Do Assembly Jobs Pay
This is a murky area as far as for the assembly jobs are concerned. If we are to determine which companies pay and do not it is hard to speak in terms of black-and-white. There are many areas that lie in the shade of grey and are hence unclear. Some assembly company's pay, some pay only a couple of times and some do not pay at all. The companies that pay are real crafting businesses. It is not difficult to spot these when you communicate and correspond with a person in charge. Many of such companies are also likely to have their own craft Retail outlet. we have already discussed how to spot the genuine assembly job offer in another post.
There are some assembly company that will only pay you one or two times. This system is geared to given the assembly company to advantages. First of all, any company needs to have some sort of a credibility to itself even it is this can more people out of their money. It assembly company constantly keeps taking money from its assemblers and does not pay them anything back the very soon the company will be in the reputation of being an absolute scam. There will be plenty of reviews and reports posted by the people who have had a bad experience in order to deter people from joining the same assembly job offer. But if the same company pays a handful of assemblers every now and then it still makes the money and also keeps its reputation intact. At least it manages to create a mixed opinion with people. This may be enough to trap for the people in paying for the work at home scam. The second advantage that an assembly company gains from paying a handful of assemblers every now and then is that usually when a person gets paid for their first project, they rushed in and out of a lot more supplies for their next few batches. Which means if an assembler paid $25 for the first batch, after getting paid for the first time, he or she might think that the company is genuine and order in $100 worth of raw materials. So while the company was making $10-$15 on the first purchase they are now making much more. Having paid you for the first time and made much more money out of it, they can refuse to pay you on the second of the third occasion.
There are of course certain companies that do not pay at all. No matter how well you make the craft for them your work always gets rejected on one pretext or the other. These are companies that often only placed postbox office address without a phone number and the name of a person in charge in their advertisements. They are harder to trace since you have no idea where real money is headed and who is the person behind the scam. Do not trust any company that does not list out valid physical details about itself. You can locate such companies by doing research on the Internet. Type that name out in the major search engines and see what kind of responses come up. If all you can see is negative reviews then perhaps you are better off in avoiding the company. You can also check out the website of the better business bureau www.BBB.com and see how many complaints have been lodged by them. It is not only the number of complaints launched by the people but the fashion in which the company chose to redress these complaints. The report on the better business bureau should be able to give you information regarding this aspect. If the website of the better business bureau does not have any valid information about the company you are interested in assembling products for them it will be a good idea to stay clear of such an offer.
Labels: Product-Assembly


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