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Top 12 Requested - Envelope Stuffing
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OnlyCritiques.com Review:
Top 12, Scam, Envelope Stuffing Critique
Envelope stuffing in my opinion is nothing but a scam. I
have seen these ads for years and discovered a long time ago that they are
nothing more then selling an opportunity to go into mail order.
The following experience and knowledge of others will
support this position:
1) “Is all of that envelope stuffing crap a scam, or
is some of it legit? It's all a scam and always has been (it was around in the
70s when I was growing up). Real
envelope stuffing is done by machine, which can do this sort of work really
quickly and way more cheaply than any system that involves shipping materials
to people's homes.
Before the development of these machines (when it was
still a semi-automated procedure), envelope stuffing was done in a factory-like
setting. It is really expensive to maintain a supplies delivery network to make
this a viable home-based industry.
What they are is yet another pyramid scheme. You send in
$5 to $50 for instructions. These instructions tell you to place ads in all the
local newspapers and/or newsgroups with the same spiel that attracted you in
the first place. The envelope stuffing
used to involve the envelopes you send your ad payment in, plus the envelopes
in which you sent the instructions to the next set of suckers, never very many
because the market is saturated.”
2) “I have tried an opportunity of stuffing envelopes
by sending a check for ten dollars. In return, I got only about ten mailing
addresses while its ad said a hundred addresses. So I wrote a letter
complaining about the number of mailing addresses and never heard back from
them.
Also, I spoke with a money management consultant, who said
that opportunities for envelope stuffing would offer free opportunities if they
were honest, in that envelope stuffing would make money for the people involved
because they sincerely needed people to help out. In other words, they would
pay you directly for stuffing envelopes instead of charging a fee first.
However, they know that envelope stuffing is a scam and people do not make
money from it so they charge first to make money themselves. He further stated
that the US Postal Service provides a warning about envelope stuffing as a
rip-off or scam.
It is also interesting to note that the ads that used to
indicate 900 phone numbers switched to 800 numbers. Now I know that some 800
numbers mean 900 numbers indirectly.”
3) “THE ENVELOPE STUFFING SCAMS EXPOSED. It seems
like every mail order publication has at least one ad in it promising hundreds
of dollars a week, just for stuffing envelopes. Some even promise to pay $4 or
$5 per envelope stuffed! So, many people send off their hard earned money for
the registration fees so they can get started on this easy work.
Then they are disappointed when they discover They've been
duped. Here's why the envelope stuffing programs are nothing more than scams.
First of all, the idea of paying someone to stuff envelopes is ridiculous. Why
pay someone even 50 cents to stuff an envelope when you can get an
envelope-stuffing machine for a few hundred dollars? There must be more to what
you'll have to do then simply putting a paper in an envelope.
In fact, there IS more. The most prevalent envelope
stuffing con game goes like this. You
pay your registration fee, which is usually around $30.00 pure profit for the
scam operator. The operator will then send you a copy of the ad you originally
responded to, along with the wording to a classified ad, telling people about
how much money they can make stuffing envelopes, and to send a self-addressed
stamped envelope for information.
When you receive someone's SASE, you send him or her a
copy of the ad. You have just stuffed an envelope. If the poor sucker sends in
the registration fee to the operator (like YOU did), the operator will send you
$1 (or whatever was promised in the ad) for stuffing the envelope. The operator
is left with expenses of around $2 and a profit of $28.
Basically, you are doing all the advertising work for the
operator for extremely low pay. You should expect a response rate, if you're
lucky, of 1/4% to 1/2%. At 1/2%, you'd
have to get 200 responses to your classified ad to get $1. Good luck.
The other most common scheme goes like this. You send the
usual registration fee in, and the operator sends you a package containing all
the components of the operator’s mailings. You must assemble them, fold them,
and stuff the envelopes according to the
operator's very exacting instructions. Then, you send the stuffed envelopes
back to the operator.
You will be paid for each stuffed envelope that meets
their standards. Of course, none of the envelopes you stuffed will meet their
standards. They will find some reason not to pay you. Of course, that doesn't
prevent them from still sending out the envelopes you stuffed.
So, you can see that joining an envelope-stuffing program
is a bad idea. Save the money you'd send in for the registration fee, and put
it towards a legitimate mail order business, and you'll be happier and more
successful.”
Naturally, I do not recommend envelope stuffing.
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