Having a competitor shop involve audio recording (whether with video or not) is always a red flag in a two party state. I once posted that shoppers should NEVER accept such a reorded shop, since it seemed impossible that the client could insure that its competitor's employees had given consent to recording. I have since found an exception to that. A very, very large MSC does recorded shops for client A, all of whode employees have signed waivers to permit recordings. Client B hires the same MSC to do recorded competitor shops at Client A's sites. The MSC's contract with Client A allows the MSC to accept such a contract.
However, as shoppers, me cannot assume that this is the case. Ask, ask, ask! If you do any recorded shops, you must tatoo the list of the 14 "two party states on you arm and consult that ist often, lol. Don't be afraid to challenge a scheduler if you are asked to do a recorded competitor shop in a two party state. I once found that the MSC, new to recorded shops, had asked their attorney the wrong question. They asked if there was any bar to video taping the employee during a shop. The lawyers, taking the question literally told them that they were entirely safe with video. What the lawyers should have added was that if they turned on the audio recorder as well as the hidden camera, they would be in violation of the law in 14 states, unless they could verify that someone had waivers on file from all of its competitor's employees. That would be rare, indeed.
The MSC in question took my analysis of the problem to their lawyers, who confirmed that, of course, the audio was the legal problem, not the video. I was then offered the shop as a written report, with a large bonus, and an apology.
Based in MD, near DC
Shopping from the Carolinas to New York
Have video cam; will travel
Poor customer service? Don't get mad; get video.