To quote Alfred, Lord Tennyson, from
Charge of the Light Brigade, "Theirs not to reason why, theirs but to do and die." And I say that just a bit tongue in cheek. I really didn't think anything of it at the time. I was looking at earning in excess of $1k in a three day period. As I said, I named what it would take for me to do the job and, sometime over a day later, I had the assignment. I have a handful of friends who know what I do and we joke that I'm a prostitute. Well, it's kind of true. Meet my price and I'll do what you want. If you're old enough, you'll remember the Wendy's "Where's the beef?" commercials. For me, especially on long routes, it's "Where's the money?"
Now, enough of the flippancy. I really didn't give it any thought when the request was made. Reflecting upon it, I see several possible reasons. In no particular order:
1- They didn't want the bank managers to be able to compare notes and see that the same person had shopped all the locations.
2- Whoever they asked at the client okayed the assignment without getting approval from their superior. As LisaSTL said, it is possible the client doesn't realize how limited the shopper pool may actually be. This particular route covered about 750 miles and the largest town I was in had a population of maybe 5,000.
3- I don't believe this was done without informing someone at the client's location. I say this for three reasons. First, it took over 24 hours for me to get a reply. If the MSC was going to do it without the permission of the client, I would have had an answer in a matter of hours. Second, I could see a MSC doing it one time if the client wasn't informed, but as I have been asked to do it again [several times], I feel confident that at least someone at the client knows that there is a limited supply of shoppers. Additionally, this is a fairly small MSC; I would almost consider them a boutique MSC. From a business point of view, I can't see them wanting to risk losing any client. Also, I have started to see some bonuses showing up on this particular job. Perhaps it might have educated the client that the shopper pool isn't as vast as they might have thought.
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Have PV-500 & willing to travel.
"Answers are easy. It's asking the right questions which is hard." (The Fourth Doctor, The Face of Evil, 1977)
"Somedays you're the pigeon, somedays you're the statue.” J. Andrew Taylor
"I have never met a man so ignorant that I couldn't learn something from him." Galileo Galilei