Could the wisdom of the business crowd decide the fate of Expo Guide and World Business Directory?
Image may be NSFW.
Clik here to view.The challenge
You’ve arrived here because of my Tweet about the Expo Guide and World Business Directory scams. First of all, thanks for coming. Second, I’d like to invite you to take part in an experiment. Could Twitter kill these nasty scams stone dead?
Have a look at the evidence (below) and if you want to play a part in stopping these scammers, then please RT the Tweet that brought you here to people in your network and let’s see if we can help stop people getting ripped off.
The Scam
As some of you may already know the world of business is still being swept by a family of scams which deliberately set out to fool people into inadvertently signing expensive contracts they don’t want. An early and well documented version of this is what’s known as the “Construct Data scam” originating from Austria. The most recent variants of this scourge are European City Guide, Expo-Guide and World Business Directory.
How it works
- You get a letter in the post (or email with pdf attachment) from the company. It’s designed to make you think they’re offering you a free listing in their online directory. It asks you to sign and stamp the form. You do and send or email it back
- Nothing happens for a while
- A couple of months later you get a demand for something in the region of €3,000
- Their demands direct you to the form where – for the first time – you notice to your horror the tiny, faint small-print saying “signing and stamping this form constitutes a contract for 3 years entry into our directory at c. €900 per year..”.
- A couple of months later, you start getting various demands. Eventually, you get formal letters from a debt collection agency. Now you start to worry. What if they take you to court? What if your boss finds out?
- You write back to the company saying it’s a rip-off and you don’t feel you should have to pay. Eventually, they graciously agree to let you off with just one year’s fee out of three. Maybe you pay up so you can put this whole traumatic episode behind you.
This scam has been running for years and shows no sign of stopping. Why? Because there will always be enough people out there who can be bullied or shamed into paying some – if not all – of this extortionate fee.
Governments seem to have little or no interest in stopping it. Watchdogs aren’t particularly bothered. It’s down to a few individuals like Jules Woodell to campaign against it – see http://stopecg.org/ and http://stopecg.blogspot.com/ for a thorough history of all the main mutations of this scam. For my own posts on the subject (and to read more than 50 comments from victims) click here. You’ll get some idea of the kind of worry and distress this scam causes.
This scam is real and current and it’s costing business people like you and me a lot of money, stress and worry. This site gets 20+ new visitors every day searching for help on this issue – most of whom are new victims of the scam from all over the world.
Personal
For your information, I didn’t get stung personally by these scams (too long in the tooth!). However, like millions of others, I regularly receive their scammy emails. My motivation is to use the blog / Google platform to mess up their operation a bit and prevent others from being ripped off Image may be NSFW.
Clik here to view.