Service & delivery parodiesiMessage

Fake Job Offer Text — Scam-Awareness Template

A realistic fake "job offer" recruitment scam text, pre-filled for a fake iMessage screenshot. Free, no watermark — for scam-awareness content.

Fake job-offer texts prey on job-seekers with an unsolicited, too-good-to-be-true role — high pay, no interview, start today. The scam ends with a request for personal info or an upfront "onboarding/training fee" that a real employer would never charge.

This template recreates the pattern so you can teach the red flags: unsolicited contact, no real interview, a push to WhatsApp/Telegram, a vague company, and any request for money to start. Legitimate employers never charge you to work.

Use for: scam-awareness reels, job-seeker safety content, and digital-literacy education. Not for deceiving real people.

Use this template

Open the iMessage editor — you can swap the names, times and messages, then download a clean PNG with no watermark. For parody and content only.

Open in iMessage editor →

How to use this template

Step by step. Total time: about 60 seconds.

  1. 1

    Open the template in the iMessage editor

    Click 'Open in iMessage editor' below. The conversation is pre-filled — the editor loads with every message, contact name, time and battery percentage already set up exactly like the preview.

  2. 2

    Swap names + photos to fit your story

    Change the contact name (use 'Mom', 'Ex 💀', or any first name with emoji), upload a different avatar, or import a real Instagram profile to auto-fill the photo. The conversation text stays the same — just the people change.

  3. 3

    Tweak the dialogue if needed

    Click any message bubble to edit it. Add new messages, delete ones that don't fit, or use the AI 'Generate reply' button on any single bubble to get an in-character response.

  4. 4

    Download the high-res PNG

    Hit Download — clean retina PNG, no watermark. The first 2 anonymous downloads are free; signing in with Google unlocks unlimited.

What people make with this template

Scam-awareness educational content

Showing a parody of common phishing/scam patterns (fake bank, fake delivery, fake government agency) alongside the real red flags is high-value education. Every viewer who learns to spot the format saves real money.

Comedy parody skits

Absurd takes on real service notifications — '$48 charge at Burger King in Antarctica', 'order of 47 rubber ducks shipped'. The format works because real service notifications are a universal experience.

Product / marketing mockups

Designers building 'what our app's transactional notification would look like' demos. The screenshot format is a clean visual prop for pitch decks and landing-page mockups.

Frequently asked questions

6 answers about this template.

What is the fake job offer text scam?

An out-of-nowhere text offers easy, high-paying remote work — then asks for personal details or an upfront payment. This template recreates the recruitment-scam pattern.

How do I spot a fake job text?

The tells: unsolicited offer, vague company, unrealistic pay for little work, and a push to move to WhatsApp/Telegram or pay a "training fee" — all shown here.

Can I make a fake job offer text for content?

Yes for scam-awareness and comedy. Don't use it to actually scam job-seekers or impersonate a real employer.

Does this iMessage template look like a real iPhone screenshot?

Yes. PostMock renders the authentic iOS bubble shapes (correct corner radius, tail placement on the last message of each group), Apple's exact iMessage blue (#0b93f6) and grey (#e9e9eb), the real iPhone status bar, and proper read receipts. The exported PNG is indistinguishable from a genuine iPhone screen capture.

Will the recipient know I made a fake iMessage screenshot?

No. Making a fake screenshot doesn't notify anyone because no real iMessage is ever sent. The conversation only exists in your browser. iMessage itself doesn't have screenshot notifications anyway.

Is it legal to use this template?

For parody, comedy, fiction, education, and skits — yes, in essentially every country. Don't use it to defame a real person, defraud someone, or fabricate fake evidence. Full legal framework: /blog/is-making-fake-instagram-dm-illegal.

References & further reading

Related templates

Want to start from scratch instead?

Open the iMessage generator →