What has been discussed so far in this review is just part of the bigger picture’s surface.
To have a full view of this picture, let us get to know the different versions of their websites.
Version #1
In this text-page version, they claim that WAH Program is about building an affiliate marketing business where you’ll be given access to an online course.
This online course affords you over 100 HD videos that will help you learn the “important facets and techniques used in this business to make a profit”.
What you will be learning is composed of the following: basics of internet marketing, mind-set you must have when trying to build your own internet business and the easy ways of giving your links the exposure they need.
Version #2
The second version talks about a woman named Bobbie Robinson (but with a different face) who earns over $10,000 by just posting links.
Sounds impossible and shady right? Well, it turns out that the woman speaking in the video of this second version is a paid actress from a website called Fiverr.
Version #3
For this version of the WAH Program, it disguises itself as a sales page that offers you a job that can help you earn hundreds of bucks per day, quickly and easily.
This version is actually the most popular one. If you try searching for the WAH Program on Google, the result will tell you that it’s a work at home company that will make you post links and then pay you at least a hundred dollars a day.
Another matter to be considered are the following websites that are identical but with slight variations:
So what’s with all of these versions
We can safely say that it must be their way of split testing the websites to find out which one performs better.
But as what has been discussed above, the three versions of the WAH Program are somehow very different when it comes to what they offer to job seekers.
Also, if you look at its history, an issue about them scamming people has risen in the year 2016.
It was only after the issue had died down that they started operating again as a business.
Here is a short 1-minute video feature from ABC News warning people about scam "work-at-home" jobs...