Monday, October 25, 2010

Have you actually been scammed?


What constitutes a scam?

Let's start by pulling out of the dictionary and getting the definition according to Webster.

Noun: a fraudulent or deceptive act or operation

VERB:

1: cheat, defraud

2: get (like money) a farce

Now that we know that Webster considered a farce, let's examine what many Internet marketers think like a farce.because, I think there is a difference of opinion on this topic.

After spending many years in forums dedicated to the theme of fraud, it seems that most think a program, company or business opportunity is a scam if they don't make money from it. it seems to me that this is the only true needed to power online scam cry.However, just because a person doesn't build a network marketing company, online or off, it makes the opportunity/program a farce. Can simply mean that the person who has failed, not doing something right, or work hard enough, or at all for that matter. Many think can subscribe to a program and money only will roll.When it doesn't happen that way, rather than look at themselves for failure, it is easier to cry scam about the company.

As for the thought of money for nothing, some would be blame marketers, by leading them to believe that it is possible to accumulate huge amounts of money for doing absolutely nothing.However, they can't blame anyone but themselves, because they were stupid enough to fall for it.

Think about this: say a person acquires a TrueValue franchise (TM), but not announcing the deal or not promotes enough in the right places, and they lose your shirt, file for bankruptcy, etc. ..That gives them the right to call TrueValue (TM) a scam?Certainly not.Or say someone orders a product from a catalogue, and invoicing Gets screwed up. say that the person was charged twice…This means that the mail order company is a scam? without him there. errors paperwork and data entry, since it requires human interaction, it is not perfect either. in other words ...Stuff happens.

If the policies and procedures are not to the taste of which is not a reason to cry foul wants. The enterprise has the right to establish a policy at its discretion, within the limits of the law. If the policy violates the law, then the company has a team of lawyers poor, or he could very well be a scam.

Back to Webster to set a couple of different types of scams ...

PONZI:

Pronunciation: pän-ze

Function: Noun

Etymology: Charles Ponzi died 1949 American (born Ital.) deadbeat

Date: 1973

investment: a swindle in which some initial investors are paid with money secured by other later to encourage more and greater risks

PYRAMID SCHEME:

Function: Noun

Date: 1975

: an illegal operation typically where participants pay to join and profit especially from subsequent payments made by participants

Then there's the: infomercial scam, scam, scam investment seminar insurance scam ...The list goes on.

There are literally hundreds of different types of scams, but the most common of them all is the scam of the array and this is the downfall of a people for most of the times.Many companies that perform this type of fraud refer to it as an electrical network.This is a situation where a person is told that they need to purchase a product or pay a membership fee, and all those people who pay their way after them will generate a massive income for them.Or, they say that if they buy your product, for what turns out to be way more than worth it, will receive a prize of greater value, once they get a certain amount of other people to buy the product, using the same promise of wealth.Both scenarios are similar from the pyramid, where, eventually, someone loses everything in the background (time and money) and receives nothing.

The problem with this is that there are a finite number of people in the world, and someone has to be passed on the line.This number of people decreases even more because there are fewer people in the world that can be achieved, which have legal age for consent being stolen, or who can afford to take the risk. because of this, programs created this way always will collapse so they are illegal; someone always loses, typically more than they can afford to lose.

The best way to avoid getting ripped off is research a company before becoming involved with it. think of it as a reverse interview. instead of you being interviewed for a job, you interview the person and the company that is trying if you sign up. Verify that the company has a legitimate product, at a fair price, and that you enjoy enough to wear it yourself as in prosperity scam Automated System, there was no product. all participants was a website and autoresponder and promises of riches which paid for was a list of lead and someone who would entice others to participate in the program for you. people spent a huge amount of money on links for PAS. the guys at the top was rich, and the people less has robbed. the Government then them off and my sources tell me that even people who have lost the program are facing legal challenges as a result of their participation, not just the big cheeses. The scam, 12DailyPro, is another example of getting something for nothing gone very wrong.

Just because one doesn't make money in a network marketing company does not mean that the business is a farce. If you really want to know if a business opportunity is a farce, show the good impression to a lawyer.

Rule of Thumb:If the only way you can earn a Commission is to sell stakes in something, not a product, they is not a good business opportunity. the reason is that the number of shares that can be sold is finite. products may be sold repeatedly generating commissions repeated. And those programs that require the above passage of sales to a member of the upline, (commonly called ' qualified ' sales) before earning a Commission is illegal. at least in the United States.

To be successful, offers a product or service that is more valuable than the money necessary to get it you will have satisfied customers, and they are money in the Bank.

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