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Best Picks

Homeown Refer Network
AA Customer Service Rep
Daycare Builder
Yahoo Store Manual
eBay Selling Book
Usborne Books
Coastal Vacations
GDI (Global Domains Int.)

Marginal

Mom'sWin (Mom Team)
Resale/Private Label Rights
Amway (Quixtar) 
HerbaLife
Vending Machines
Plasma Donation
Web Host/Domain Name
Affiliate Programs
Paid Surveys
Driving Jobs/Free Cars
Candy Wrap Software
Ziby.com
eCurrency Trading
Quicklister (LLI)
MommyCash Newsletter  
Telemarketing  
Be Your Own ISP
SMC
Government Auctions
eBay Misspelling Software

Questionable

Home Inspection Book
NPS  
It Pays To Learn.com  
Online Virtual Malls  
Double Pay System
Website Sales Package
Day Trading
Domain Squatting
Make Money Surfing
Infomercial
Judicial Judgments
Liquidations
Medical Billing
Government Grants

Obvious Scams

Envelope Stuffing  
Home Assembly  
Long Domain Names
Affiliate Marketing Scam
900 Numbers
Offshore Invest "Secret"
Real Estate No Down
Stock Market Systems
HUD Refunds
Gambling Systems
Coupon Books

Think you'd like to go full time with eBay? Wanna know how to really earn with it? This book can help! Read full independent review here.

Make Money Surfing

Real work at home jobs DO exist, but you won't find them by searching for them on Google. It is so hard to tell the scams from the legit stuff. We offer a listing of 20+ companies that DO hire people to work from home. No telemarketing, no unethical or immoral stuff either. Get the details here.

Rating:

Level of Review: Researched.

Overview: Paid to Surf programs promise that you can make money by surfing online. Sometimes someone is telling you they have a "secret" method of earning lots of money through this means.

Product: The product is advertising, targeted at you.

Cost: There will be no cost but time for a legit program. Scams have a price of $9.95 on up.

Compensation: A per-click rate, usually in pennies, or points (points are just a way to make you think you are getting more than you are).

Conclusion: Paid to Surf programs are legit, most of the time. But only if they are NOT charging to sign up, and if they are the actual company that issues the check.

You won't make a fortune at this. Over a year's time, you might make $10 to $50, if you do a lot of clickthroughs. You can sometimes increase your earnings if you buy the products that are being advertised to you, but this COSTS you.

The catch to all this is that the company that pays you is getting paid by the merchant, to advertise to you. You are the target of the advertising, and the only reason they pay this way is to try to persuade you to buy things you would not otherwise buy. Often, the advertisers are Work at Home scammers, or near scammers, who know that if you are willing to try paid surfing, you must be on the lookout for an easy buck.

You don't precisely get paid for surfing either. You get paid for the number of times you go where THEY want you to go. You can browse online all day if you want, but unless you click on the ads, you don't get a thing. And sometimes you may be required to go through an entire presentation before you get your penny.

Not an efficient way to make money. At best you will pick up a few extra dollars over a long time period. At worst you will end up spending a lot more than you can afford, on things you don't need. You would have to keep very busy at this in order to make enough to cover even the cost of your internet connection.

Our Rating System:

No program is right for everyone. Even a rating of four or five does not indicate that you should dive in without some careful thought and consideration. Business is still risky. All reviews have the reasons for the rating clearly defined.

 - Information presented in program is accurate and factual concerning the potential of the program, program is based on sound business principles, and has good potential to provide stable income for individuals to whom the program is suitable.

 - Information is accurately presented, company focuses on selling product, but business is either more confusing, less predictable, or slightly higher risk for one of a number of reasons. Still considered a sound company and very acceptable risk.

 - Information may be confusing or misleading, company may have significant issues with program structure, support of product, or public perception and reputation. A rating of three does not mean you should not do it. It just means you need to be sure you are suited to overcoming the difficulties that the program has.

 - Information generally misleading, risk fairly high, many unanswered questions, business principles questionable, but still has some potential for actually working for some people.

 - Cannot declare that it is an outright scam, but potential for it to work is very low. Will have questionable business theory, bad reputation, excessive hype that is not backed up by common sense, or other aspects which indicate very high risk. Will always have multiple issues, not just one thing.

 - Outright Scam. Anything labeled this way is never worth any kind of risk.

Helpful Info

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Real work at home jobs DO exist, but you won't find them by searching for them on Google. It is so hard to tell the scams from the legit stuff. We offer a listing of 20+ companies that DO hire people to work from home. No telemarketing, no unethical or immoral stuff either. Get the details here.

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