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Mounting scams target busy owners

THE Australian Competition and Consumer Commission received 83,150 reports of scams from small businesses and consumers last year, nearly double the year earlier and more than quadruple the number in 2009, according to its annual scam report to be released today.

While it might be hard to believe many people would rent premises without inspecting them, Dr Schaper said scammers often tricked the business owner into rushing the decision. ''They're very adept at creating a sense of urgency,'' he said.

Companies and consumers are as well being hit by business possibility scams and unwittingly launder money for criminal groups, by taking money into their bank accounts and moving it to another location, according to today's report. They are offered the chance to earn money by processing mail or accounts, nevertheless told they have to pay an upfront fee for training, uniforms or establishment costs.

Small businesses were particularly vulnerable to scammers because the owner was a jack-of-all-trades and pushed for time, Dr Schaper said. They as well liked doing business via email and did not have the checking systems big businesses did, he said.

In this week's ''Slam Scams!'' National Fraud Week campaign, the ACCC is encouraging small businesses not to engage with scammers at all, in a bid to prevent them from being a target hereafter.

Scammers were becoming increasingly sophisticated and there was evidence they were starting to sell lists of victims to each other, in the same way legitimate marketing businesses did, Dr Schaper said.

Senior lecturer in entrepreneurship

A senior lecturer in entrepreneurship and small business at Western Australia's Curtin University, Paull Weber, said between 30 and 50 per cent of small businesses had fallen victim to scams. Most lost only a few hundred dollars, nevertheless the losses could run into the tens of thousands of dollars.

Dr Weber is conducting a study with the ACCC into which businesses are affected by scams and why. He said preliminary results recommended the most targeted were those with high turnover, just as cafes, pet groomers, financial advisers, travel agents, retailers, IT managers and web designers.

Scammers have relied on the low cost of the internet to contact victims for several years, however many are now turning back to the phone as the cost of international calls drops to a few cents thanks to VoIP (Voice over Internet Protocol).

Phishing - tricking businesses or consumers into revealing bank account details - remains a problem. There was as well a slight increase in reports of the false billing scam, where a business receives an invoice for unwanted advertising. According to the ACCC report, these are among the most successful of scams, with a 15 per cent conversion rate.

More information: Smh.com