Net Based
Business Opportunities; Are Some Flop-portunities?
Scam artists selling fraudulent Internet-related business
opportunities are trying to cash in on the Internet’s
potential. Don’t let them fool you. Although the Internet has
vast commercial possibilities, every entrepreneur who buys into
an Internet "opportunity" doesn’t automatically find
a pot of gold at the end of the rainbow.
You’ll see fraudulent Internet-related business
opportunities promoted on Web sites and through e-mail
solicitations. But these frauds are also marketed through more
traditional methods, including infomercials, classified ads and
"advertorials" in major newspapers and magazines,
telemarketing, trade show presentations, seminars, and direct
mail solicitations. Many of the scams are targeted to
individuals who are not technologically savvy. Indeed, many
pitches even seem designed to take advantage of an entrepreneur’s
"Internet innocence."
The Federal Trade Commission has found that scam artists use
many different methods to pitch a variety of business
opportunities. Here are a few examples:
Company A promises that consumers can earn thousands
of dollars a month if they join its multi-level marketing plan.
The Pitch: Recruit people to sell devices that enable
television access to the Internet.
The Problem: Everyone pays to join the program. The program
compensates participants based on how
many people they recruit into the program, not on their
retail sales of products to consumers. That makes it an illegal
pyramid scheme, not a bona-fide multi-level marketing plan.
Pyramiding generally is regarded as illegal because by
mathematical necessity, nearly everyone who participates will
lose their money. Compensation is based on recruiting, not on
product sales. When there are no new recruits, the pyramid
collapses.
Company B says consumers can earn big money by
providing access to the Internet.
The Pitch: Sell machines or kiosks that provide walk-up
access to the Internet, for a fee, in public places like
airports, upscale hotels, and shopping malls. Consumers spend
thousands of dollars for the machines, which the company
promises will generate "amazing" earnings. What’s
more, the company promises plenty of profitable locations to
place the machines.
The Problem: Rather than the high-traffic locations the scam
artists promise, the machines are placed in bars and pizza
joints. Consumers can’t possibly make the earnings they were
guaranteed.
Company C advertises that consumers can earn more
than $150,000 as "Internet consultants."
The Pitch: Free seminars to teach consumers how to "make
money on the Internet."
The Problem: The seminar really is a high-pressure sales
pitch for Company C’s Internet yellow pages or Internet mall
advertising business opportunities. The company promises to
deliver Internet and sales training for a fee of several
thousand dollars. Consumers hoping to launch a lucrative
enterprise never get the promised training and frankly, never
earn the promised amounts.
The FTC urges you to investigate Internet-related business
opportunities as carefully as you would check out any business
opportunity. Before you invest or buy into any business
opportunity:
- Realize that seminar "trainers" or
"consultants" often are there to sell you a
business opportunity, not teach you Internet basics. In
fact, they may be counting on your lack of experience with
computers or the Internet.
- Investigate all earnings claims. Talk to others who have
purchased the opportunity to see if their experience
verifies the claims. Visit them in person.
- Demand to see the company’s claims in writing. In fact,
get all promises in writing.
- Keep your eyes and ears open for "shills" or
phony references. Don’t accept a list of references
selected by the company that offers the business opportunity
as a substitute for a complete list of franchise or business
opportunity owners.
- Ask for a disclosure document if you are interested in a
franchise. This document is required by law. It should
provide detailed information to help you compare one
business to another. Be skeptical of companies that do not
have disclosure documents.
- Check out the company with your state securities agency,
attorney general, local consumer protection agency, and the
Better Business Bureau where you live and where the company
is located. A check with the BBB may not be foolproof, but
it is prudent nonetheless.
You can file a complaint with
the FTC by contacting the Consumer Response Center by phone:
toll-free 1-877-FTC-HELP (382-4357); TDD: 202-326-2502; by mail:
Consumer Response Center, Federal Trade Commission, 600
Pennsylvania Ave, NW, Washington, DC 20580; or through the
Internet, using the online
complaint form. Although
the Commission cannot resolve individual problems for consumers,
it can act against a company if it sees a pattern of possible
law violations.
The FTC publishes free brochures on many consumer issues. For
a complete
list of publications,
write for Best Sellers, Consumer Response Center, Federal
Trade Commission, 600 Pennsylvania Ave, NW, Washington, DC
20580; or call toll-free 1-877-FTC-HELP (382-4357), TDD
202-326-2502.
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