Speaking as someone who fell for a very similar scheme a few years ago, steer well clear.
Chances are they'll have you going door to door on a commission only basis after trying to reel you in with
potential earnings of six figure salaries. The offices will be nice (if a little small) and there will be several other people (generally as many as the vacancies they are advertising) waiting for an interview too. Guess what? You will
all get the job.
In a lot of cases you have to cover your own transport costs and some even require a (generally small) initial investment for 'training'. It's called multi-level marketing (look it up) and is extremely similar in structure to a pyramid scheme. They
will try and pressure you into recruiting friends and blatantly lying to potential customers. After two weeks (90 hours) of working in a similar role, I was £60 up. That's 50% of what I would have gained from unemployment benefits. Many of these operations (google The Cobra Group for a prime example) consist of a parent company using many different subsidiaries to compete with each other and help disguise the nature of the business.
I wish you the best of luck finding sustainable employment, but this just isn't it.
Out of curiosity, what is the company's name?
Try to find a temp agency. It's income. Enough to potentially get your own place. More importantly, temp agency work actually looks surprisingly good on your resume.
Dont know what its like there, but temp agencys dont take anyone anymore - they just advertise jobs.
That's incorrect. I've worked for temp agencies in the past and would highly recommend it if a decent one can be found. They do generally take a percentage of your wages, but you'll still usually (in my experience anyway) make a little more than you would if you were directly employed by the company. The downside is that you'll have next to no job security. A lot of employers really like seeing a significant period of agency work on a CV, as it shows you to be adaptable and unafraid of change.