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1. Carefully Review Orders - Whenever you receive an order, take some extra time and review the order carefully. Make sure the consumer filled out all of the information correctly and that it matches. If it is a fraudulent order, in most cases you can catch anything that does not seem right by carefully reviewing the entire order. 2. Contact, Shipping & Credit Card Information - The consumer's contact information should match up with the shipping address and the credit card information. If it does not, then you need to find out why they want the products shipped to another address or have a credit card with different contacts. This is a very good sign of a scamster, but not in all cases. 3. Address Verification Service (AVS) - Provided by most merchant processors, you can run the AVS service on all of your transactions to ensure that the information they gave you matches with the information on the file with the card issuing bank (The Credit Card Bank). If it is different, then it is possible, among other things, that the consumer has a partner involved with the order. Contacting the consumer to find out the exact reason is highly encouraged. 4. Free Email Addresses - The majority of scamsters will use a
free email address to hide their identity. You can very easily
find out if your consumer is using a free email provider by just
visiting the web site domain that comes after the @ symbol. For
example: consumer@thewebsite.com, you can go to thewebsite.com to
see if that web site is an email provider like Hotbot or Yahoo.
It is a good idea to require a real email address from their own
domain or their ISP when they order. This can be accomplished by
stating the requirement on your order forms.
6. Domain Name Records - One unknown trick is to look up the domain name records of the domain name they are using in their email address to see if it matches with what they provided in the order. This will only work if they have their own web site and used their own domain name as the email address. Take the same procedure as explained in tip #4, and use Network Solutions' database to search for the records. The url can be found here: http://www.networksolutions.com/cgi-bin/whois/whois Their information might not completely match up, depending if something changed or if they are using a business address verses a home address, but you should get an idea, like in the same state or city. 7. Very Large Orders - Take special caution when receiving noticeably high orders, the amount of products or services they are purchasing, especially around holiday seasons. Also pay attention to orders that are sent by overnight delivery. Since the scamsters aren't paying for it, they do not care about the extra cost and want it as fast as possible. 8. Use Fraudulent Notices - Place fraudulent notices, buttons and images on your order forms and your web site content. Let the consumers know that fraudulent orders will be pursed to the fullest extent of the law. By having these notices, it will usually run off most scamsters. 9. Telephone Search - You can purchase a database of phone numbers on a CD or you can use services such as http://www.anywho.com/ that will do a reverse search on a phone number for you. This will allow you to confirm the contact information for the phone number that the consumer has provided. 10. Call The Consumer - The last, and usually the most affective way, to clear up all confusion is to call the consumer with the phone number they provided. If they gave you a bad phone number, then try contacting them via email for a valid phone number. Be very suspicious about this though, because most people usually don't give out wrong phone numbers unless it was miss typed. By using these tips, hopefully you will not experience any fraudulent orders. If you are scammed, then take serious action by following the order and prosecute the fraudulent consumer.
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