Forum Moderators: LifeinAsia
It turned out that the category he quoted seemed the right match for our business. So I said thank you very much when he added that it'll be £499 + vat as it was last year and that the invoice will arrive in due course.
Hold on a sec, I said, we didn't pay last year, you don't appear on my "Approved Supplier List" so we couldn't have ever raised a payment for you. That's when he started fumbling. I typed "<the company name>" in Google and came up with natch. Not one site anywhere making any reference to it. I told him to find some other sucker.
I've heard of these scams before and have had one or two attempts in the past... but just thought I'd warn you guys about the scam.
[edited by: engine at 7:27 pm (utc) on April 22, 2004]
[edit reason] specifics removed [/edit]
It's also similar to the common "Yellow Pages" invoice scam, which is most often conducted by mail. (An invoice that looks like it's for your local phonebook ad but is in fact for some bogus directory.)
I guess scams have to keep up with technology!
The business directory thing is insane - I sometimes wonder if some of them actually think they are providing a valuable service.
Same scam as usual ... old habits never die ...
Thanks for the heads-up.
Regards,
R.
I have not seen one of those domain letters in a while. I guess that fell out of favor.
I have enough domains out there that I get at least one a month. Two last week for parked domains expiring in September. Of course, I must act by May - or else!
and am now trying to help a client who mistakenly replied with payment to one of them.
I warn clients that they will probably be getting these kinds of pitches when their domains come up. A reckless or feckless client can cause themselves a lot of problems.