HomeCashFlowSolution.com is a new website by Jason Hall that claims to be able to give you the necessary tools and training to make money from home. For a one time fee of $97.00, they promise you a set of ten pre-made, fully automated websites ready to go live and begin making you money within minutes of signing up.
While you will own the ten pre-made websites, Home Cash Flow Solution will set them up with ten different products to be promoted and sold from your individual sites. These products will all be download ready – eBooks, Scripts, Software, ect – so there is no need for you to purchase, carry, or ship actual products.
Home Cash Flow Solution makes it clear that your job is simply to get traffic to your websites, and they will help you do just that, with their internet marketing training course.
So is Home Cash Flow Solution a Scam?
Well, the first problem is that Home Cash Flow Solution offers you pre-made websites, which will likely be the exact same pre-made websites they are offering everyone who comes to their website. And, as anyone who works with internet marketing or internet sales will tell you, it is already difficult to make money online with a completely unique website, and using websites and products that are also being used by hundreds of other people will only make it incredibly more difficult.
Second, they say that all you have to do is get traffic to your website. This happens to be the most difficult task for anyone working in internet marketing, including major corporations! And while Home Cash Flow Solution claims to train you, remember that they are offering identical services to the hundreds of others who will have your identical websites and identical products.
They could also potentially offer to up sell you to a package that includes programs that will get you traffic to your website automatically. These types of programs are notoriously worthless – most people even suspect that they are simply bots that make it appear as though people are visiting your website, but you will still never see sales.
And – since we’re on the subject of up selling – since Home Cash Flow Solution makes no mention on their sales page of charging you for hosting and site maintenance, there is a good chance that once you pay your $97.00 you will be enticed to pay more for that as well. It seems highly unlikely that Home Cash Flow Solution would be giving hundreds of people free site hosting out of the goodness of their hearts.
Finally, Home Cash Flow system is being promoted by fake news sites. You may have been directed to them from News 10 Reports or News 8 Reports, where you read a story about Jessica Holcomb from a town close to you… Yes. The fake news site is a large warning to avoid a particular product, because if they are willing to use such dishonest tactics to get you to their website, it’s probably a bad indicator of what could happen once they get your credit card number.
This doesn't excuse the fact that Home Cash Flow Solution is selling a program that is going to take a lot of work for the average person trying to find a way to work online. And to someone who has no money and no job, this could turn out to be a disaster.
The $97.00 initial payment is great marketing and that's all it is, marketing. This program is full of upsells and if you're not careful you'll end up spending far more than the initial cost of the program. Just like any work-at-home program, it will work for some and not for others. But I would be real skeptical of this one.
Finally, I'm in the process of attempting to get a refund, well, this is a real sign of a scam when they keep making excuses not to promptly return your $97.00, even though they claim an unconditional money back guarantee. They still want you to give them a reason for the refund request. Excuse #1, you have to be within the system a certain amount of time before they can pull up your information, of course, they already have your money, and they want you to call back. Excuse #2, it takes 7 to 10 days, "working days," before a refund can be credited back to your account. Support refers you to customer service, customer service makes all the excuses, and you never talk to the same person twice. In all fairness, if I do happen to get a refund, I won't hesitate to make another post.
I would say that an extremely small percentage of marketers actually do well financially. Look at GDI for example. GDI is a network marketing company that posts a weekly leader-board. This leader-board basically shows you who the top affiliates are, how many people they're bringing in, and how much revenue they're producing. Notice, I said REVENUE and not PROFIT. That is, they may be producing thousands monthly in revenue, but how much expense they are incurring to do so (advertising) is anyone's guess.
What was really telling about the leader-board, was the amount of "successful" affiliates in relation to the total number of members within GDI. A couple of years ago, I did a simple computation, I divided the number of leader-board achievers by the total number of GDI members and determined that LESS than 1% of GDI members were making it to the leader-boards. Basically, with the earning structure set up as it were, you weren't really making any money unless you were on the leader-board.
That said, over 99% of the people who join GDI fail to experience the "amazing opportunity" they were sold on. As always, buyer beware.