Monthly Archives: September 2009

Work At Home Jobs Sept 30, 2009

wahsjobsSubscribers to WAHS Jobs and News are receiving an additional 20 work-at-home job announcements in their email every Friday! You can too. Use the form above to subscribe to get jobs sent to your email each Friday plus additional work-at-home job resources. Visit Work-At-Home Success to subscribe.

READ FIRST! To apply to the jobs listed below, please follow the directions posted in the announcement. DO NOT CONTACT WAHS TO APPLY TO A JOB LISTED HERE. Work-At-Home Success is not representing or affiliated with the companies posted here. These jobs are found by Work-At-Home Success or submitted for posting. Further Work-At-Home Success can make no guarantees about the jobs posted. Remember to never pay money to get hired or use your personal bank account or credit card to help a company do business!! Please let me know if any job posted below asks for money or is otherwise questionable. Visit WAHS’s Scam Alert page to get information on protecting yourself from scams.

New Jobs




Patent Attorney
Leadership Scorecard Consultant
Digital Marketing Specialist/Web Developer
Technical Support
Customer Service


Search for more jobs!

Didn’t find the job you want above? Here are some of the sites I used to find the jobs listed above. These resources list hundreds of jobs in a variety of categories. Please note, the listings below are NOT jobs (jobs are posted above). These are services that provide work-at-home job announcements. Some are free and others aren’t. While you never want to pay a company to hire you, its is okay to invest in a service that can help you find a job. The services below are the ones that I use and know to be reputable.

Telecommuting Job Databases (fee required to access these services)

HomeJobStop has over 100 jobs in clerical, and more in customer service, writing, transcription, miscellaneous plus 100′s of others. Very affordable.

VirtualAssistants has 100”s of Secretarial/General jobs plus 100′s more in other categories. Little more expensive but offers more jobs.

HomeWorker- Provides many great jobs in a variety of areas including virtual assistance, customer service and more. Very affordable.

Free job search sites (you need to search by keyword to find work-at-home jobs on these sites).


Monster.com

CareerBuilder

Job.com

CraigsList.org

Share

The Real Deal on Mystery Shopping

Like surveys, mystery shopping is one of those “jobs” that people seem to gravitate to because it seems so easy and fun. And like surveys, mystery shopping is a “real” way to make money. BUT you aren’t likely to make a living. The few times I mystery shopped, the income was not at all worth the time and expense. But if you want to try it, there are some things you need to know the most important of which you don’t have to pay to mystery shop. Legitimate companies that use mystery shoppers don’t charge you.

This brings me to an email I keep receiving from Shadow Shopper. I’m not sure how I ended up on this list, but a few times a week I get an email about how desperate they are for shoppers in my town. The email mentions my town by name or zip code. If I lived in a big city I might buy the hype. But I live in a county that just got its first stop light. There are only two chain stores and a couple of chain fast foods in the area. Competition is low. I don’t see them needing mystery shoppers.

What they are desperate for is for me to BUY into their program. It doesn’t appear that Shadow Shopper is actually hiring but that it sells memberships to access its directory of mystery shopping programs and sends email updates of new jobs. This might be helpful if in fact you live in a city with regular and frequent mystery shopping needs. But with a little research, these companies can be found online for free.

Further Shadow Shopper terms of service indicates there are NO refunds. To me its not worth risking your money if you don’t have any recourse. What if I joined and discovered there in fact was no mystery shopping in my area (meaning their email lied to me). I still be out of luck according to the sites TOS.

And finally it says you can become a certified shopper…does that really exist? Well it exists, but does it actually mean anything? I wasn’t certified when I did some shops so its clearly not a requirement.

The real deal is that mystery shopping doesn’t pay well and often you end up losing money if you have to buy something or the money they give you to spend (like in restaurants) isn’t enough to cover the meal. Further you are asked to do specific things in the store (ask for customer service help, check the bathrooms, etc) and you have to pay attention to details because the report you fill out is detailed. This makes it hard to do shops with kids tagging along. And finally, the work isn’t steady. You can go weeks even months without an assignment. Most people can’t afford to live on an income of a few bucks every few weeks.

Mystery shopping can be a fun way way to earn a few bucks or get a free meal, but don’t expect it to be your career.

Share