Home > Humanities And Science > Scams


Top 9 Ways To Tell Your Biz-Op Might Be A Scam

Article Rating: 5

email this article    print this article

9: The top people in the organization insist on calling the company a BIZ-op, even in written communication.
8: Every email your sponsor sends you crashes your entire system because the signature file contains 63 links and 23 banner ads, all for different biz-ops than the one he's sponsored you in.
7: Your sponsor insists on being known only as Agent 7731 and can only be reached at a public phone booth.
6: You call your sponsor at the phone booth to find that he's only available between 2 and 4 a.m. You leave a message.
5: The person who takes your message tells you his name. It's Agent 7732.
4: The founder of the company has a framed picture of Charles Ponzi on his desk.
3: The founder of the company has a framed picture of Ken Lay on his desk.
2: Either of the aforementioned pictures is autographed and bears the inscription: To My Soul Mate.
And the number one way to tell your BIZ-op might be a scam:
1: There are already 3,478 people involved in selling the same opportunity.
And that's JUST IN YOUR ZIP CODE.
Shelley publishes the weeklyScam Slam! Get the Skinny on Bad Bizops newsletterfilled with information on home-business and work-at-home scams and how to avoid them. Read it at:http://www.yourdiscountsite.com/scamslam.htm