I am in year number four of mystery shopping and have yet to get any certifications. I did, however, get certified for on-site inspections with a few companies and pay for background checks with the ones that other forum members said were worth it. Those are my only real costs and $7-$15 for an annual background check that helps me get $500 extra work each year is worth it to me.
I started out doing drive thru and fast food shops. Those were pretty easy peasy and even at $5-$20 a shop, were worth it at the time coming out of my second trip to college (I was 2 classes shy of a major after graduating with a degree and a minor).
After fast food shops, I started picking up $5-$10 grocery store shops. A little more narrative, but worth it to me to get $10 in free food and stuff because I was broke after a new car and buying a little place. Dunno why I thought two for one was a good idea but I did it and suffered through.
After food+grocery, I started looking for other work and found this forum -- this place is pure gold. Ignore any negativity, accept constructive criticism, and keep your eyes open for sound advice. Everyone has a different experience, but you can certainly make a living. When I first started here, I was making in real money -- $50-$250 a month, TOPS. I was laid off for a few months and for 7 months, shopping was my only source of income. It's harder with a family because you don't necessarily want to travel long hours and be gone too terribly much but the key is balancing high dollar shops with low dollar short shops. If I can do a $150 bank shop that will cost me 2 hours of time but meet my days goal, that's awesome. If I can pick up two bonus food shops at $25 each or even $50 and net free food I can pack home plus easy reports -- that might be what I end up doing on the way to or from work or even both.
Writing was the hardest part for me. I learned how to write papers that involved statistics and a bit of business lingo. I did not learn sentence structure or grammar. That sounds silly, but is very true. I am from WV and living in Kentucky. Sometimes... I type like I talk and it can get me in trouble -- bwahaha. But, I would never put "watsatnow" on a report
![tongue sticking out smiley tongue sticking out smiley](http://www.mysteryshopforum.com/smiley/smilie6.gif)
I would likely say something like, "The associate asked ' what was that, now?' and finished taking my order." Even if they did say watsatnow
![winking smiley winking smiley](http://www.mysteryshopforum.com/smiley/smilie3.gif)
Still, grammar and sentence structure will bite you in the arse on intensive reports. I like getting those 9's and 10's back on reports
Yes, you can make an honest living of it so long as you remain honest and do the work. If ya goof, accept it, and always be polite even if you're right and they are wrong. I'm not saying get ran over, but always be nice and smile on the phone. Seriously, you get more work. I had a shop I tried to get for $35 with a scheduler and it was a no go. Another scheduler called a week later and I was layin' on the thick accent and sweetness and got myself $84.50 a shop. Why such a weird number? I dunno. Must have been the max out or close to it. Anyway, good luck and sign up with a bunch of companies. Get yourself a pen and paper and an excell sheet ready and begin record keeping. I log all my stuff by hand in a daily planner and on a computer digitally with a back up. I write things down such as my miles, my cost, my shops, the times, and I take photos of every location even if not required. Ya never know.
Start small -- even if you need big money -- it's better not to be so stressed out you're ready to cry. And ya still might cry now and again
Take on 1-2 a day, then work your way up to those routes of 5-6, or 10-12 depending on your life, car, and family.
And if it helps, while I was depending on this for 7 months -- there were a few months I brought home close to 5k. That was not typical and more often than not, it was closer to $2k-$3k. Those were tough months but I wanted the money and wanted to be sound while being laid off. Shopping in general, though, is easy enough with some work to net $500-$1200 and not work outside of Monday through Friday 10am to 4pm. It will take a while, though. If you're up for it and not working anywhere right now, try to schedule yourself a shop a day for a week straight and see how it feels. Or do 1 shop a day on Monday and Tuesday, and 2 a day Wednesday thru Friday. The next week, try out 3 a day and see how you feel. Feel it out and remember not t take every single job and not to travel more than you're getting back out of a shop. IRS tax deduction is around $0.51 a mile but I try to make sure when I take a shop or a route of them, it's averaging out to AT LEAST $0.25 a mile for me. That's my happy number. And, of course, if I'm just bored -- I might do a shop that isn't usually worth the money but I'm off work and antsy. Good luck and get your groove! Keep records!
Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 10/02/2017 04:00PM by MountainCacher88.