Small business opportunity fraud prevention

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The SmallBusiness.com Guide to Small business opportunity fraud prevention is a collaborative project created by users of SmallBusiness.com.com. It provides an overview of basics related to this topic. Find more guides at The SmallBusiness.com Guides Hub.

Contents

Overview

Unfortunately, an advertisement for business opportunities can often be a fraud or scam. If you want to "be your own boss," "work from home," or just "make extra money"? Then you may be tempted by an advertisement or offer for a business opportunity. Before you open your checkbook, check out the offer. Fraudulent business opportunity promoters use advertising in print, outdoor, broadcast and on the Internet to tout all kinds of offers, from pay phone and vending machine routes to work-at-home businesses like medical billing and envelope stuffing. Too often, these ads make promises -- about earnings, locations, merchandise, or marketability that sound great, but aren't truthful. The result: consumers are getting ripped off, losing money instead of making it.

If you're a prospective business owner, what can you do to make sure this doesn't happen to you? First, do your homework, including getting pre-investment information in writing. Under the FTC Franchise Rule, most potential business purchasers have the right to receive information about the earnings potential of a business opportunity. Most legitimate business opportunity promoters don't hesitate to give this information. Second, research other aspects of the business' performance. One way to do that is to personally interview other people who have bought into the program.

Warning signs that an 'opportunity' is a scam

Spotting fraudulent business opportunities is no easy task, but there are certain clues: One may be the type of business opportunity being advertised. Fraud is most often associated with vending machine, display rack, pay phone, medical billing, work-at-home, and some Internet-related business opportunities.

Promotions for fraudulent business opportunities often appear in the classified pages of daily and weekly newspapers and magazines, and online. They can even appear on websites like SmallBusiness.com that use third-party advertising services like Google Adsense used by tens of thousands of advertisers. They also may be marketed in television infomercials and commercials.

The ads use similar bait: Good pay (say, $160,000 a year) in a short period (weeks or months) for little effort. They trumpet an ideal work situation -- the ability to set your own hours, be your own boss, and work from home.

What the ads don't say is that the people behind these so-called business opportunities aren't really interested in helping you run a successful business: They're interested only in getting your money. To get you to buy in, they may mislead you about the business opportunity's earnings potential and promote a "phantom" opportunity that has little chance of succeeding - for example, a business with little or no market. They may doom your chances of success by providing cheap, low-quality or out-dated merchandise; poor quality equipment (such as defective pay phones and vending machines) and locations that get little foot traffic, like rural gas stations, out-of-the-way snack shops or stores in deserted strip malls.

While fraudulent business opportunities prey on consumers, they also harm legitimate businesses. To evade the law, promoters of fraudulent business opportunities often jump from one city to the next, leaving behind unpaid bills for newspaper ads, office rent, phone bills, mail delivery, and other services.

Checklist for considering a business opportunity

Where to report business opportunity scams

If you suspect a business opportunity promotion is fraudulent, report it to:

External links

Source

Material found on the FTC's Business Opportunity Website served as the source of the original entry of this page.

Contributors

Mkelley

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