Many legitimate home-based jobs and projects can be found online, but trustworthy guidance is scarce. Worse, with a 56-to-1 scam ratio in work-at-home ads, the terrain is a minefield of fraud.
Nevertheless, customer service agents, researchers, test scorers, tutors, writers, and concierges are just a few of the many people regularly hired to work from home.
A growing number of Fortune 500 companies, including UnitedHealth Group, American Express, and Northrop Grumman, also hire home-based personnel.
In “Work at Home Now,” you'll learn:
- The top insider tips on good and bad Google search terms.
- How to find the “needles in the haystack” on Craigslist, Indeed, Monster, CareerBuilder, and other big sites.
- Where the real jobs for mystery shoppers, transcriptionists, and similar part-time specialties can be found.
- Scam-spotting tips that even law enforcement doesn't know.
Including interviews with hiring managers and successfu
Scams, and Making a Great Living.
Christine Durst founded the Virtual Assistant industry in 1995. Michael Haaren, an ex-Wall Street attorney, was one of her clients. Together they launched Staffcentrix, a leading VA training company, and the International Virtual Assistants Association; built the first portable career/Virtual Assistant training program for the Armed Forces; and transformed the Virtual Assistant movement into a global phenomenon.
Write a review