Watch Out for Fake Customer Satisfaction Surveys

Don't be tricked into divulging personal financial information by scammers posing as legit businesses.

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(Image credit: Getty Images)

Before you respond to that customer satisfaction survey e-mail from your bank, credit card company or other familiar business, consider this: It might be a scam. The Better Business Bureau warns that scammers are now trying to get consumers to part with their personal information by posing as financial institutions and other businesses interested in getting feedback from clients.

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Cameron Huddleston
Former Online Editor, Kiplinger.com

Award-winning journalist, speaker, family finance expert, and author of Mom and Dad, We Need to Talk.

Cameron Huddleston wrote the daily "Kip Tips" column for Kiplinger.com. She joined Kiplinger in 2001 after graduating from American University with an MA in economic journalism.