Complaint Review: COUPON DIRECT OF CANADA - surrey British Columbia
- COUPON DIRECT OF CANADA surrey, British Columbia United States of America
- Phone:
- Web:
- Category: Home Based Business
COUPON DIRECT OF CANADA send coupon direct $40 start up fee and you could be working in as little as 10 days,well its been 2 months,were are these supplies im suppose to get,to get me started? advertisfauseing,even money bac i sent $40 to a company called coupon direct of Canada hoping to make money at home,send them money for there start up supplies,which sounded fair.instesd they just took my money! surrey, British Columbia
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i sent $40 cash to coupon direct of Canada.they explained,i have the paper work right here,they need so many people in certain areas to do coupon reports for them,and if they had enough and didn't need you they would reimburse your money.they explain how it would cost to much to set up shop,hire employees,and pay out taxes. it is easy for them to get people at home to work for them.it take about 20 minutes to fill out a work sheet and each worksheet is from $15 to $25 each,how many you do is up to you.one of the papers has a whole write up written by their office manager Karen Channing,who probably doesn't exist.They really write a good scam,how they wrote it says how they know of all these scams out there and how they are legit and money back guarantee,isn't that false advertising?Shouldn't they have to do what they claim?so i guess anyone can write anything and not be held liable?they also say how they couldn't afford to send out there expensive supplies for free because some people would just not do it and might through it away,i mean how it was written made you want to trust them,i wish i knew about this add(ripp off report) before i sent them the money.its only $40 but its money i really do not have.i thought this would be a way to make money not loose it.think of all the people who sent them $40 wow they are rich,good scam,hit the little guy take his hard earned money,for nothing but a headache,enjoy my money cause i wont.nor will my kids.im a single mom strugling right now,not working so every dime counts,taking food out of my kids mouth,thanks coupon direct. sighed kim and family from British Columbia Canada
This report was posted on Ripoff Report on 09/09/2009 09:55 PM and is a permanent record located here: https://www.ripoffreport.com/reports/coupon-direct-of-canada/surrey-british-columbia-/coupon-direct-of-canada-send-coupon-direct-40-start-up-fee-and-you-could-be-working-in-as-492521. The posting time indicated is Arizona local time. Arizona does not observe daylight savings so the post time may be Mountain or Pacific depending on the time of year. Ripoff Report has an exclusive license to this report. It may not be copied without the written permission of Ripoff Report. READ: Foreign websites steal our content
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#1
WHAT??
AUTHOR: Laurie - (U.S.A.)
SUBMITTED: Thursday, September 10, 2009
Did you bother to do ANY research at all before sending them money?
This sounds very similar to the Envelope stuffing scam - (oldest work at home scam out there)
MOST WORK AT HOME OFFERS ARE SCAMS OR MLM's. You have to be prepared for that - and BE WILLING TO LOOK FOR SCAM INFO BEFORE SENDING ANY MONEY!
If you had taken the time to check it out first - like on the FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION WEBSITE - work at home schemes.. DOES THIS SOUND FAMILIAR?
Costly Coupon Scams
Cents-off coupons are providing big bucks for scam artists who offer business opportunity and work-at-home schemes featuring coupon certificate booklets and coupon clipping services. Using the Internet to market these so-called opportunities, fraudulent promoters are promising entrepreneurs, charity groups and consumers earnings of "hundreds per week" and "thousands per month" simply by selling coupon certificate booklets or cutting coupons at home. The fact is that consumers and manufacturers are getting clipped in these costlyand deceptivecoupon capers.
Theres only one legitimate way to use a coupon: Cut it out of the newspaper or other source and use it toward the purchase of the designated product. A coupon is meant to be used only by the consumer who buys the product for which the coupon is printed. Selling or transferring coupons to a third party violates most manufacturers coupon redemption policiesand usually voids the coupon.
Coupons are big business: More than 3,000 manufacturers distribute nearly 330 billion couponsworth an estimated $280 billionevery year in an effort to help consumers save money. Indeed, it is thought that 77 percent of American households use some eight billion coupons to save $4.7 billion on their grocery bills.
Yet, fraudulent promoters are making money marketing and misrepresenting coupon-based business opportunities to unwary consumers and even savvy organizations.
Among the victims are:
- would-be entrepreneurs trying to run a business from home, people with otherwise limited income opportunities, and people just trying to make a living, who are losing savings and time and effort;
- charity groups, lured into selling coupon certificate booklets as fundraisers; and
- consumers who are dealing with complicated forms involving difficult procedures and handling fees to receive the same coupons manufacturers give away for free.
Coupon Certificate Booklet Scams
A promoter sells an investor a business opportunity selling coupon certificate booklets. The investor is supposed to sell the booklets to consumers for $20 to $50 each. The booklets contain 20 to 50 certificates, each of which can be redeemed for $10 worth of grocery coupons. That makes each booklet "worth" between $200 and $500 in coupons. To redeem the certificates for coupons, the consumer must complete and mail a form, select 30 to 50 products from a list and include a self-addressed, stamped envelope and a processing fee.
In theory, the investor should make big profits selling the booklets to consumers. And consumers should save big money by using the coupons when they buy the groceries. In reality, though, the promoter is the only one who makes money.
Investors who spend several hundred to several thousand dollars to buy the certificate booklet distributorship lose money because inflated earnings claims never pan out. Consumers who pay out substantial processing fees and postage for coupons lose money because they can clip coupons for themselves from their newspaper. To redeem $500 worth of certificates, for example, a consumer might pay postage and processing fees of over $100. And everyone loses on false claims that coupons have no expiration date: Only a tiny share of coupons issued by manufacturers have no expiration date.
Coupon


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