Earn At Home
This article reviews some of the various
"earn at home" options available to you ...
While the appeal is great and the benefits equally as
great—if you can find them—earn at home gigs must be closely
investigated and carefully considered. First,
telecommuting writers know how lucrative and lovely working at
home can be. We have freedom. We are our own
bosses. We can work from our territory, empowered by the
comfort of our own private spaces, coffee and cigarettes and TV
as we work, and, yes, the joy of wearing whatever we want,
including pajamas.
But a few caveats are in order for contemplating the earn at
home option as one that is all good, all frills. Of
course, you will want to avoid the earn at home scams: any
company that advertises you can make money working for it but
then charges you a fee—a one-time fee, a materials charge, an
application fee—is not to be trusted. You are working to
earn money, not spend it. No “employer” should charge you
anything, especially not to apply.
One earn at home possibility includes taking surveys.
Again, do not pay even a sign-up fee. There are hundreds
of survey companies that are free and that offer points, prizes
and drawings, and even a few dollars. I do mean a FEW, as
for example, one survey is worth ten points and you get $10 for
every 1,000 points earned…so you do the math (taking into
consideration time spent per survey = how many dollars—or
cents—per hour).
Another popular trend is the pay-per-click game. I
call it a game as in this case, you hire on to get paid for
clicking. You get one cent for each click, and each click
requires you stay on the page/ad you click on for a minimum of
30 seconds to a few minutes. So…one cent per minute is,
yes, sixty cents an hour.
More advanced is the earn at home gig that is a writing
project. These are typically taken by/offered to writers
(as they should be), but if you have yet to write for a company
and think you might want to, might be good at it, pay heed to
the way the ads (soliciting work-at-home folks) are
worded. As Angela Hoy, of Writers Weekly, has thoroughly
researched and reported in her article, “Red Flag Phrases to
Avoid in Freelance Help Wanted Ads,” a number of indicators
should make you be wary: if the company is a start-up,
stating it cannot pay now, that it pays in exposure, or that it
may offer stocks, think twice. If you seek to earn money,
you wouldn’t answer an ad that asks you to work for no
money. And “exposure” is gotten not by the company that
has no exposure itself yet (whose website is not seen by anyone
looking for writers, usually) but by your own advertising
methods, by your years of publication and by
contest-winning. As Hoy also explains, key phrases such
as “trial period,” “interns needed,” and ads with grandiose
promises are offers for you to do free work until they approve
of you, do free work for the term of the project, and do free
work on the promise that you will one day get royalties,
shares, or lots of pay, respectively. Clearly, all of the
above are unacceptable to the one who wants to work at home,
but work, nonetheless, for money to pay those who also expect
money for their work—the editors, publishers, start-ups,
doctors, lawyers, plumbers, waitresses, and store
clerks.
For more information relating to starting a home based
business or setting up a home office, please visit our
"resources" section, or go to articles about home business.
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