Emily Young Review- Earn At Home Club Scam EXPOSED

Posted by in Not Recommended | 0 comments

I may have recently posted about Kim Swartz but a few reviews ago, I also wrote about Michelle Robinson. These fictional characters have been used time and again as the name behind several programs or scams. Another example here is Emily Young. I came across her name from one fake news site called WAHC. I say fake because it may look all legit and professional but if you check each menu page (finance, tech, economy, media etc), you’ll be redirected to the sign-up page of Earn At Home Club.

Anyway, they have an article about Emily Young from Philippines who makes $89, 844 a year. I won’t go into details of her sob story because it’s insignificant and very common (rags to riches tale of a single mom). Their “proofs” are screenshots of estimated earnings which can easily be photoshopped. Oh scratch that, even Paint can do it. As of this writing, the registration deadline is on October 7, 2015 which is nothing more than a scarcity tactic – creating urgency for you to take action. Pay no heed since it will eventually reset.

On the bottom part, there are several comments from users. Of course, these are all fake. But the scammers wanted this to look neutral so they added in a comment from someone who’s skeptical. Lol. Actually, I already wrote about this before and it’s also called Earn At Home Club but the one back then had Jennifer Becker’s name, not Emily Young. Yup, that just confirms the fact that this is yet another scam. Scammers don’t find the need to create a new story or website. So what they do after being exposed is change the name and URL, some facts and voila, they’re up and running once more. In fact, please take time to read the fine print. They’ll tell you up-front you probably won’t get compensated as much as Emily Young.

WHAT IS EARN AT HOME CLUB?

You won’t know unless you sign up and that’s another MAJOR red flag. If this was really legit, why not tell you what you’re getting yourself into?

The truth is, it’s a link posting scam. I refer to this as scam because it makes you believe you can make easy money online when in reality, it won’t. It’s just a bait to lure you in and when you’ve taken it, you’ll find yourself being offered with various up-sells which are simply created to make you spend more and not earn more. One of the usual “offers” includes a call to an advisor or consultant which is just really another sales person who will stop at nothing just to sell you some useless programs or bootcamps.

HOW MUCH DOES IT COST?

The site says they have a one-time payment of $4.97 and this is when reading the fine print becomes very useful. That amount is just for the three-day trial. After which, you’ll have to pay $77 and another $57/month unless you cancel. In addition, there’s a ten-day free trial for their Facebook training. After that period, you’ll be charged with $29/month.

Does it sound familiar? Yes, because Jennifer Becker’s modus is the same. As I said, the creators behind this merely made very small changes. And if Becker’s “program” was tagged as scam, there’s no reason for you to believe this one’s any different.

VERDICT:

It’s a scam.

  • They make outrageous claims and promises and fail to deliver.
  • They don’t tell you up-front how much it really costs.
  • They use fake news sites with fake testimonials and fake back stories.
  • They use fictional characters.
  • When it’s exposed, they’ll just recycle everything and create a new name for the program and creator.
P.S. Make sure you check out the #1 affiliate income opportunity if you're looking to make money the right way...

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *