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expuser
Community Member

Job warning signs

When reading a job description, what causes you to go "Ut-oh!"? What red flags do you see in applications that at least puts you on your guard, if not actually skip to the next one? Here's some of mine (and others):

 

First and foremost The work is yours until you are paid in full. You own the copyright until you have been paid the agreed sum. If you choose to work for 15 cents per hour then that's your problem. If it takes longer than you thought..again, down to you. BUT. If you have done your bit according to the contract that you agreed, then the work is yours until it's paid for.

 

Asking for payment or to use your own accounts (Thanks Dave!) Money comes from the client to you; anything else and you're doing it wrong. Do not ever (unless you know the client really well, and give it second thoughts even then) pay for something for the client unless you have received the money from them first. Deposit for something; webhosting accounts; domain name; subscription for site X that is "essential for the job" etc etc. No money. Ever. Similarly, do not use your own eBay, Craigslist etc. accounts to list things for sale...chances are high that it will end badly and wreck any good karma you have built up there. And it'll be you in the frame if it turns out that it was illegal.

 

"Bait and Switch" (Thanks Selcalmel!) Clients advertise one job and then offer a different job at interview. Now there can be valid reasons for this; but a big difference between the job description and the work you're being offered should be viewed with extreme suspicion. Mostly on oDesk it's either jobs that you wouldn't have applied for if the job was described honestly or changing the rules to try and get the price down.

 

Too many people being interviewed This can be a sign that the buyer is dividing the job up and giving the various parts as a 'test' to applicants...with the intention of getting the job for free. It could just be that the buyer is looking for a very specific set of skills, or other innocent motive, but maybe not.

NOTE: (Thanks Brandon!) This also applies to the client's history...check the total number of jobs posted versus people hired. If there are a load of jobs posted but few contracts awarded, then proceed with caution.

 

Only low bidders being interviewed If you're not one of the low bidders on that job then it's probably not worth applying.

 

Long list of demands, silly budget We've all seen them; the jobs for an all-singing, all-dancing website for $100, followed by either a HUGE feature list and/or a long list of qualities required by the contractor. Luckily for you, the buyer is advertising the fact that they are a wanker (behaviour which is unlikely to change if you were unfortunate enough to land the contract). This buyer knows the market well enough to know exactly what they want; and must therefore know that the budget is exploitative...move on. And as a corollary to the above (Thanks Louis!):

 

People who bellow orders, often in capitals "SUCH SUCH WILL NOT BE READ I IF [insert term].... OTHERWISE I WILL DELETE YOUR APPLICATION IMMEDIATELY". Or "MUST ATTACH SUCH AND SUCH OTHERWISE YOU ARE WASTING MY TIME". Some people -presumably after watching Alan Sugar or that twat Trump- think that this is how bosses should behave. I see it mostly as a sign of either someone being new to being in a position to call the shots and is a bit insecure about it, or someone who is a natural git. In either case your job will be more difficult because of it. Also, these types of application are frequently paired with a ridiculous budget. Any buyers who are reading this should note that this isn't the way to go about things...also all capitals make it harder to read and you're increasing the chances of applicants missing an important detail. Annoying people before they've even applied for your job cannot possibly help. Am I the only one, by the way, who feels the impulse to reply in kind?: "Listen up bitch. I reckon I can do it in 10 hours which'll cost you $450 and if that isn't good enough then you can just **Edited for Community Guidelines** would be a fairly short application, probably.

 

Mention of half-finished job/previous contractor/s There are two factors here...sorting out what someone else has done often takes longer than just doing whatever it is from scratch. You will very probably be inheriting a hairy-arsed nightmare. The other factor -and a question you should be asking yourself (and the buyer, come to that)- is exactly why the previous contractor didn't finish. It does happen that buyers get a run of bad luck with contractors (often after playing in the lower budget ranges), so it isn't necessarily the buyer's fault. On the other hand, it could be. Rescuing a client from a wall-to-wall catastrophe at the 11th hour is one of the best smug feelings you can get as a freelancer; but these jobs are high-risk...you need to ascertain for yourself that the buyer is genuine before getting in too deep. A note to any buyers reading this: If you've already been through two or more contractors and you still don't have a result, you need to seriously consider throwing a match in and starting with fresh code. I've had jobs where it took significantly longer to find out what the hell the previous guys had done than it would have taken to just bin everything and do the job. And with other people's code, you can never be 100% sure that you haven't missed something important/broken/nasty.

 

One-line descriptions Buyers quite often don't know the information that a contractor needs in order to produce a final product the client will be happy with; that's not a problem and it's the contractor's job to ask the right questions. But when you see a job like "I need a website. Plz replie", just move on. If they can't be bothered, then neither can I.

 

Payment method not verified Sign either of a first-time user or a scammer. If the unverified user is overly familiar with the way oDesk works...warning! If it's a first time user, you may well have to do some unofficial oDesk support and talk them through it. And you might still get scammed at the end.

 

Anything where you have to create a user account on another site (that isn't the site you're working on) before you start. No. Just no.

 

Business plan with failure built in As a webdesigner, I hear 10 plans for world domination before breakfast. Some job descriptions have fail built into the very fabric of the scheme. The worst ones are the ones where you have to mess around with NDAs and soothe the buyer that you're not going to be over the horizon with his masterplan (which often as not turns out to be another bloody facebook or youtube clone). *sigh*

 

Jobs where 'clients' are mentioned I don't really like sub-sub contracting. Firstly there's there's the thought of the buyer sitting on his arse collecting cash for my work; which rankles a bit. Secondly -and more important- is the 'Chinese Whisper Effect'; where the original client's specs is filtered through the middleman's idea of what the end-client wants. These specs may well not be accurate. You *will* be doing extra work because of this. The same applies to large companies where an underling has been given the task and is now offloading it onto you; but in this case the specs are more often written down. The worse case in this latter scenario can be where it's a committee and everyone present has to get a design change in there -no matter how pointless- just to get their name in the minutes of the meeting.

 

"It will only take 5 minutes" No it won't. No job in the history of contracting has ever taken only 5 minutes. It takes longer than that to liase with the potential client, for a start.

 

Jobs that aren't worth it ((Your hourly rate) * (Number of hours you think it will take)) + (Say 10% safety margin for extra missions/unexplained bits) = (Your price for the job). If there's not enough money or not enough time, then it's usually best to move on.

 

Anything that mentions CAPTCHA or removing watermarks It's naughty. Don't.

 

Web scraping Nah. Probably illegal (copyright) and definitely immoral. You're stealing someone else's work. Worse...you're automating stealing someone else's work.

 

Jobs where it looks like a reasonable budget for the job until you read the description and it turns out that the budget is a monthly wage for full-time work of the same type This is annoying and wastes time.

 

Non-profit organisation (Thanks Mahesh!) A non-profit organisation is not the same thing as a charity. Some are, of course, but some are tax dodges, some are for groups of people, with the aim of the organisation being something you don't necessarily approve of..."Mothers in support of the ruthless oppression of Brits in Spain"; "White supremacy"; "Black supremacy"; whatever. Or -as Mahesh points out- it could just be weasel-wording for the fact that they haven't made any money.

 

Buyers asking for free work samples/tests (Thanks Anna!) It is the buyer's right to ask, just as it is your right to refuse. It's also discouraged by oDesk. All the veteran contractors (including me) will advise against free samples and in any case that's what your portfolio is for...to show previous examples of work and the standard that you're capable of. For contractors it just is not worth it...if there's 30 applicants to the job, you're spending time doing work for a 1 in 30 chance of getting a job. You can spend your entire life doing this and not make a penny. Now that I've said all that, a free sample is what landed me my first job on oDesk...someone wanted a graphic vector conversion and -having some free time- I just did it and sent an (unusable) sample graphic in. The buyer didn't demand a sample (I would not have applied if that were the case), but I proved I could do the job by doing it. Traditionally in design work, it used to be the case that the designer offered several alternate designs; but those were for *much* larger-budget jobs. It isn't worth even considering for the sort of jobs that are at oDesk. If you do choose to give free samples, always watermark them (Thanks Ernesto!). In the case of writing samples, send them as a graphic or locked PDF so that the text can't be used without paying you.

 

Free work samples - Part II If the buyer is asking for free samples and if it's the sort of job that can be broken up into smaller tasks then pay extra attention; and also look closely at the number of people being interviewed.

 

"Great opportunity for newbies" (Thanks Judith!) This means that a buyer is offering a risably small budget for work in exchange for giving you feedback. This is either feedback blackmail or investing time in order to get in the game, depending upon your point of view. You are definitely being taken advantage of; but really it's your decision...as long as you go into it with your eyes open and as long as it's all agreed at the start. Buyers trying to use feedback to change the terms after the job has started, however, should be reported.

 

Vague specifications (Thanks Louis!) It's harder to work with vague specifications, mostly, but you see quite a lot of jobs with insufficient detail. If you're extremely lucky, it's a buyer who wants this Thing to perform this Function; is busy; has correctly assessed your level of competence; and trusts you to get 'er done. This is rare. It is, however, also difficult to write job descriptions with exactly the right amount of detail. Insufficient detail could be due to laziness; unfamiliarity with the oDesk system; lack of knowledge (which is after all why the buyer is getting a professional in)...lots of reasons. The best way of approaching this -I believe- is to use the application letter and interview to clear up any ambiguities and to focus in on the specs so that you and the client both agree on what the job actually is and where the boundaries are. If you start the job and only have a vague idea of what the client wants, you are going to have problems. Possibly big problems if the job description also states...

 

Unlimited redo A job description containing these words should be approached with caution. Particularly with website work, as you're essentially agreeing to maintain it forever as part of the deal. Add a bit of mission creep to a contract like this and you're in a world of hurt. I always specify 'reasonable amount of re-do' in the cover letter. It's a contract and you should never agree to something that can suck up an infinite amount of your time for free. I understand that buyers want their work the way they want it and the 'unlimited' is mostly just a way of ensuring that their needs will be met. You, the contractor, also needs to ensure that you're covered, so best to renegotiate this phrase.

 

"Send us ID" This is not needed to work at oDesk. Don't do it or you will be very sorry. Verify who you are through oDesk, if you must, but ***NEVER*** send ID; bank account details, PayPal, eBay or any other information that can be used by ID-theft types.

 

Write to me outside of odesk This isn't necessarily a problem...everyone has their preferred methods of communication. At the first hint of paying outside of oDesk you should run away quickly: It's against oDesk rules; will get your account terminated if you're caught; and you will probably get stiffed by the buyer anyway.

 

Phishing (Thanks Santos!) The way this works is that someone sends you a link (usually an obscured one like "http://bit.ly/whatever"). This takes you to a page that *looks like* a login page to a common internet service (Gmail, Paypal, Amazon, whatever), but isn't. What the page is, is a copy of that login screen and the idea is that you type your password in and it gets captured by naughty people. It's then standard practice to use that email/username/password on lots of other common services to see if they work. If you 1) fall for it and 2) use the same password everywhere, you're stuffed. Don't trust an obscured link; and ALWAYS check the URL on a login screen, just to make sure you're in the place you think you are. Personally, I go a little further than that and keep a link with my (encrypted) password file and I only use my local link to visit web services.

 

Good luck out there!

977 REPLIES 977
vpitschlitz
Community Member

I think of myself as an experienced Odesk freelancer. In the past 2 months I have had 3 contractors not pay me. There were no warning signals. They had good payment and hiring records. It seems that the new thing is, that some people build up their reputation and then go rouge.
sammbz
Community Member

This is a great list of warning signs that are on about 100% of the jobs here and i totally agree with you...
kihonge_linet
Community Member

100% TRUE on rights to content ownership, "You only get what you pay for" Pay besides Odesk is a 100% deal breaker Last but not least, "You need to be armed with a copyright agreement or a job contract indicating terms on pay: for fixed price (whether you did monkey business or 100% quality writing) the only time the content becomes fully owned by the hirer is when the work is paid for." Otherwise, you can be someone's horseback and heavens have mercy if you live to see a new day with fresher beginnings because you will hate writing. TAKE CARE!!!
issamshomaila
Community Member

This is one major red flag I have detected from two of my past clients that turned out to be scammers (got them both banned with screenshots -- one them was actually a big shot contractor! Thanks Odesk!). The first one was in Sweden, however, the time appearing with her messages wasn't the current Swedish time -- it was somewhere else. Later I tracked my articles down, found the actual owner of the website, asked him for the contractor who gave him my articles, he gave the name and yada yada yada. Now I matched the time appearing in the Swedish client's messages and the contractor's profile -- and both were the same! (Philippines btw). Of course, I had other proofs that solidified the whole complaint, however, this also helped a lot. The other guy was in India, I am in Sri Lanka and we share the same time zone. The guy had a HUGE time zone difference with mine -- I was like... how is that even possible! Again, contacted support and the guy turned out to be a scammer.
rabia7
Community Member

Hi, if anyone has time, could you follow this link and let me know if this job is a real deal? i received interview invitation on this job, but i dont feel it is the real Forbes company, **** *[Removed by Admin]
expuser
Community Member

Looks a little iffy. First job posted from that account. Secondly, the language is just a little off in the job description; in particular the last sentence: "3) We help you succeed at you task." ...but there's other bits and pieces scattered throughout that just don't quite ring true.
rabia7
Community Member

it is a scam indeed, because the client is asking for o desk login information and g mail information in the messages...i have flagged it and contacted support..
anne_ginger
Community Member

So I'm new here at odesk. 8 days ago I got hired by an agency to write blog articles for them but then it turned out to be book chapters. It is about a very technical topic which is also part of my day job. Anyway the agency wanted me to add wrong information and I simply cannot do it so I told them to tell their client that, also pointed out the fact that I was deliberately mislead to write book instead of blog articles. At the start, the agency paid per article and was communicating well but as the days go by, they are pressing me to submit more and more articles and not paying up. Now, this is simply wrong, because I gave them a specific time when to expect the articles and they agreed so they don't have a right to pressure me. This is all very weird because the agency has great feedbacks and I am hoping that this is all just a miscommunication maybe a fluke. The book is all done now. For the past 24 hrs I have been contacting the agency but got no response so I sent told them that if I do not hear from them, I will give a full refund of the partial payment, and that I retain all rights to the content I've written. I need advice, I really want to end the contract now but am worried how this would affect me.


❄❄❄ Just A Forum Contributor --- This isn't against forum guidelines ❄❄❄
tunepunk
Community Member

I've been freelancing on and off for several years but never online, so I just signed up to give it a try and fill the gaps and earn some money between my IRL freelance jobs. Where I'm from i never charge lower than 45USD per hour, (only when my clients can guarantee very long periods of full time work.) Below that it's hard to make a living here if you don't have work 8 hours per day. My usual price is 65-80 per hour, and occationally i charge up to 130USD per hour. First of all looking at the job listings here i don't see any jobs paying even near those sums, and i'm thinking what the hell am i wasting my time here for? I checked out a job from one top US clients at this site offering 10-15USD per hour. I would make more per hour working at McDonalds here. I then googled what a normal Graphic Designer salary is in USA. around 46.000 per year - wich would mean around 3.800 per month or roughly 23USD per hour. (160hours per month) So why the hell are people even doing freelancing online if it doesn't pay more than a full time position? considering you have to keep updating portfolio, track down the jobs, bid on the work, wait for contracts do some free work and manage your bookkeeping and keeping correspondence with clients (usually unpaid). I can only speak for my self but i'm not even gonna look at job here unless it pays more than 30USD per hour. It's just not worth it, unless all the creative/talanted people in the world move to countries that have lower living costs. I have my rate and I know i'm quite awesome in my areas of choice. Seeing jobs listed here offering 10-15USD per hour or less is really not appreciating time effort and creativity. If you have a business and cant even pay what it would be minumum wages for that profession own country by your country standard wages then you shouldn't be running a business at all. I may not compete in price but sure as hell compete in quality and competence, from what i see in porfolios.

I hear you there, Richard. I am finding that even very talented individuals (more talented than myself) are charging less than I know I have to in order to make a living as a freelancer. It is the pathetic results of "global economy" at its best. Dare I say, working as intended.
gmang
Community Member

[quote=Ricard Jensen]I may not compete in price but sure as hell compete in quality and competence, from what i see in porfolios.[/quote] Clients here are small business trying to get something that "works" for the less possible money. I agree with you in that the rates are outrageous (and I'm talking about the best rates) but I sincerely doubt competing in quality will take you to get works at the rates you expect.
g_shakes
Community Member

This list is great. Thank you so much.
jjosephs
Community Member

This is a fantastic list. I agree with it 99%. But the Web scraping, is not illegal if you're collecting it for data analysis. That is, the client is generating meta-data from the data and not using the content and calling it theirs.
expuser
Community Member

There are probably legit exceptions for most of the warning signs (except sending ID...NEVER do that). Even your 'creating metadata' example has a dark side. Could be a genuine scientific study; which would be fine or it could be harvesting names and addresses for the purpose of spamming them later, which wouldn't (in my opinion). On oDesk the words "web-scraping" are a warning sign as the chances are pretty good that the job is dodgy. It's a list of indicators, that's all. Some jobs can raise several red flags and still be kosher...it's down to you to read the situation on a case-by-case basis because it's you that'll be taking the risk.
marciamalory
Community Member

it has to be of the "highest quality". So you do the work, the client says it's not good enough, regardless of how good it may actually be, and won't pay you.
jsaiya
Community Member

This whole list would save a bunch of people time and headache! This should be one of the tests you have to do to open up more applications. So sorry you had to experience these but thank you for sharing.

You have to be careful, because some of these aren't set in stone, they are just "warning signs".

I have accepted a couple of jobs (I'm not sure if here or elsewhere) that were suspicious (mostly lack/strange presentation of the info and not exactly the signs listed here) and tbh, they turned out being very nice works in which the client simply didn't express too good in english nor knew exactly how to explain what he wanted. I've been scammed in a work which looked legit. Anyway, these things happen, but I must say onlince freelancing is convincing me the world is full of honest people, because scamming us in this line of work is extremely easy and it doesn't happen too often.
arin89
Community Member

A new client of mine initiated a contract of a huge lot of assignments a few days back without asking or inquiring about my handling capabilities. I had my festive season in the meanwhile and right at the initiation of the work i clearly said that i would require extensions owing to the festive season ahead. The client persuaded me to carry on. Now after 60% of the work is over, the client suddenly says that i crossed my deadline and ended my contract just like that. On expressing my angst, the client has threatened to report my profile. In spite of getting cheated, will i still continue to stay in the receiving end of all the odds? Please help me.
munni2013
Community Member

Thanks bro.

thet815
Community Member

I applied for a a typing jobs on word docs, I got message from the client and gave me instructions to go to this link and when I did, and its a Catche typing. Have checked that this is a new client at oDesk. Is this a scam? or my time is not worth it? Thanks..
asajid
Community Member

Hi Marites, CAPTCHA jobs are against the ToS and are shady at best. Most cases end in non-payment, and the results of your work will be used to spam other sites. Please report the client and the job to Customer Support. Kindly include any relevant info, chat transcripts and links that the client shared with you.


Always reach for the skies, for even if you fall, you'll still be on the top of the world...
tanabe
Community Member

Before applying for any job or accepting any job offer, go to the actual job posting, scroll down, and check how many contracts are active under that client's name. If they're fairly new, are all fixed contracts, and they're all with $0.00 payment reflected, think again. Chances are your client is trying to rip all of you off. I just came across this one client who apparently did just this trick. He hired 8 other people for essentially the same project type, and left all of us hanging with our $0.00. He won't end our fixed contracts and won't give us milestone payments either. What's sad is that he's from the same country as I am...
asajid
Community Member

Hi Abraham, Please report the client to Customer Support and also flag the job post. With the help ticket kindly attach relevant info, proof and chat transcripts. Thanks!


Always reach for the skies, for even if you fall, you'll still be on the top of the world...
tanabe
Community Member

Hi, Ayesha. I did in fact, right before I posted my tip above. Our contract has just been suspended by oDesk as they are currently still investigating it. Also received seconds ago was their response to the support ticket I raised. I hope everything works out well. Thank you.
asajid
Community Member

You're welcome, Abraham. Appropriate action is being taken against the client. Thanks for the heads up!


Always reach for the skies, for even if you fall, you'll still be on the top of the world...
mm_cipres
Community Member

I wish id read this sooner, as i have mercilessly fallen prey to two consecutive fixed price contracts where i wasnt paid a single cent 😞 i just consider them growing pains being new to odesk and all. I have a question sir, what are the most common reasons why odesk suspends a client's account? My client said the reason she cant pay me yet is cause her account got suspended so she cant withdraw her paypal funds from odesk.. Is that how it works? and you mentioned NEVER give any ID even paypal. If thats the case, How will i informy my client how/where to pay me? Ive given out my bank account number and my paypal email ad. Am i in big trouble?? Please help me.. Thank u
asajid
Community Member

Hi Michelle, Receiving payment outside oDesk is called Disintermediation and can result in permanent account suspension. Please report the client to Customer Support and include all details to prove non-payment and attempts at disintermediation.


Always reach for the skies, for even if you fall, you'll still be on the top of the world...

[quote=Michelle Cipres]I wish id read this sooner, as i have mercilessly fallen prey to two consecutive fixed price contracts where i wasnt paid a single cent 😞 i just consider them growing pains being new to odesk and all. I have a question sir, what are the most common reasons why odesk suspends a client's account? My client said the reason she cant pay me yet is cause her account got suspended so she cant withdraw her paypal funds from odesk.. Is that how it works? and you mentioned NEVER give any ID even paypal. If thats the case, How will i informy my client how/where to pay me? Ive given out my bank account number and my paypal email ad. Am i in big trouble?? Please help me.. Thank u[/quote] Oh, Dear! Where to start. First, before you do anything else, work with your bank and Paypal to regain security to your accounts. Contact them, tell them every bit of information you have given out and ask for help with protecting your identity and account. It may mean closing those accounts and opening new ones. Be straight forward with the institutions, and hopefully they will help. Otherwise, you could end up with a major loss, if not now, somewhere down the line for sure. DO THIS NOW!!! Second, read everything you can about how this site works. Do this for any site you intend to do business on and for any clients you may have. Educate yourself so you are protected against scammers. You are here to make money, but some of the mistakes you have made can actually cost you dearly, and they were made because you did not educate yourself before getting started. Third, learn to read warning signs. Asking for account information and any mention of payment outside of oDesk is a clear deal breaker and can get you into some real trouble. Forth, raise your rate! For one thing, the rate you currently have set is in the range set by freelancers who have little to no skill and who are just hoping to catch a break. You have skill. I don't even need to look any farther than your post to know that your use of English is worth more than you are asking for it (you do need to add apostrophes, though). Also, the low rate you have listed on your profile makes you attractive to scammers. Raising it will bring you more interest from serious clients and will discourage scammers from engaging you.
csingraham
Community Member

As a writer, I've had issues with people that want my phone number so that they can call me with ideas tht pop into their head. Along the same lines is Skype. Undoubtedly, these clients always end up calling me all the time (sometimes in the middle of the night) wanting to talk for hours, resulting in me getting no actual work done for them. Several of my Freelancer friends and I have a no phone call or Skype clause in our contracts with new clients. I charge an extra amount, way, way over my usual rate for those that want Skype. Theses Clients are usually more trouble than they are worth. On another note of needy clients, those that require you to have your NDA notarized. *Rolls eyes* Unless you are working on a contract for a long time with many, many thousands of dollars, avoid the high stress clients. Even then, they still aren't worth the ulcer they are going to give you.
aaron100
Community Member

Thank you for posting this. I just started over a week ago on this site and have seen what you have warned about. Though, so far my business as a contractor has been pleasant when it comes to being paid. I have had to decline several offers in the past that directed me to either be paid outside of oDesk or to sign up on another site and get paid through Pay-pal. One client was shocked when I turned him down, the reason being he wanted to pay me outside of oDesk.
chikuse
Community Member

I've applied one job and got interviewed a couple of days ago. After a couple of email exchanges, I found out the person was trying to get free information without actually providing the job. One sign is he interviewed all the applicants but didn't hired anyone of them. Another sign is for his other job postings for the same job, he offered only 3-5$, but for this one, exactly the same description, he is saying the budget is 200$. Then there are about 10 postings about the same job in his history, but nobody was hired. I've actually spent quite some time on the topic and did a lot of research. I thought it was a real job. Then I saw a job post from him again with the same job description today. Now his budget is $100. It's about a writing job. I believe he is getting free stuff to put on his website from applicants this way.Wonder if there is any place I can report his behavior.
expuser
Community Member

dale315
Community Member

I just saw a job post from an employer who's been a member of oDesk since April 2012, who hasn't yet paid out a single penny, and whose payment method is still unverified. I would avoid this employer.
_paulcox_
Community Member

I see so many postings that listed under "hourly rate," but in the description they say not to apply unless you can do this for $such and such flat rate. Why not just post it as a fixed rate job? Do more people go for the hourly rate jobs than the fixed rate, so the client tries to work the system?
katrinacandee
Community Member

I had a company tell me they were sending me "start up money" to purchase software. It seemed legit and I am not sure if that's the same as getting paid outside of oDesk? As soon as I replied to the interview they said they were sending one check for a certain amount. After communicating with them more I started getting suspicious,the checks arrived today and they are NOT from the company who supposedly hired me. I called the company on the check and before I could finish my sentence they said Fraudulent! Its a huge scam and the innocent company are prosecuting. So please beware of anyone saying there sending you "start up money", its a most likely a scam.

Hi Katrina, This is a known scam, please report the client to Customer Support and also flag the job post. Thanks!


Always reach for the skies, for even if you fall, you'll still be on the top of the world...
michellelane
Community Member

Client during interview stated he wanted ME to send HIM $450 for "software" needed to perform the job.. RED FLAG.

Hi Michelle, This is a known scam, please report to Customer Support with details and also kindly flag the job post so that it can be taken down. Thanks!


Always reach for the skies, for even if you fall, you'll still be on the top of the world...
roxyborlongan
Community Member

Hi there! I am fairly new to Odesk and have applied for some jobs. I have received a message from one of the clients that they will hire me plus the context of the job or the projects. Please note that I have not been interviewed or something. How does this work or what would be the next step? or what would be the best practice for this. Thanks in advance!
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