Stuffing Envelopes Legit Or Scam ?
Stuffing Envelopes Legit Or Scam ? Here are 13 points that explain various details about stuffing envelopes which are not revealed to you by the promoters. Read over these points and you'll understand why these programs are flawed: Envelopes Can Be Stuffed Cheaply No "company" in their right mind would pay you to stuff an envelope. It costs less than 50 cents per envelope for this service -often much less - at your neighborhood print shop. What's a Starter Kit? Often the people behind these offers ask you to pay for a Starter Kit. What do you receive with the Starter Kit? They don't say in exact words. Most of the time you're told it contains everything you need to get started. Clear as mud.Tell a friend about this article! Never Pay For Disclosure Often times you are asked to send in a "good faith" payment before getting details of the offer and to prove you're serious. That's absurd. Any legitimate operation will give you full disclosure beforehand. Never pay for disclosure. This is a dead giveaway that it's a scam. What's A Processing Fee? Sometimes the up-front payment is called a "processing fee" that covers the promoter's expenses. Expenses.. for... what exactly? Everything you need, of course. And what do you need? A starter kit! What's a starter kit? Everything you need! Someone Else Must be Stuffing envelopes Before You Get Paid You only get paid for "stuffed envelopes" when someone else you recruit stuffs a self-addressed, stamped envelope (SASE), up-front fee, or "good faith" payment, into an envelope. You don't actually get paid for stuffing the envelope that is sent to others. You must generate sales and/or leads to get paid. When other people are scammed into stuffing an envelope then the "stuffing" cycle is complete. This cycle is not explained in their sales literature. In fact, the sales literature is often deceptive to the point of being fraudulent. Free Stamps and Envelopes Cost a Bundle! A popular promotional point of envelope stuffing schemes is the promise of free envelopes and free stamps, leading you to believe you will have no costs except for your initial "processing fee." Actually, you receive your free stamps and envelopes by placing advertisements asking people to send you a self-addressed, stamped envelope in exchange for free information. Needless to say, advertising the fact that you have free information is, well, not free. In fact, it costs more than if you paid for the stamps and envelopes yourself! Very few people are willing to go to this much trouble in an age of 'instant information'. Plus, people want information that truly is free - free information does not add up to 2 good stamps and 2 good envelopes. When was the last time you took the effort to self-address an envelope, put a stamp on it, put this envelope into another envelope, address that envelope, put another stamp on, then mail it? When did requesting free information through a 800 number or via the Internet become old-fashioned? Does anybody have their hand up? You advertise the program using your own money. If you don't advertise, you don't make money. If they offer to sell you a mailing list of names and tell you to use it in direct mail campaigns... it's worthless. The response rate to these lists are well below 1%. The Revolving Door: The Advertisement Is The Product Most commonly, the information, or "circulars", or "product literature" or whatever they say you are stuffing, is really just the exact sales letter you read which convinced you to send in your money... a revolving door with no actual product. The Back Door Ploy Sometimes you may be led to believe a booklet, special report, or direct mail circular is the actual product. But this is not the case. For instance, a special report on "Legitimate Home Jobs" may actually be a back door tactic to try and convince you that the scammer is unbiased and simply "reporting" the facts. When in fact, the goal of the report is to endorse an envelope stuffing program. Testimonials Are Just Words Unless Verified Sometimes you'll see testimonials from "real people" who are supposedly making money stuffing envelopes. The testimonials are worthless when you can't follow up with the "satisfied customer" to verify the claim. Anyone can slap up some words and call it a testimonial. Beware Of Unattended Toll-Free Numbers and No Email Address If the promoter of the program offers an 800 number it is usually not for contacting the company. Most often it is a pre-recorded message telling you to leave a message or mail your inquiries to their rented mailbox. Why would they give out this number? Because it looks good and most people don't call it. Consider this, if you ever need to contact this person or "company" with a question or problem, you'll have to write them. No phone calls. No email. Why? Because it's a shady operation. Is that any way to run a business? Is That Guarantee For Real? To get a refund if you're not satisfied, you'll have to fill a certain number of orders first. Usually it's from 50 to 250. That's a tall order. You'll need to advertise heavily and aggressively to get that many orders. You'll spend hundreds, even thousands, on advertising before qualifying for a refund. What They Don't Tell You Some envelope stuffing programs seem fairly straight-forward. They explain what you will do and how to do it... right there on the website or in the literature. For instance, you may see your pay specified at $4, $8, even $12, for each envelope you stuff. You learn about the stuffing process, their direct mail and newspaper advertising methodology, and the manner by which you will get paid. What they don't tell you is that you may find the ancillary products or services offered through their program morally and ethically objectionable. With enough digging, you may discover that not only will you be promoting the envelope stuffing offer to others, you may unwittingly be involved in the promotion of gambling sites, alternative medicinal therapies, or other non-regulated or illegal activities. What they don't tell you is that if you meet the requirements to get a refund, you'll have already earned a substantial sum for the promoter. You soon discover that it's cheaper to give up the program rather than meet the requirements of their guarantee. This is a mute point though, since these people often pull the plug on their rented mail box and move on when things get too hot. What they don't tell you is that effectively promoting a product or service doesn't happen by just placing a few tiny ads or putting up a few fliers and asking for a SASE. They don't tell you that advertising will bankrupt even the healthiest of accounts if done without discipline and testing. They don't tell you about metrics and ad tracking, branding, product placement, and the art of writing effective copy. What they don't tell you... is exactly why this article was written. Envelope Stuffing Operations Have Been Targeted By Federal Authorities The Federal Trade Commission will actively prosecute large envelope stuffing schemes. This is a direct indication that promoters of these scams are operating outside of the law. The FTC, working in conjunction with individual states, has leveled charges against 77 work-at-home schemes in 17 states. A good portion of these stings involved envelope stuffing operations. At the very least, envelope stuffing opportunities are unethical. The people who push these offers are looking for fast bucks, and are not really interested in helping anybody but themselves. If envelope stuffing were a true enterprise, you would get full disclosure about the offer before having to send in your money. They don't give you full disclosure because the majority of people would be turned off by this "black hole" kind of scam. Plus, you would have an actual service or product to sell after joining the organization. They offer no product or service of value. Their "product" is usually the envelope stuffing offer itself.
Are there any legit envelope stuffing jobs?
You can stuff envelopes as an employee for your local print shop or mailing house. They probably only pay a little better than minimum wage.Or you could start your own Direct Mail business. This is envelope stuffing at its finest, and completely legal to boot. Another way envelope stuffing could be legit is if you sell your own product or service, or sell someone else's product or service for a commission, and you use direct mail to solicit sales. However, direct mail is just one advertising medium to drum up sales for a legit product or service. I have investigated many envelope stuffing offers. I have found none to be legitimate. They are a "money pit" that sucks in people's hard earned money. The promoters use deceptive language and make fraudulent claims to dupe people into the scam. Don't get trapped into the notion that you can make easy money with little effort. If envelope stuffing were that easy and if it were really legitimate, everybody would be doing it. Do you know anybody that stuffs envelopes and makes lots of money? I don't.
stuffing envelopes questions

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