Remote Product Marketing Tester at Express Vitamin

Website VITAMIN EXPRESS

VitaminExpress operates primarily as an international online store for premium health supplements rather than a traditional walk-in retail chain.

 

Remote Product Marketing Tester for Express Vitamin, you need to know the unfiltered truth: This is not a real job. It is a textbook “Brushing” and review-manipulation scam.

How It Actually Plays Out

The pitch sounds amazing and effortless: you spend 10 minutes ordering a product with escrow money, write a quick review, keep some free vitamins, and pocket $15.

If you reply to that email, here is what actually happens:

  • They Arrive for Your Credit Card: They claim the money is sitting safely with a third-party escrow company. In reality, they will send you a link to a fake, look-alike payment platform. The second you type in your credit card or bank login to verify your account or pay for shipping, they sweep your account clean.
  • The Advance-Fee Ghosting: If they don’t use a fake escrow site, they will tell you to buy the vitamins on Amazon with your own cash first, promising they will reimburse you the product cost plus your $15 commission once your review goes live. You buy it, you post the five-star review, and the moment you ask for your money back, they block your email and vanish. You are left broke, holding a bottle of mystery pills.
  • You’re Committing Review Fraud: They aren’t testing products; they are buying fake reviews to artificially pump up a product ranking. Participating in this violates the terms of service of every major marketplace, and your personal consumer accounts will get permanently banned.

Red Flags You Can’t Ignore

Scammers use very specific psychological tricks to turn off your critical thinking. Look at the language in this post:

  1. Email that you are interested — There is no company portal, no background check, and no real interview. They want you off the safety of the job board and into an unmonitored private email chain immediately so the job board can’t protect you.
  2. Too Easy, Too Fast — Making $15 for 10 minutes of work scales out to an insane $90 an hour. Real companies do not pay $90 an hour for an untrained person to click three buttons. If the math makes no sense, it’s a scam.
  3. The Mystery Vitamin Danger — You should never, under any circumstances, ingest or use health supplements sent to you by a company that runs illegal review manipulation schemes. You have zero clue what chemicals are actually inside those bottles.

Things To Note

Do not give these people your name, your home address, or your banking details. Genuine product testing is done through massive, established market research firms (like Nielsen or specialized agency panels) where you fill out intense, 30-minute feedback forms not sketchy private emails promising fast cash for five-star ratings.

To apply for this job please visit weworkremotely.com.