In the past have participated in a few online work from home adventures. My time is valuable and if it smells fishy I don’t even look twice at it. PayPerPost has worked well for me in the past. The adsense ad here doesn’t do much. Occasionally I get a couple referral dollars from recommending something I would recommend anyway so that is nice. But when the account is empty and the gas tank is empty, sometimes having a way to generate a little cash right away is nice. I don’t mind doing surveys if they are legit, but I don’t have time for endless clicking for no reason. I am however always on the look out for something to recommend to stay at home Moms who are about to have their homes foreclosed on. I also know several whose hubby’s are currently laid off. I have been seriously looking at Project Payday. It comes highly recommended and costs nothing to join, if you fill out one of their free offers. It does take some time, it is not free money. I opted for the Credit Check Total, and was pleasantly surprised. It is free as long as you cancel before the free trial is up. So, write that down somewhere. So I will keep you posted on Project Payday and how it is working for me. If you have tried it in the past I would love to hear your comments.
Dineen says
I signed up for this one a couple years ago. The fractions of pennies never paid off for me. There are a LOT of emails that come in to your email box to click on to check out. I eventually gave up on them, because they were for things I had absolutely no interest in. I put them in a separate email folder to manage them. You DO get a lot of traffic to your site(s) for referrals (which I don’t), so you may make money there, though.
Penny says
I think maybe you are thinking of something else, this one pays like $50 at a time, but from what I see it looks like it takes a bunch of time, which is hard for me.
Dineen says
I’ve gone back to the site to look it over again and it’s changed radically from when I first signed up. It looks like a completely different program requiring a more full-time commitment, not a spare time sort of thing.