What To Do If You Suspect a Scam or Have Been Scammed
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Has spelling errors or lacks a professional tone.Lists a company without an established physical office.References their company but don't use an email address from their company's domain.Uses a generic email address such as or (check on the actual email address used in the from field or email address given as the reply to).If it seems too good to be true, it probably is. Focuses on how much money you'll make.The person is out of town or on a business trip and not physically able to meet.Asks for sensitive personal information.Asks for you to make purchases on their behalf such as gift cards.Email or contact to you that you were not expecting to receive.Be wary if the job posting or email exhibits any of these signs: There are many potential signs of a job scam. They may even reference the ICC in some way to make them seem more legitimate. Some will even go as far as stating that they represent an established company. Scammers may also directly contact you, for example through email or phone, soliciting to hire you for an open job position. While the ICC vets every position that is posted to Handshake, sometimes fraudulent postings make it through. Scammers create and maintain fraudulent postings on many reputable job boards, for monetary gain, including Handshake and even networking sites like LinkedIn.