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admin on Tuesday, December 22nd, 2009 |
6 Comments
Automated Blogging
My wife showed me a video on YouTube of a kid talking to his mother. Real popular video with 31,000,000 views. On the corner was an add for a way to make money. Claiming that the "system" can earn you $3500 a week or some crazy number.
I went to the page to satisfy my wife who asks me "why can’t you convert your online time to income?"
so that was a link to tycoon cash flow.
I don’t know what to think of this program. It asks you for like, $49 to start which is not a lot of money but right now that $50 seems like a lot to us (the economy in Vegas sucks worse than the rest of the country) and so i am really skeptical to pay it.
It doesn’t seem like it’s mlm (multiple level marketing AKA pyramid scheme) and claims to be a program that anyone could in theory do for free if they had the know how.
What they "sell" you is 14 videos that explain how to place ads to drive traffic to products you do not sell but you make a comission from a second party selling the product
It does promise huge profits though. That I am very wary of. There is no get rich quick system.
I read a review that was titles "tycoon cash flow SCAM" but then said that it makes money! Talk about confusing. The review says that it will generate Income but definitely not as fast as the creators imply.
Then I get an email from the same site (the main tycoon cash flow site) after I did not "act now!!" and purchase at first offering me a FREE course because I am their "friend" (haha!) and it is about six long pages that do seem full of info but no demands to "buy now!"
Has anyone tried this? I am a computer "nerd" and have been online since 1995 or so. Don’t need to take any wooden nickles but i do want to have an honest shot at now being cheated and making my utility bills (phone/tv/electric) go away with some extra income.
Thanks for reading. I am not affiliated with the program at all. I am not trying to get a hundred replies from ppl that want to sell me their system. I just want some opinions.
Thanks again
Steven in Las Vegas
Its just another of the countless scams.
You can only obtain legitimate work from home positions from brick and mortar companies.
You want to send your resume out to companies hiring for positions you are qualified for, but include in your resume that you have a home office and you wish to work remotely. Include how you have your home office set up and what equipment you already have in order for you to perform your job.
These jobs are just going to advertised as jobs, they would not promote them as "work at home" because they would hear from too many unqualified people.