It’s 11 PM in your third month of unemployment, and you receive yet another “We’re hiring urgently!” text. This one promises $75 an hour for data entry—no experience needed, start tomorrow. That knot in your stomach? Not excitement. It’s your instincts trying to save you from joining the 20,000 people who reported job scams in just the first half of 2024.
Think you’d never fall for a job scam? Even careful professionals can be vulnerable to job board-induced brain rot. Sometimes, you want to believe. Scammers count on that feeling—and they’re getting scary good at exploiting it.
Most scammers aren’t just targeting desperate job seekers or tech novices. Clever scammers hook even experienced professionals with graduate degrees and decades of experience.
“More sophisticated attackers may even target people individually,” says Nick Kowalczyk, Vice President and Chief Risk, Compliance, and Privacy Officer at Kelly, who tracks recruitment fraud daily. “Plus, artificial intelligence helps the worst-performing scammers. It cleans up their typos and gets it looking like any other job posting you see. That has really raised the floor.”
The dream of full-time remote work is another way scammers get their hooks into educated job-seekers. A BBB survey found one of the biggest reasons people fall for these scams is believing they’ve finally found a perfect work-from-home role.
Some warning signs should be instant deal-breakers. Train yourself to see these blaring alarms:
Understanding the playbook helps you spot the con early, especially since most follow the same script.
Real companies | Scammers |
Multiple video calls or in-person interviews where people show their faces | Text-only “interviews” on WhatsApp |
Check references | Don’t care about your resume |
Ask about your actual experience | Hire you in five minutes |
Real companies | Scammers |
Send email from @actualcompany.com domain | Use free email accounts (totallylegitrecruiter@gmail.com) or fudged domains—for instance, swapping a 1 for a lowercase L |
LinkedIn profiles show work history | No online presence, or it doesn’t align with their claims |
Answer questions about the team and role | Act cagey when questioned |
Want to watch a fake recruiter vanish? Ask:
If you’re already deep in a WhatsApp conversation with a recruiter who you just realized is a “scammer,” start by not blaming yourself. Scammers are clever, especially when augmented with AI. Falling for their schtick isn’t a knock on you personally.
Once you’ve taken a deep breath, move fast. Start with money protection:
Then, protect your identity:
Last up—make reports. While this doesn’t necessarily mean authorities will stop your scammer from preying on others, it creates a paper trail and can help get your own money back.
When you’re navigating remote job searching alone at midnight, you wind up handling all the scammer detective work yourself. That’s exhausting—and risky.
This is where staffing agencies like Kelly change the game. We talk to companies daily. We’ve verified their domains, know their HR teams, and have already done the sniff test. Working with a Kelly recruiter means receiving only vetted opportunities and avoiding the scams.
The rule: Legitimate staffing agencies never ask for money upfront. If anyone claiming to be from Kelly or any other staffing agency asks for money, they’re lying.
“Keep your guard up,” says Kowalczyk. “But don’t let that stop you from growing your career. Just take a few seconds to verify each job posting.”
Run new opportunities by a trusted friend. Sometimes saying it out loud—So, they asked me to buy gift cards…—is all it takes to realize you’ve been had.
“This is a volume play for scammers,” says Kowalczyk. They reach out to thousands of people hoping only a handful will bite. Your objective: Don’t be their volume.
Ready to skip the scamxiety? Connect with a Kelly recruiter who’s already verified the companies, knows who is actually hiring, and will video call you with their camera on. No fees or fake checks required.
Start your job search with a team who knows the difference.
For more information on spotting and reporting job scams, please visit our Job Scam Protection page.