This e Home Cash Flow Solution review and analysis of the sales page goes over quite a few aspects of the sales page that you might truly want to think about if you’re considering purchasing e Home Cash Flow Solution. Personally, I’d recommend you avoid e Home Cash Flow Solution based on the following red flags:
Red Flag #1: e Home Cash Flow Solution uses the following company names at the top of it’s sales page, but gives no explanation at all as to why the logos are there. Here are the companies that eHomeCashFlowSolution.com website is using:
- Fortune
- BusinessWeek
- Entrepreneur
- Forbes
It also lists HomeBusiness and 500 – although I’m not sure what those are supposed to refer to…possibly “Forton 500″ and “Home Business” magazine?
Red Flag #2: eHome Cash Flow Solution states that it has been voted the #1 Online Success Kit by some organization that they call “Online Entrepreneur”. However, I’ve looked and looked for something called “Online Entrepreneur”, but the only thing I’ve been able to find is two websites with a bunch of parked pages.
Red Flag #2: e Home Cash Flow Solution is making use of stock photos for their testimonials.
One of the HUGE red flags nowadays is the following disclaimer that you sometimes will find at the bottom of sales pages:
“For purpose of privacy, testimonial pictures have been adapted and are not their actual photos.”
It’s important to understand why many sites started using this disclaimer. What happened is that stock photos became incredibly easy to find with new reverse image search technology. So as a way around this problem several websites began making use of the aforementioned disclaimer.
So what that means is that the only way that law enforcement can determine if the testimonials are actually real or fake is to file a lawsuit against the company using the stock photos. However, having worked with the FTC on a case where they happened to be trying to find fake testimonials and also evaluate the position of the disclaimer statements, I’d be completely shocked if they actually decdied that the position of the “substitute photo” disclaimer on eHomeCashFlowSolution.com would be considered clear and conspicuous enough for consumers to understand that the photos are supposed to be substitutions.
This doesn’t necessarily mean that all testimonials a website that makes use of stock photos are fake. But it should definitely be considered a HUGE red flag when you see this sort of thing due to the fact that an ENORMOUS NUMBER of question websites are doing this sort of thing and have done it extensively in the past.
If you’re interested in checking out a few of the stock photos being used on eHomeCashFlowSolution you can do at the following links:
- Click here to see Ryan Masters’ at iStockPhoto
- Click here to see The Casey’s at iStockPhoto
- Click here to see William McDonald at Getty Images
Red Flag #3: e Home Cash Flow Solution delcares at the very bottom of its page that all people giving testimonials have been paid.
Take a look at the VERY bottom of the eHomeCashFlowSolution.com sales page you’ll discover that there’s a disclaimer there which says:
“All testimonials have been remunerated.”
Once more, the potential issue here is the fact that this disclaimer is placed at the VERY bottom of the eHomeCashFlowSolution sales page. The Federal Trade Commission demands that disclaimers be clear and conspicous – that means that consumers shouldn’t have to look all over a web page just to find them. They should be easily found.
Red Flag #4: eHome Cash Flow Solution uses testimonials that might actually be in violation of the FTC’s “No Safe Harbor” rule.
Perhaps they’re attorney was on strike or something, but it’s violation of this guideline is very serious. The problem has to do the fact that the Federal Trade Commission recently implemented what’s known as the “No Safe Harbor” rule for testimonials which David C. Vladeck – Director, FTC Bureau of Consumer Protection outlines as follows:
“…the use of a disclaimer such as “results not typical” is no longer a safe harbor for the claims made in testimonials. Third, while you may use atypical or best-case testimonials, if you do, you should clearly and conspicuously disclose the generally expected
results consumers can expect in the depicted circumstances. Of course, the best practice, and the less risky practice, is to use testimonials that actually reflect what your product or services is likely to deliver. In other words, rather than run ads that give with one hand but take away with the other, it would be better for your ads to give a clear picture of the results a consumer will
actually get.”
So as you examine the eHomeCashFlowSolution.com disclaimer which states:
“*INCOME CLAIM WARNING: Testimonials are not typical of most results. Photographs or images are a depiction of individuals and payment methods. These income examples are representative of some of the most successful participants in the program. Some individuals purchasing the program may make little or NO MONEY AT ALL. These claims are not a guarantee of your income, nor are they typical of average participants. Individual results will vary greatly and in accordance to your input, determination, hard work, and ability to follow directions. No person or company can guarantee profits or freedom from loss. Any and all use of this website certifies you are agreeing to our Earnings and Income Disclaimers.”
Red Flag #5: Home Cash Flow Solution can’t seem to remember if it’s actually “Home Cash Flow Solution” or “My Home Wealth System” or e Home Cash Flow Solution as you can see in the following image:
- eHome Cash Flow Solution or Home Cash Flow Solution or My Home Weatlh System?




WARNING!!!! I was one that paid $97.00 to supposedly make money posting links. There is a guarantee to get your money back, so I thought i could not lose. After paying for this and reading all the information they gave, I knew it was a scam. I called them within 45 minutes of purchasing this and asked to be refunded. They would not refund my money, Here is the guarantee from their website.
Triple Satisfaction Guarantee…
1. You are guaranteed immediate placement as a Search Engine Agent by joining this certification program, or you?ll get your money back!
2. After you sign up, take up to 2 months to try out posting links from home with this program. If you aren’t making money and aren?t satisfied, ask for a full refund anytime within 2 months. You’ll get your entire fee back immediately with no questions and no hassles whatsoever. (You can ask for a full refund by phone or email, full contact details are below). In other words, you make money with this, or it’s free.
3. Plus, even if you ask for a refund, I want you to keep all the special gifts you?re going to receive as a member. I know this guaranteed program to make money isn?t for everybody, so if it?s not for you, I understand and want you to accept these free gifts as a token of my appreciation for giving the program a try.
He told me they could not refund my money until I tried it for 2 months. I read his own guarantee to him, refund with NO QUESTIONS and NO HASSELS…He refused. He kept trying to pressure me into trying the whole program and said you will make money. From some other things that he said to me…I asked, Are you telling me that if I make only one dollar on this program, you will not refund my money. He said that is right. I got off the phone with them and called my credit card company and we are filing a dispute. The credit card company said THEY SEE THIS ALL THE TIME. Learn from my mistake. If it sounds too good to be true. IT IS.
Wanda,
Glad to hear you filed a dispute with your credit card company. The good thing is that companies HATE it when you file a dispute with your credit card company because it increases their chargeback rates which can increase their fees and even force them to lose their merchant account in some cases. So not only are you working on getting your money back, you’re actually potentially making it harder for them to do “business”.
Ok , i get it !!!!
Thry’re thievs , we need to be careful, they want to stole our money !!!!!
Put that stolers in jail !!!!!
These people are scam artists and liars. I never got anything from them for the $187.00 charge to my checking account. The phone number provided only had a recorded greeting and no way to leave a message. Then it was disconnected. I found another contact number online and was told that I was talking to the wrong company, yet they refunded me $18.70 (not $187.00) and now that number is disconnected also. I will not stop spreading the truth that this company is DISHONEST!!!
Obviously this is a scam. I received an email from MYSELF that linked to this site. Here are a couple things you should do if you ever think a website is a scam:
1) Type in the website URL into google: ehomecashflowsolution.com – you notice how the actual website is not first on the list with a proper description and title. This means that google has banned the website from any of its searches.
Compare that to a site that I have created (url fantasyfootballmanager.info). You can see that even though the site wasn’t professionally made, you still see the title and description of my website listed 1st and several other pages from my site listed right after. If the site you look up doesn’t show up this way, it’s been banned by google.
If google has banned a website, its a sure sign that they are up to no good. Google doesn’t ban just any site; that’s why you can find porn and gambling on Google. There is also a Firefox plugin that will allow you to see the date that a webpage was last cached in Google. If it does not show up with a result, the website has already been banned.
2) Don’t trust all negative reviews. This is a search engine technique to rank highly in google and not all of them are honest. There are even some that are made by the creators of the original website for purposes of convincing people that they are on the up-and-up.
An example of this is FatBurningFurnace.com – type in “fat burning furnace scam” into google and you will find some of the sites directly link back to FatBurningFurnace.com. The sites were either created by that website or the creators are known as “affiliates” and make money off of sending you back to the website.
3) If you ever see the following “As seen on” with a list of news networks, it’s a scam. Period, end of story! These same websites will often have a list of comments that seem to well thought out to be actual Americans commenting on the subject; but they will always be closed for commenting.
4) Finally, if the webpage that got you to the site only has one outgoing link … to the scam page … and none of the other “buttons” on the page work (in my case http://jobnewsta.com/finance/?story=1g4r2), then they are trying to funnel you to a bogus website.
One more example I would like to throw up here. My friend recently got ripped off with fake Air Jordan shoes. He gave me the website he got them from (kixstore.com). He asked me to check it out and I found another scamming technique that people use. The website used to be real, but was dropped by the original creator; then someone in China bought the “dropped domain” and redirected the whole site to kixstores.com (with an ‘s’ at the end of store). Redirecting domains like this is another way website scammers like to try to fool people.
Use the techniques above to make sure you never get scammed again!
Thanks Michael,
Those are great tips for people. I’m going to add a couple of them to this page:
Home based business opportunities red flags
Great awareness about the dropped domain redirection, too.
And if anyone’s interested in Fantasy Football, you might want to take a look at Michael’s site here:
Fantasy Football Manager