Work at home jobs and how to find them
The sad thing is that there are tons of excellent free and low-cost materials and tutorials for people looking for work at home jobs. But because scammers can easily make more money than legitimate sites, the best information about work at home jobs often gets clobbered and "flooded over" by products that are ripoffs and scams.
This page will take you through some of the best resources for finding legitimate work at home jobs and teach you to avoid pitfalls and traps in the process of doing your research and job hunting.
Follow "The Rules" when looking for work at home jobs
Readers of the WorkAtHomeTruth newsletter know to follow what we call "the rules". These are rules of the telecommuting job hunt that when followed will help you to avoid most cons, swindles, ripoffs, and scams. Of course nothing can prevent everyone from making a mistake all of the time, but "the rules" will definitely save a lot of people a lot of headaches.
If you don't know the rules yet click here to view them.
Network for work at home jobs
If you're not networking, you're nuts
1. You start learning tips and tricks for weeding out scams.
2. You gain information about which companies that offer telecommuting positions have the best reputation and which you should avoid.
3. Most importantly, often another forum member that you have become friends with will pass along openings to you (or at times the whole forum).
- WAHM telecommuting forum
- If you're not on the WAHM forum, you should be. You specifically want to check out the "Telecommuting Mommies" section (men are welcome, too). WAHM is one of the busiest forums online for those seeking both work at home jobs and work at home businesses.
. - JustOnlineJobs forum
- JustOnlineJobs seems to be the site the Nell Taliercio has settled on as her main site. I'm glad, too, because I always thought it was a mistake that she had so many different sites going.
She's been an enormous resource for telecommuters and potential telecommuters since her earlier days of posting great information in the WAHM forum so it's great to see her consolidating all of her efforts into this site.
I would call this a "must-add" forum for any of you who are serious about telecommuting.
. - I've Tried that forum
- I've Tried that is a newer site and the owners are one of the rare breeds online that are really trying to help as many people as possible while still generating some revenue for their site.
Their best information is their information about work at home jobs. Stick to their information about work at home jobs and you're good to go. In fact they have an inexpensive ebook that we highly recommend you pick up.
Sometimes we have wildly different opinions about home businesses and they have an article about how to identify online scams that isn't very well thought out at all and reflects their lack of more advanced internet research techniques.
Take their "tip 5" for example. They suggest you copy and paste a block of text from a sales page into Google and then go onto say:
"Copied and pasted into Google yields numerous results and presell pages. It's safe to say that it's a scam and you'll likely be selling the same program you are buying."
As a matter of fact, doing that tells you virtually NOTHING in most cases. Why? Because most of the best copywriters for even the most legitimate products often operate from what's called a "swipe-file" - standard blocks of text that have been proven to influence and increase conversions. And this practice isn't limited to online advertising, it goes for retail advertising, offline print advertising, and all forms of media.
In fact if you followed their advice in your day to day life, you probably would have to call nearly EVERY single potential purchase you make through the day a scam and you might even starve to death because "hey, this firm, smooth and delicious" apple is a scam!
In fact this is one of the reasons why services like Competitrack, Whosmailingwhat.com and many other ad monitoring services exist.
That isn't to say using the ideas in the article will hurt you, but you're going to be leaving a lot of the best online opportunities untouched if you follow their "10 Tips".
. - WhyDoWork forums
- WhyDoWork has a huge forum of users and rapidly became a very popular site for finding work at home jobs.
The have both a free section and an upgraded version of their site for $20.00/year which is probably most useful for freelancers, virtual assistants or home business operators. - TelecommuteReview social networking for telecommuters
- TelecommuteReview is a newer networking site for telecommuters. It's simple, smart, and organized, and we think it's going to be an important place for telecommuters over time.
Books on how to find work at home jobs
If you need a powerboost to your telecommuting job hunt try these...
The following guidebooks will help you develop the skill to find work at home jobs using advanced search and networking skills.
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- You Can Work In Your PJs
- This is one of our favorite books about how to really find telecommuting positions. One of it's biggest strengths is it helps you uncover many specific and marketable talents that you may have never thought you had. And then it shows you exactly how to capitalize on those talents and use proven methods for securing the best jobs for your skillset.
Let's just say that this book goes way beyond your typical list of "telecommuting positions" that everyone and their brother has seen.
. - Phil Montero's Lose Your Commute
- This is a terrific guide recommended by non other than the Executive Director of the Telework Coalition itself! That's great, but just how important is the Telework Coalition?
Well, former Vice President Al Gore references THE TELEWORK COALITION as "the" source for information on telecommuting.
So I'd say you're on pretty solid ground when it comes to the guidance Phil Montero gives about finding work at home jobs in Lose Your Commute.
by WorkAtHomeTruth
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