Small businesses targeted by Corporate Portal invoicing scam
Small businesses targeted by Corporate Portal invoicing scam
The Commerce Commission is warning New Zealand small business owners of an invoicing scam undertaken through the post by a German company which operates a website called Corporate Portal New Zealand.
Business owners have been approached to update their business details with the Corporate Portal and have reported being misled into entering an ongoing subscription contract.
Kate Morrison, the Commission’s General Manager of Competition said, “We have received a number of complaints about the Corporate Portal and similar scams. It is a priority for us to protect consumers from scams. In this case, business owners have been sent formal looking letters with the letterhead ‘New Zealand – Companies.’ This has led some of them to believe they are obligated to provide their details for the New Zealand Companies Office.”
The letter urges businesses to complete their basic details by a deadline date or they will be removed from the Corporate Portal website. It gives businesses the option of including more information by filling in an attached form and returning it to the Corporate Portal address in Germany.
Ms Morrison said, “The letter gives business owners the impression the ‘service’ is free, that the business is already listed and that their details need updating. In reality, filling out the form and posting back their business details signs them up to a $1,411 annual subscription to a basic online directory, for at least three years.”
Once this form has been sent and the business is signed up, the terms and conditions make it difficult to cancel, and the Corporate Portal says it reserves the right to increase the annual fee with no consultation.
“We recommend that all unsolicited correspondence of this nature is considered very carefully. If consumers are concerned about the authenticity of documents it always pays to do your due diligence first, including checking with the relevant government department if the letter looks like it is from them. It’s also important to remember that websites with ‘nz’ in the web domain are not necessarily based here,” said Ms Morrison.
Corporate Portal has previously targeted British and Australian small business owners and featured on scam alerts in New Zealand from the Ministry of Business Innovation and Employment (MBIE) and the Department of Internal Affairs.
MBIE’s advice is to immediately report letters from the Corporate Portal by entering details on their website: https://www.theorb.org.nz/forms/scam-or-fraud/
It also lists a number of measures to protect small
businesses from scams such as:
• Limit the number of
people in your business that have authority to make
purchases or write orders
• Keep written records of all
orders and purchases
• Reconcile all invoices against
actual orders. Ask for proof of purchase and check with
colleagues to make sure that you have received what you paid
for
• If an invoice seems to reference an advertisement
or directory entry you genuinely made, make sure that all of
the details add up. False billing scammers may use your real
advertising as the basis for their fake invoices, e.g.
company name, address and bank details
• Deal only with
people and companies you know and trust.
The full list of measures that businesses can take can be found here:http://www.consumeraffairs.govt.nz/scam-news/scam-alert-small-business-scam
The Commerce Commission has recently warned of another organisation called New Zealand Small Business Assistance Centre which is based online and has used similar tactics to elicit money from small business owners.
ENDS