I have spent the five years trying to work at home and have had some
success. The following are a few facts I have to share with people who are
either trying to or have given up trying to work at home.
Q. What
about places that put up “pay money to get a job” postings? Are they worth
the money? Will I get a job if I spend the money?
A.
If a job
asks for money, then it is not really a job. Think of it this way, would
you pay to fill out an application for a job outside the home? No, of
course you would not, so why you would pay someone for a work-at-home job?
Let’s say that a listing says “Buy our software and you can work at home.”
This probably means that you buy the software up-front and they give you a
list of places that might hire you.
The
software is usually something similar to what you already have in your
computer, like a word processor program or something you could buy in a
local office supplies store’s discount section. The list of jobs they give
you is usually a list of companies they found in the phone book and you
can find the same companies yourself just by using the Internet Yellow
Pages. And if companies were really hiring work-at-home people, then why
would they give the software to another company to sell? They wouldn't!
They would list the software requirements in their help wanted classified
advertisement.
Fact to
remember:
If they ask for money, then it is probably not a real job.
Q. What
about these places that advertise “Pay to join our group and we will help
you find a job” or “We have hundreds or thousands of jobs listed” sites?
A. I
spent over $500.00 on those during my second year of job searching and
never did get a job. I’m not saying they are all bad or tried to rip me
off. Some were an all-and-all-out scam. Others honestly tried to provide a
good job list for me to send my resume, but if you don’t have the
requisite skills, it doesn’t matter how many honest job listings are
provided. Still others provided job listings that were so old, they were
no longer hiring or no longer in business! These sites used old job
listings so they could say they had “thousands of jobs” listed. There were
also some that listed jobs found listed by “monsters” and headhunters.
My best
advice is if you want to join one of these places, then you should go to a
“work at home”-type message board and ask for other experiences with the
company. Ask questions like: Did you really get the material they promised
to send to you? What kind of jobs do the sites offer? Did you find a job?
Remember that the people who run these companies often go to these message
boards and reply to the questions posted by people like you , so be sure
and wait till you get several replies so you can get to the truth.
Fact to
remember:
Do your homework before spending the money – take the time to ask around
and check out the company with the BBB (Better Business Bureau) to find
out if there have been any complaints listed against the company.
Q. Are
Medical Transcription (MT) jobs good jobs and is this type of job for me?
A. Just
because you take the MT (Medical Transcriptionist) classes doesn't mean
that you will get an at-home job. I took all the classes and got
certified. I then tested for jobs for a year before giving up on that type
of work at home. This is not to say that it isn't a very good job for some
people, it just wasn’t ever going to be the right job for me. I know
several people who do MT work at home and love it.
Most MT jobs require
that you have at least six months’ to a year’s experience at an in-house
job before they will consider you for independent, at-home production.
Once you have gained your in-house experience
(or you have
been lucky enough to start out at home), you have to be prepared to work
eight hours or more in a row transcribing.
Most
transcription jobs call for tight turn-around time (TAT). A typical
scenario is that they give you a set time to record their audio using to
your transcription-recording machine (either via phone line or web site).
Then you have a set number of hours to do the transcription and send it
back to the company.
This
means you have to have these hours set aside five days a week to work,
just like you would if you when out to a job. Not all MT work will be
consistently supplied, so you might find that you work fast and furious on
Monday and Thursday, and have no work on Tuesday, Wednesday, and Friday.
My best
advice is if you are interested in becoming an MT, then you should first
check out the schools with the BBB. Go to an MT message board and read
what other people who do this type of work have to say and ask them
questions you might have. Also, buy training tapes to listen to before
paying for classes to see if you are the kind of person who can listen to
them all day and type what you hear (given that an MT school will
obviously teach you the necessary vocabulary and formatting styles, etc.).
Personally,
I found that I could barely understand half of what the doctors. They talk
very fast, some have foreign accents, and/or there were high levels of
background noise (maybe the doctor was dictating while driving). I wish I
had done my homework before I had paid for the at-home course that I took.
Now I have a $300.00 MT certificate and a $250.00 transcription machine
sitting in a box somewhere in my garage.
Facts to
remember:
Be sure you really have the time the job requires and the desire to do
this type of work, check out MT schools that interest you by asking about
the school on MT message boards to see who else has gone to these schools,
and check with the BBB to see if there have been any complaints made about
the schools that were left unresolved.
Q. I know
HTML and made my own web site. Does this mean I can be a Webmaster at
home?
A.
Probably not when it comes to jobs found through Internet job searches.
Even if you know HTML, can make frames, tables, can create your own
graphics, and use copy and paste JavaScript, you probably will not find a
web page design job just by doing a regular Internet job search. I can
write HTML freehand without an editor and am competent at many other
web-page-related skills. I have sent out over 1,000 resumes and have not
even gotten one honest reply. Three years ago I finally realized that if
you really want to work at home doing web page design, then you need to
have at least a two-year of college degree.
This is not to say there are no honest HTML at-home
jobs for simple skills like routine updates to web sites, but bear in mind
that for every job available for doing HTML out there, there are thousands
of people applying for it. I can't even imagine the number of resumes that
are sent daily for jobs listed for HTML skills! My best advice is either
go to college and get a degree in CGI, DHTML, Flash, ASP, VB Script, Java
Script, Flash, Database Interface, Oracle, and SQL server (to name a few
different skills and language codes) or try to develop a clientele of
small business owners, local to your area, who need simple web sites and
can’t afford expensive “professionals.” Many of small businesses would
love to have web site, but either have no idea where to start, believe it
costs too much money, or that they have to sell their product online
(which they don't). They can use the web page for advertising, promote
sales, or offer printable coupons. The best way to get this type of work
is ask your friends to tell any small business owners they know about your
services. In your town has a local newspaper or newsletter, consider
placing an ad.
Fact to remember: If you all know is HTML,
then either get a degree so that you can apply to online jobs or hand out
business cards to friends and local small business to create a local
clientele.
Q. I can
make postcards, greeting cards, and write verses using my home publishing
programs. Can I use these skills to get an at-home job?
A. This can
be done on a freelance basis at home. There are books that offer lists of
companies that might buy your work. You can visit your local library or
book store to get Writer's Market: 8000 Editors Who Buy What You Write
and/or Artists & Graphic Designer's Market: Where & How to Sell Your
Illustration, Fine Art, Graphic Design & Cartoons.
Now you are
probably asking, “So what do you do at home?” I make my
money using affiliate programs. Affiliate program are online stores that
pay you per click, lead, or sale by placing banner and/or products on your
web page.
I do make enough money to help pays the bills, an average of
$14.00 an hour on a 40 hour work week after overhead such as advertising
and web host cost. To learn more about affiliate programs read "Tying
Together Web P ages & Affiliate Programs to Make a Profit" at
http://work-at-home.momsbreak.com.
I have also made many work at home free printable sheets to help you.
Good Luck
with your pursuit of a work-at-home job or home business!
About The Author:
Kimberly Hargis,
Owner of Mom's Break
http://www.momsbreak.com. See
Mom's Break ~ Home Business & Work at Home at
http://work-at-home.momsbreak.com to find Articles from Expert Guest
Columnists, 40 Free Printables and Files, Work at Home Mom Pride Shirts &
Much More.
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