Anonymous Post Box Addresses:
This fact is perhaps the biggest giveaway of a product assembly company not being exactly kosher. The majority of them provide only a postbox address as means of communication. You are supposed to send a self addressed and stamped envelope to these companies if you want more information. They in turn stuff this envelope with their brochure and project information and mail it back to you. This brochure of his commonly made colourful and attractive with alluring promises of easy income. They do their best to convince you that you are in a position to make hundreds of dollars every single week and do not require any prior work experience.
Why are you only have the copy of their very attractive and convincing brochure to make your decision on you really do not know where exactly this product assembly company is located or what it's business profile is like.
Since these companies do not have a presence on the Internet it is not possible for you to check them up with official agencies like The Better Business Bureau. You only have to rely on their word and the faceless entity that you are communicating with. When you send them money for registration fee, in case you do decide to fall for the offer, you have no idea where your money is headed or who is receiving it. You are in opposition to decide that the people you are sending the money to in the faction of a crafting business that hires home based assemblers to assemble crafts for them. They are simply a post box addresses. Nothing more.
Be very wary of companies that do not provide additional information about themselves or do not make a representative of the company to speak with you in order to clarify your doubts and problems. Under most circumstances you should absolutely refuse to work with an entity that claims to be the home job or home employment provider that requires you to send them money to join their home based in compliance and specially when they maintain an anonymous identity. Any legitimate business will not shy from revealing information about its business profile, physical location, name of the person in charge and means of contacting them which includes phone, fax and e-mail. Ask yourself this, do you know of any legitimate business, right down to the small store around the corner from where you live, that does not have a physical address, a phone or and e-mail? Just answering that simple question will tell you why you should avoid product assembly company's that hide behind the anonymity of post box addresses.
The summation of this post is the complaint of product assemblers who have had experience with working with such companies who only give out their postbox addresses as means of contact with them. After deciding to join such a company, people have sent in their finished and assembled batch of crafts only to find that they were constantly rejected. On trying to get a refund from the company they found it impossible to do so because they had no idea what the address of such an assembly company or the person in charge was. Since they had no presence on the web, there was no way to look up information on the business via agencies such as The Better Business Bureau. All they could do was sending in male to the post box address which predictably went unanswered. It is common for people to stop trying after a few times to get their money back as they figure that it is not worth their time. They accept that they were scammed. They learn, and sometimes do not, from the experience and move on.
Labels: Product-Assembly


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