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Is leapforce a scam

Updated: 9/20/2023
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Wiki User

11y ago

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Yes it is !

1. stating by the test I'm a Web Engineer, Marketing & SEO Specialist i have worked for fortune 500 companies and really big firms ...

2. I did the whole questionnaire in 15 mins

and they fail it ? !!

I saved all the questions before submitting with the correct answers !

I compare it with many other people that have previously taken the test ... ALL QUESTIONS VARY BUT CrossRef with them i found their answers in the same questions ... CORRECT ALL OF THEM !!

3. so i lost 1 hour of my life with them GIVE THEM MY INFORMATION and no answer from them !!

4. Happy Ending ... I place a lawsuit against them already !!

Don't loose your time with them at all

a. they don't have much job lately as per 50 people i spoke with "max 1h a day"

b. They don't give you any human interaction

c. The money is not worth the trouble !

Better go and get an affiliation with some PPC company or something

_______________________________________________________

5. Now who's ready for an answer from an actual employee? Leapforce is NOT a scam. An unpleasant experience is NOT the same thing as a scam. Some people lose interest because of the difficult testing process. Some get frustrated with the lack of direct contact. Some people just don't plain care for this kind of work. That does not make it a scam. I've been employed there for two years and they have never failed to pay me nor have they screwed me over in any way. They do not ask you for any money up front. In fact, they never ask you to give them money. They do not deduct anything from your pay for any reason. They do not send you checks from princes in Nigeria and ask you to cash them and send half back to them. They do not ask you to sign up your friend who will then sign up their friends who will then sign up their friends until 40 layers of friends have signed up and claim you'll get bonuses from all of those people.

Not everyone qualifies to work at Leapforce. Their testing process is not for idiots. It's very arduous and a lot of people fail....kinda like the people who claim it's a scam. Leapforce is REAL work done by REAL people all over the globe. You'll be doing search engine evaluation, which is not to be confused with search engine optimization. Basically, you're telling the company whether the results that search engines give to users actually meet their needs. If you have doubt, check out the forums on Workplace Like Home and Work at Home Moms.

....no you don't have to be a mom to work there.

In response to the claims it is a scam:

1. Big deal. I've worked for Publix which is a Fortune 500 company, does that qualify me to say that a company I don't know anything about is a scam? Leapforce has NOTHING to do with SEO content, so I'm not sure why you think that qualifies you to talk about the company.

2. There is no way you completed the testing process in 15 minutes. It takes around eight hours. You don't get paid for the testing, but it's part of the screening process. Your story about copying and pasting all the answers doesn't check out. The test doesn't work that way. Also, who did you verify the "correct" answers with? If you have friends working there that can verify the answers, then wouldn't they have told you if the job was a scam?

3. Once again, your story doesn't check out. Who were these 50 people you talked to that weren't getting work? Where did you find them? Wouldn't they have told you whether or not it was a scam? There are plenty of sub-forums on reliable work at home pages about Leapforce. In fact, a lot of them are overwrought with posts about how there "isn't much work lately," but it could be for a variety of reasons. Regardless, none of the people complaining there is likely to say Leapforce is a scam. They're just frustrated that they didn't get the number of hours they'd like.

You probably didn't pass the screening process, didn't check your spam folder, or didn't do something the directions told you to do. You have to be REALLY good at following directions for this job. It is true that communication is a weak point for this company, but if you follow the directions in the screening process, you will get the communication you need to certify. Once you have been hired, that may be a different story.

Depending on your location, you may get limited tasks. American users, as a rule, have the most work. Also, Leapforce doesn't employ people in every US state due to local tax laws.

4. No you didn't. No lawyer would take that case. Besides, even if you tried to sue them, that still doesn't mean it's a scam. If every company with a lawsuit against it were a "scam" then no one in America would have a job.

It is true that sometimes there are weeks or months where you don't get many hours. Summer is notorious for low work volume. Not to mention, if you do poor quality work, they will limit your hours. When you are new they limit your hours to ensure you're doing a decent job. When they see that you are doing average or better, they allow you to work more. There are plenty of raters that get eight solid hours a day or more. The low task volume is purely temporary....unless you just really suck at your job, in which case you'll get fired anyway.

Most tasks are allocated to American users. Some countries don't get many tasks at all.

It is true that feedback and interaction is Leapforce's weakest spot. You may find yourself getting very little work while others are getting plenty. If you ask them about your quality, they may or may not reply. You do get periodic "reviews" but they are very impersonal because everyone is getting them at the same time.

Whether or not the money is worth the trouble is up to the individual. Personally, it is my main source of income. I've made more in my life, I've made less. Don't forget to consider, you are working from home and setting your own hours. No office drama, no commuting expenses, no spending money on clothes because you can't be seen wearing the same outfit all the time, no waking up an hour early to figure out what to wear. It would take a LOT of money for me to trade those benefits in. Those are all factors think about when you look at the pay rate.

For some, it's a job they do for a few extra bucks. Some others might think of the pay as "too low" to bother with.

...but, folks, if you want to take the recommendation of someone who doesn't know what they're talking about, has no real experience, and can barely write in English over the words of an actual employee, go for it.

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11y ago
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