| Millions of Americans have lost their jobs in the | | | | that kind of money online or otherwise? These kinds |
| economic downturn. Experts say that most of these | | | | of offers are just too good to be true, and thus, they |
| lost jobs will not be returning, leaving many wondering | | | | are! |
| how they will make up for the lost income. | | | | Tip 2: Any offer that requires money, take a pass on it. |
| Many are looking to the explosion of possibilities for | | | | Another very popular work-from-home pitch is the one |
| work online and from home. But before you ditch | | | | where all you have to do is "invest" in a course that will |
| those work suits and load up on new pajamas and | | | | teach you all you need to know to make a six-figure |
| slippers, make sure you know how to differentiate | | | | income. This pitch is just a sales pitch, not a legitimate |
| between legitimate jobs and those offers that are not | | | | offer for work. You'll never have to pay money up |
| what they seem. | | | | front for any legitimate job offer. |
| Tip 1: If it sounds too good to be true, it probably is. | | | | Tip 3: Never provide any information beyond your |
| The internet is rife with free at home job offers with all | | | | standard resume. |
| kinds of sensational claims. We've all seen the ads and | | | | Your identity can be stolen very easily through |
| articles that detail stories about someone who lost their | | | | fraudulent job offers. Be sure that you use a |
| job, found this wonderful, yet always vague, | | | | disposable email address on your resume and do not |
| work-at-home opportunity, then bang! "I made $6,000 in | | | | ever provide your social security number for any job |
| one week!" Do you actually know anyone who makes | | | | solicitation. |