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earweed wrote: » Yesterday I got an offer for a position as a field engineer. It's contract work, the company basically get's contacted by the customer and contacts me. I then contact customer to set up appointment and drive out to the site. I have to have a registered business name, Fed Tax ID, and Business liability insurance. This is all done for and paid by me.
earweed wrote: » I'm mostly worried about an hours drive (not paid for mileage) and 2 or 3 hours at one site. Right now I need ANY type of IT experience on my resume. The side work I've been doing refurbishing PC's and reselling them isn't lucrative or really a big + on a resume. Basically I don't want to graduate from WGU with a big fat lame nothing on the IT experience front.
MentholMoose wrote: » From your description, it sounds shady. If you are paying any money whatsoever to this company to set anything up at all, run. Also, the whole part about setting up your own business sends up a red flag for me. I've done contract work and it's never required anything remotely like what you describe. My income was simply reported on a 1099 form and for tax purposes I was considered self-employed. If they start asking for a lot of details about your "business", be very careful about what you give them. A common scam involves scammers convincing people to set up their own business. Once the scammers get the business info, they set up a merchant account and a bank account tied to the business and proceed to make fraudulent charges to stolen credit card accounts.
earweed wrote: » I don't think I can disclose the companies name here but they are an established company. Except for the gripes on the forum I found, they seem reputable. There were no recent complaints on the forum so I assume they either cleaned up their act or the techs who were complaining left. The company outsources all kinds of other jobs, like helpdesk (which is one of the jobs I had applied for with them) and field engineers. Apparently due to all the problems they had in the past they are requiring their field engineers to be private businesses. Besides the business liability insurance I don't see any costs in getting set up.
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