What a bunch of soft ball fluff. I try to stay off this part of the forum because my advice is NOT for new mystery shoppers. But Dayum, people. It seems to me that the olde guarde are painting a black and white picture when 50 shades of gray (no not the poorly written mommy porn) are needed to make the picture make sense.
When you work as a mystery shopper, you don't always know who your are working for. The client is NOT necessarily the employer of the target. It may very well be a competitor who is using the shopper as a corporate spy. In this case, you are not acting or role playing. There is no training and there is no consent. The target, person or company have nothing to gain. You are creating fraud and misrepresentation. Good old fashioned lying and stealing. Your motive is now profit at the expense of the target.
If that is not bad enough, some mystery shopping companies will give you instructions that require you to break the law. Trespassing, entering secure areas under false pretense, secretly recording conversations in two party consent states. Then comes the phony social security numbers, opening bank accounts that you don't intend to use, light sabotage,and even alleging theft or damage that has not actually occurred.
The next piece of canned advice is, "if you have a moral problem with a scenario, don't do it." To quote George Will, "Well."
If we don't take care of our customers, some one else will. Right?
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up, up, down, down, left, right,left,right, B,A, start.