The Survey Voices website describes Survey Voices as “the world’s leading online survey aggregator.” They are like a matchmaker who matches people like you with a survey company. Each time they make a match, Survey Voices gets paid.
Survey Voices claims that to have “thoroughly vetted” the paid survey companies they recommend. I doubt it.
Although Survey Voices is no a scam, I still do not recommend them. Completing online surveys is a lousy way to try to make money.
Most online survey companies are really not a research-based survey company at all. They are a marketing company pretending to be a survey company in order to trick you into buying stuff.
Survey Voices leads to an array of survey companies. Some of these companies may be legitimate, but many of them are not.
It is important that you understand the risks you may encounter. Some survey companies can scam in subtle ways. Others will openly try to max out your credit card.
The more greedy you feel to make money online, the more vulnerable you will be to survey scams.
Survey companies that promise you will make big money are trying to get you buy products through their affiliate links. If they pay you anything, it is only a portion of the commission they earned when you bought the product. You will always spend far more than you earn.
The Two Kinds of Survey Companies.
In my view, there are only two types of survey companies online.
There are legitimate research companies that are genuinely seeking market information, and there are survey companies that are really marketing companies.
Read the Survey Voices FAQ, and you will discover that Survey Voices will lead you to survey companies that will have telemarketers call you and put ads on your cell phone. These are not survey companies. These are marketing companies that intend to get money OUT of you, not pay you.
How Much Can You Really Earn with Online Surveys? Not Much!
Most legitimate research survey sites will not pay you with cash. Instead, you will get award points that have no cash value. Sometimes, after you have earned enough points, you can either trade your points for something in the company’s catalog or for a chance to win sweepstakes.
If you try to make money with survey sites, you will probably get suckered into a marketing company scam. These are the so-called survey companies that claim you can earn big money with surveys and that your opinion is valuable. These types of companies are trying to make money off you.
Survey companies do not want to pay you. They can and will terminate your membership for no reason to avoid giving you money. This is a common tactic to keep from paying for you.
The Trial Offer Scam.
You are asked to complete a free trial offer and are promised you will earn cash if you do. However, when you sign up for the free trial, they want your credit card number. They tell you that you can cancel at anytime.
But you cannot cancel before you are billed because they won’t let you. Or, you do cancel but are not paid the money you were promised because the free trial did not convert to a sale.
The survey, aka marketing, the company makes a commission when you signed up for the free trial. If your free trial converts to a sale, they make a bigger commission. They can’t lose, but you can’t win.
If they do pay you, which is doubtful, it will be only a fraction of your own money. You spend big money, and they give you little back. That’s how people go broke.
The Fake Points Scam.
You complete a survey and were awarded 30,000 points! You browse through the company’s gift catalog and find an expensive watch you can get in exchange for the 30,000 points you just won. You know the watch is worth at least $400. All you must pay is a small shipping charge. What a deal!
You trade in your points and pay the small shipping charge with your credit card. A few days later the luxury watch arrives.
All is well until you get your credit card bill at the end of the month. To your surprise, the bill has a $100 charge on it from a a company you have never done business with.
You call your credit card company and learn that when you thought you were redeeming your survey points for the watch, you signed up for a buyer’s club. You authorized the club to charge your credit card $100 a month for the next three years!
The credit card company cannot help you because you are bound by a three-year contract. That’s the fake points scam. Enjoy your new watch.
For more information, visit: https://scamavenger.com/survey-voices
https://goo.gl/JNqyKi
https://youtu.be/RgrdynzFTvM
http://scamavenger.com/videos
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCpTu…
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