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Assemble Products at Home to Make Money; Online Scams


Finding a job where you assemble products at home to make money ought to be easy because there are tons of websites claiming to offer just that. Sadly, most of these turn out to be scams.

Trying to find a job where you assemble products at home to make money is very hard nowadays. The foremost reason for this is that manufacturers prefer to exploit overseas workers who will assemble products until their fingers bleed in return for a fraction of what we would call minimum wage.

Trying to find a job where you assemble products at home to make money on the internet sounds as if it should be easier than scanning local newspapers and notice boards, and phoning round local manufacturing companies. It isn't. Searching for craft or assembly home work online can lead you in a couple of directions; one I have recently encountered is the misleading advertiser.

Today I was browsing online and looking at work at home opportunities when I spotted an article on the subject of how to assemble products at home to make money. "Bingo" I thought; "things must have changed" I thought. Sadly I was wrong. This is the journey I was led through.

The article claimed that assembling products at home was a great way to make money. It made it seem that making money at home from product assembly was just about the easiest thing in the world ("why couldn't I find any before", I wondered). It set out this list of product assembly job opportunities.
Baby Bibs, Stuffed Animals, Holiday Decorations, Key Chains, Sewing, Hair Cutting Capes, Jewelry, Wood Products, Refrigerator Magnets,
String Art, Potpourri ? Sachets, Hair Bows, CD Stands, Felt Game Boards, Book Marks

This is a pretty comprehensive list; there must be something on it for everyone who wants a work at home assembly job. So I clicked the link in the article to go to the product assembly job website.

Instead of reaching a website belonging to a company offering employment, I found myself at a blog containing exactly the same article as the one I had just read. I was starting to get bored with the chase, but decided finding a legitimate work at home assembly job would be worth the effort, so I clicked the link on the blog page.

I was sure the reward for persevering would be a website full of jobs where you assemble products at home to make money. Clicking the link in the article on the blog did take me to a website, but there was no sign of any craft or product assembly jobs, it was just a page advertising get rich quick schemes.

People do say that you have to kiss a lot of frogs before you find a prince. I certainly kissed my fair share of internet amphibians before I finally found a real job where you assemble products at home to make money. Visit http://www.huntingvenus.com/disciplescross.html to read a full program review.

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Article Details
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Author:Elaine Currie
Publication:Home based business community
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Sep 25, 2009
Words:489
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