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Consumer watchdog issues warning to small business: Yellow Pages scams back on the cards

The old-school Yellow Pages scam is back in action. In the past week the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission has received over 60 reports from SMEs of a scam involving companies pretending to act as the Sensis Yellow Pages directory. The past weekโ€™s complaints bring the total number to 90 for the current financial year, […]
Yolanda Redrup

The old-school Yellow Pages scam is back in action. In the past week the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission has received over 60 reports from SMEs of a scam involving companies pretending to act as the Sensis Yellow Pages directory.

The past weekโ€™s complaints bring the total number to 90 for the current financial year, as more and more small businesses are receiving faxes from โ€œYellow Page Australiaโ€ and โ€œOpen Business Directoryโ€.

The fax appears to be seeking confirmation of the contact details of the business, but in the fine print it reveals itโ€™s actually an agreement to sign up to an online business directory service โ€“ which costs $99 a month for a minimum period of two years.

ACCC deputy chair Michael Schaper told SmartCompany small businesses are often targeted because they generally have less sophisticated record-keeping systems.

โ€œTheyโ€™re under a huge amount of time pressure and with this scam youโ€™re doing something which looks reasonably legitimate.โ€

โ€œSmall business owners are generally honest souls and think if they receive a bill they should pay it. The small businesses owner is usually paying the bills late at night or on a weekend and often doesnโ€™t have anyone to raise the alarm,โ€ he says.

In 2011 there was another โ€œYellow Pagesโ€ scam, although the ACCC successfully prosecuted two overseas companies for sending thousands of fake faxes to local businesses. The scammers were fined $2.7 million by the Federal Court.

Schaper says despite this case of a successful prosecution, scammers are generally difficult to catch and they have so far been unable to identify the perpetrators.

โ€œThere is a limited jurisdiction and ability to prosecute outside of Australian borders,โ€ he says.

Other types of scams which frequently target small businesses are fake invoices, such as messages warning a companyโ€™s domain name registration has expired and a bill for a renewal fee, or scammers sending unsolicited emails pretending to be the Australian Taxation Office.

The ACCC reported in 2012 businesses lost $93 million to scams and 84,000 were reported to the watchdog.

But figures from the Australian Institute of Criminology have shown less than 10% of scams get reported, making scams potentially a $1 billion problem.

Research conducted by Curtin University in 2012-13 and published in June revealed financial losses due to scams ranged between $100 and $10,000 per annum and the time spent rectifying the scam was up to 100 hours.

The study also indicated the financial cost to a scammed small business greatly exceeds that of the scammed amount.

Should a small business be the victim of a hacker, it can cost up to $10,000 to rectify.

Schaper says to avoid being the victim of a scam, small businesses should delete or discard anything which seems questionable, trust their gut instincts, perform cross-checks before paying bills and isolate bank accounts.

โ€œIf youโ€™re going to check something to see if itโ€™s legitimate, donโ€™t look at the URLs of the suspicious email, go to the business through a legitimate contact point. Often the scammer will have set up fake phone numbers and websites,โ€ he says.