. Additionally, you'll be competing with hundreds to thousands of others who paid the fee too, and are attempting to sell the exact same products or services and the scheme itself, on identical, company-sponsored Websites. It sounds good on the surface when dot-con hype promises "free training" in marketing and sales techniques. But the fact of the matter is, those with duplicate Websites are your direct competitors, and they too are learning the same techniques.

Internet business opportunities also tend to hype the ease of online marketing and popularity of shopping on the Web (e-commerce). Granted, online marketing has a broader reach than most traditional methods. It's also true that e-commerce is a growing, multi-billion dollar industry. But that very reach and popularity makes the Web a highly-competitive place to do business, and it gets more so everyday. Many failed dot-coms will attest to that. Despite that some had millions in venture capital to finance far more marketing resources than home-based Internet businesses typically can, they failed.

Among the biggest dot-con hypes is getting "free advertising" in "hundreds" of search engines. When starting up a small businesses, you likely won't have much of an advertising budget. So, free advertising might sound good, and you can bet the dot-cons know it does. Because search engines are the "Yellow Pages" of the Web, it's true that they are the main source of Website traffic. But the reality is, there are only a handful that deliver significant traffic, such as Yahoo, Excite and Google. The rest of the "hundreds" are relatively inconsequential for marketing.

To get a free listing of significance in the popular handful takes search-engine savvy―a whole 'nother ballgame―and lots of hard work, such as keyword and meta tag optimization. If you don't know what a keyword or meta tag is when you pay the fee for an Internet business opportunity, you're already in trouble. Again, if the dot-cons promise to teach you the techniques, remember that they're also teaching your direct competitors. Besides, no matter how much training a seller of duplicate Websites promises, many of the popular search engines won't list identical sites or those that are even close. Search engines call them mirror sites, and consider multiple submissions of same to be redundant. Some won't list get-rich-quick schemes either, for obvious reasons.

"Build it and they will come" doesn't work nearly as well as the dot-cons would love for you to believe, so they conveniently fail to mention these and other inherent flaws. Natch, it's to their advantage to make it sound far easier than it is. They'll say anything to get your fee, their main source of income.

The Bottom Line of Internet Business Opportunity

Often, after the people who buy into these dot-cons have tapped out their friends, relatives, neighbors, church comembers and everybody else they know, they soon realize that the so-called Internet business opportunity was not the piece of cake the hype made it out to be. According to an article about MLMs by Small Business Advisor, Dr. Judith Kautz, "There are countless stories of folks who have destroyed their social foundation through pressuring friends and family to buy their products."

After the product or service phase fails, the only way left for them to recoup their investments or make what little money they can, is to dupe others into paying the fee, the same as they were duped. But they soon realize that's not easy either, as it'll take a lot of dishonest, "network marketing" legwork. Those with a conscience usually just give up at this point, eat their losses and learn a lesson the hard way.

But there are some who still don't get it, even after they've ticked off everybody they know. Sadly, scam artists turn otherwise ethical people into scam artists too, whether or not the otherwise-ethical realize it. Dr. Kautz indicates that they are so brainwashed by the hype, it becomes a cultlike obsession. She says, "Members mouth company mottos with no conscious awareness of how ludicrous the claims may be."

You've probably seen their "Wonderful Opportunity" and similarly-titled posts in forums that allow it. (The Job Searching: Technical Forum doesn't.) Besides their typical ambiguous hype about all the "wonderfulness" with no mention of the inherent flaws and risks, the URLs they provide are one of the clues that they're duped "cultists" attempting to dupe others into an Internet business opportunity scam. The URLs terminate in tags that credit them with a chunk of your fee, should you bite the bait. For example,

http://www.getduped.com/?id=maryq123

Where ?id=maryq123 is the tag. They likely also get a cut of your future sales, as your "sponsors." In other words, you'll help them move up the "pyramid" at your expense.

Others are just unoriginal and lazy con artists, looking for an easy ride at your expense. They could care less about selling products or services and have joined several, dupe-others-in Internet business opportunities. They'll say just about anything to get their cut of your fee. Some will even act hurt or angry if you question their motives. But con artists really don't give a hoot what you think about them. It's all just part of their bait-and-hook campaign.

How to Avoid Internet Business Opportunity Scams

This is not intended to discourage you from starting up a home-based Internet business, but rather just to give you a heads up about the too-good-to-be-true, Internet business opportunity scams. There are legit small businesses that have successfully carved out or exploited Internet niches that are not yet saturated, one of the real "secrets" to success. But, as does just about any other entrepreneurial endeavor, it takes hard work, knowledge, dedication, cash flow and resources. (An understanding significant other helps, too.) There are few quick and easy ways to make money on the Internet, at least not honestly.

Granted, there are people who've had success with Internet business opportunity scams, if duping others in defines success. But for every so-called success, there are hundreds of people who aren't, because the hype misled them into believing that it was far easier than it really is. Don't be fooled by
• Testimonials
• Guarantees
• Documented "proof"
• Huge income potentials

And more hype, like "Get out of bed when you want to!!!" and "Work when you want!!!" Who among your customers will understand that you didn't ship their orders on time, because you chose to sleep in? How many people earn huge incomes by being lazy? To succeed at a dot-con, you must be selling, scheming and conniving all of the time. In fact, dot-con or not, Internet businesses take orders 24/7, which is pretty much the whole idea. So, you likely won't be sleeping in much or taking many days off, until you can afford a staff to take over. But how many years will that take, even for a legit Internet business?

It's all just bait conceived by con artists, who care only about parting you from your money. Ethics don't come into it. (For more about con-artist tricks, click Work-at-Home Job Scams in the sidebar.) The predators who run Internet business opportunity scams count on a new sucker being born every minute, and thrive on the naive, wishful and desperate. Stay-at-home moms, the elderly, and physically-challenged people who need money most are among their prime prey.

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