Home Job Placement Review. Is it Associated With Scams?

 

The answer might be yes and that’s because I researched this program as well as the others it was associated with, some of which I purchased and knew to be scams.

Let me explain everything you need to know and be careful of with Home Job Placement in this review!

Quick Report on Home Job Placement:

home job placement scam

Creator: Kelly Simmons.

Price: $97.

Overall Rating: 0 out of 10 stars.

Warning: This is the deepest review I’ve ever had to do, but I’m going to prove that this program, IS a scam, has been renamed after a previous one.

I’m also going to show that the program it was renamed after it was also a scam and how all of these programs are interconnected to one another to keep fooling people constantly.

Alternatives (legit):

home job placement alternative

Home Job Placement in a nutshell:

Another copied/pasted site that probably sells training no making money online that probably won’t help you actually do it. 

The first program I though this program was renamed after was Home Job Source. I mean if you look at the way the picture looks here, they do look alike. I did a screenshot comparison, so you tell me:

homejobplacementvssource

How Home Job Placement is connected to at least 2 other scam programs:

I’ve gotten into the habit of always trying to buy these programs. It’s true that if I’m not happy with the purchase (which always happens) it’s a pain to dispute charges and get refunds, although I will admit, that on at least 2 occasions, these same scam websites have refunded me my money without a problem. 

Anyway, to explain how Home Job Placement has at least 2 other associations (and possibly even more), I have to give you one very specific example of what I uncovered:

One time, I was trying to purchase Home Job Source which as you already know is in some way a duplicate of this program, only to find out, I couldn’t. I kept getting a message saying I had already purchased it and I figured out I was in the records of that company for probably buying another one of their programs and again this was probably all connected to the same network.

Say we have one company which has 5 websites, A-E, every site looks the same, with only the name of it being different.

So if I were to buy A, then see there was a B-E site, try to buy one or more of those, they probably wouldn’t let me buy it considering I already have A. That’s what I think happened here. And many of the scams I expose on my work at home scams list page and see on work at home special report sites like these, often look like Home Job Placement.

Back to the review. Leading back to Home Job Placement:

I’m mentioning all of this now because this is exactly what happened when I tried to buy Home Job Placement. They gave me the same exact same message! So naturally, having the same exact experience in the past, I had to figure out from which of the connected companies I had already purchased from.

But with so few links from the main website to visit, I had to experiment and by doing so, I actually did find out the truth, and that is that this program was based of 37 Clicks. Here’s how I found out:

I clicked one of the only links on the error page where it said I couldn’t buy the program. That opened up another website (I think it was the same homepage of Home Job Placement) from which I also found one of the privacy, contact, disclaimer links. That opened up the following page:

homejobplacementlink

We have the link of Home Job Placement, but the disclaimer is only writing about the 37 Clicks program. This is exactly what I warned about. Same company, but just different A-E names (maybe less, maybe more), all linking to the same central program. 

Where the scam runs deeper:

I could go ahead and end this review right here, but I have to go all the way and here’s another true thing:

I never purchased 37 Clicks either! 

  • So Home Job Placement is renamed after 37 Clicks. I think I’ve proven that.
  • But they’re not letting me buy it because they say I have it, but I just admitted that I never purchased it.

So what is going on?! I’ll tell you:

There’s ANOTHER company from which 37 Clicks was renamed from that is Replace Your Job! To prove this, you can either read my review on Replace Your Job OR you can do the longer thing, find the official site, click on disclaimer to get the EXACT same page I found to prove Home Job Placement is taken from 37 Clicks, except, you guessed it, the name is changed to Replace Your Job:

homejobplacementreplace

Oh and there’s more scams in this network! 

At least one other, Extreme Home Profits. If you Google “Replace Your Job Scam”, one of the websites you’ll get is one that says it’s Extreme Home Profits, but links to Replace Your Job. I’ve also tried that program. 

And another thing, when I reviewed Replace Your Job, the name of the lady at the time was Kelly Scott, not Kelly Simmons. 

Investigating this became SO annoying, but I went even deeper:

So I’ve proven thus far that: 

This program is connected to 37 Clicks which is connected to Replace Your Job, which I DID buy. But to be EXTRA sure I was right, I even went further:

I looked for any information about 37 Clicks and found a login page. Here is that page:

37clicksonlinesoftwaresolutions

The title I want to draw your attention to (besides the link I put in red) is the term “Online Software Solutions”. This is the EXACT same program I got when I purchased Replace Your Job.

And that should bring an end to the debate on me having to prove myself.

Final Rating: Home Job Placement

0 Stars

Red Flag (Scam)

0 out of 10 stars. I’ve already done the review on another article, please read about that there. 

rhscams

My final thoughts: Now that I finally proved it, here’s why I was right:

You don’t change the name of your program so many times or mask it this much unless you’re hiding something and that’s really the point I wanted to make.

If you want to know what you get inside of Home Job Placement, just look at my review of Replace Your Job, that’s it. I rated that program a 0 out of 10 stars and since I proved this and that program lead you into the same place, it’s only fair to give this program the same exact rating! 

I’m actually glad I didn’t buy it now and went through the whole hassle of figuring how they are working. I proved a long standing theory I’ve had about these companies and I hope you avoid them!

By now I hope you’re convinced and furthermore, I hope that you also take my advice about the other program I mentioned that you can count on. 

9 thoughts on “Home Job Placement Review. Is it Associated With Scams?”

  1. There are also two other company names associated with homejobplacement.com, and their online ads are IDENTICAL to that of Home Job Placement. I mean identical down to the last word and with the photo and testimonial of the same woman, Kelly Simmons. Those two other identical websites are:

    securejobposition.com. and onlinejobsnow.com

    If the business and Kelly Simmons are for real, why do they need multiple company names and websites? Something appears to be fishy here…

    Reply
    • Hi Gloria, you are now catching onto the same scam that so many have had to go through and I hope you didn’t get involved in them. I’ve actually seen and reviewed all 3 of these programs and know exactly what you’re talking about.

      Reply
  2. I signed up for this program..but after reading your reviews I changed my mind and called them right away and requested a refund, thank God I got it! I should read these reviews first before I sign up.

    Reply
  3. I paid the 67 dollars to start now I’m thinking it’s a scam. They tried to get another 87 dollars to start my own web page so I hope I can get a refund and think I’m gonna have to report this site to cyber crime. I’m on ssi thinking this would be a great extra income, I feel so foolish.

    Reply
    • Hi Nikki, don’t be upset, most people fall for some sort of scam online throughout their time browsing and it’s normal. As long as you know how to dispute charges, you can prevent them from being final.

      I know you’re down right now, but you’re obviously looking for a good company and I can definitely suggest one to you: Wealthy Affiliate, you’ll never have to look again…

      Reply
  4. Thanks for the information. I tried to send a payment to them and my bank stopped it asking for verification from me. Guess my bank keeps up with what they see as fraud better than I do and others. Too bad there is no master list of what sites and programs are fraud and which ones are not. Thanks for the information. I am trying to find a work at home program to do during my free time since I am only making minimum wage at my current job. I’ll check out that program that you mentioned.

    Reply
  5. I’m a 69 year retired, disabled Vietnam Veteran who simply can’t work in very much of any capacity and I do not even drive. I only make $15,780 gross, annually 50% below the Poverty Level and must find some way of supplementing my income. I’ll checkout your above link for a legitimate gig, with hopes and prayers. I’ve been trying forever. Wish me luck. Thanks.

    Reply

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