AARP Hearing Center
Don Simmons, 66, has run a successful pool maintenance business in South Florida for over 20 years. But health problems and too many long days in the hot sun left him hoping he could find a new source of income. So he was pleasantly surprised two years ago to find an email from a company that offered to help aspiring entrepreneurs set up their own internet business. For only $50, they could get Simmons up and running.
Even though Simmons (his name has been changed to protect him from retribution) had never run a website before, he figured, why not try? So he found a drop shipper that would get him access to over 1,000 products to sell. He arranged to accept credit cards. A basic website got built as promised. Voilà! In a month, he was open for business.
But as weeks turned into months, not a single person visited Simmons’ website. But the telemarketers, well, they pounced. Even before the site went live, web developers started to bombard his phone with pitches to help him grow the site. Each started with the same line: “How are you progressing with your business?” Simmons wondered how they knew he had a website and how they were able to find him so easily.
Web-kit bait
The answer, says Lois Greisman, associate director at the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), is that scammers offer inexpensive web design kits simply to generate leads. “If you pay $50 for a kit, that is the teaser rate. After that, you will be bombarded with telemarketing calls and online solicitations,” Greisman says. “We see leads that come from the sales of these web kits sold for three to four times the purchase amount.” In other words, a scammer will pay the original website developer as much as $200 for your contact information.
That’s why Simmons started getting so many offers for help. Each company told Simmons he would never make any money with such a basic website because there is so much competition out there. However, for a certain price ($3,000, $5,000, $15,000 — the price varies depending on the company and the pitch) these callers claim they can upgrade it to generate lots of sales.
Simmons ignored most of these calls because he didn’t want to waste more time or money. But one caller from a company in Washington state was particularly persistent. He called and spoke to Simmons roughly nine times per week, each time telling him that for only $7,500, he could realistically see income of $50,000 the first year. Simmons was still skeptical, but thought that even if he could make half that amount he would be happy. The salesman gave him three references. Simmons was unable to reach two of them, but the third person answered; he ran an online website that sold holsters for guns. He said the company Simmons was considering was for real and had helped him build a successful website.