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Classic Work-at-Home Schemes
Several types of offers are classic work-at-home schemes.
Medical Billing
Ads for pre-packaged businesses - known as billing centers - are in newspapers, on television and on the Internet.
If you respond, you'll get a sales pitch that may sound something like this: There's "a crisis" in the health care
system, due partly to the overwhelming task of processing paper claims. The solution is electronic claim
processing. Because only a small percentage of claims are transmitted electronically, the market for billing
centers is wide open.
The promoter also may tell you that many doctors who process claims electronically want to "outsource" or contract
out their billing services to save money. Promoters will promise that you can earn a substantial income working
full or part time, providing services like billing, accounts receivable, electronic insurance claim processing and
practice management to doctors and dentists. They also may assure you that no experience is required, that they
will provide clients eager to buy your services or that their qualified salespeople will find clients for you.
The reality: you will have to sell. These promoters rarely provide experienced sales staff or contacts within the
medical community. The promoter will follow up by sending you materials that typically include a brochure,
application, sample diskettes, a contract (licensing agreement), disclosure document, and in some cases,
testimonial letters, videocassettes and reference lists.
For your investment of $2,000 to $8,000, a promoter will promise software, training and technical support. And the
company will encourage you to call its references. Make sure you get many names from which to chose. If only one or
two names are given, they may be "shills" - people hired to give favorable testimonials. It's best to interview
people in person, preferably where the business operates, to reduce your risk of being mislead by shills and also
to get a better sense of how the business works.
Few consumers who purchase a medical billing business opportunity are able to find clients, start a business and
generate revenues - let alone recover their investment and earn a substantial income. Competition in the medical
billing market is fierce and revolves around a number of large and well-established firms.
Envelope Stuffing
Promoters usually advertise that, for a "small" fee, they will tell you how to earn money stuffing envelopes at
home. Later - when it's too late - you find out that the promoter never had any employment to offer. Instead, for
your fee, you're likely to get a letter telling you to place the same "envelope-stuffing" ad in newspapers or
magazines, or to send the ad to friends and relatives. The only way you'll earn money is if people respond to your
work-at-home ad.
Assembly or craft work. These programs often require you to invest hundreds of dollars in equipment or supplies. Or
they require you to spend many hours producing goods for a company that has promised to buy them. For example, you
might have to buy a sewing or sign-making machine from the company, or materials to make items like aprons, baby
shoes or plastic signs. However, after you've purchased the supplies or equipment and performed the work,
fraudulent operators don't pay you. In fact, many consumers have had companies refuse to pay for their work because
it didn't meet "quality standards."
Unfortunately, no work is ever "up to standard," leaving workers with relatively expensive equipment and supplies -
and no income. To sell their goods, these workers must find their own customers.
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