@shopperbob wrote:
As with many aspects of life, there is more than one side to the coin.
Side one--From strictly a business standpoint, I would follow Joanna's plan.
Side two--If the aggravation of side one were considerable AND my reputation mattered, I would opt to strike a middle ground that would reward both my contractors and myself. Curinos AKA Inforna, as an example,has a name valued at far more than a few bucks.
Absolutely. Well said.@joanna81 wrote:
A bare minimum fee will usually get you bare minimum work.
Absolutely. Well said.[/quote]@joanna81 wrote:
A bare minimum fee will usually get you bare minimum work.
@sandyf wrote:
Not at all true in my market. I do most of my shops at bare minimum pay and my favorite ones are usually gone before I even get to the website the day they offer them. And I consider my reports to be way above bare minimum. I feel fortunate to be able to even snag some of them at base pay.
@KarenSchedulesForIpsos wrote:
schedulers often have absolutely nothing to do with that unfortunately.
@KarenSchedulesForIpsos wrote:
I understand that shoppers think those things happen or are up to the schedulers, but it really usually isn't. It was the comment about playing games with the schedulers that made me go hmmm
It was really perfectly explained by another poster earlier - joanna81. If the budget to do a project is a certain amount and you KNOW that there are some really remote locations that are not going to be filled at the base pay -- you have to fill as many as you can at the base, so that when you have to pay more for the harder ones - you have money in the budget to help cover it.
As a scheduler if the shops aren't completed I don't get paid - so the MSC isn't going to let me decide what the bonus should be right? Shopper says I can go right now for $100 - and wow I want the shop filled, so I pay it! So typically schedulers aren't given much leeway at all over what bonuses are.
Schedulers (in my experience) aren't playing games at all - we are on your side - we want you to do the shop, we want you to be successful and do many many more shops!
I have worked for 6 MSC's and never found a discretionary scheduler fund yet. It doesn't mean they aren't out there of course - and there is a company I worked for who would say ok for this client - we have $X to spend on bonus. They already had it decided. So in that case I knew what I could spend and that worked - but if I spent less than that, I didn't get any of it at all they kept it for the next round until it was needed. And it wasn't a large amount at all, and I usually did have to use all of it and sometimes go ask for more.
If anyone out there has one of those MSCs with a fund schedulers get to keep if they don't use it - are you looking for schedulers? Let me know![]()
And of course you are right there are many companies out there and i am sure they all do them quite differently.
@ColoKate63 wrote:
Certain video mystery shop companies absolutely had “bonus pots,” pre-pandemic, for their schedulers. And their schedulers absolutely collected leftover money and did very well financially.
Video shopping luxury car brands and clothing is a whole different ballgame than gas stations and storage facilities. There’s a tiny pool of people who can convincingly pull off a 90 minute Porsche sales shop on video, or fit into the clientele in Loro Piana location. The schedulers for those shops had big bonus pools at hand and were careful about dispensing the bonuses.
As a shopper for these types of projects, I was paid a week in advance for my work. I had to pass a background check, have multiple references, interviews, and have a high credit score.
I will be very glad when these type of video shops return.
@BirdyC wrote:
@KarenSchedulesForIpsos wrote:
schedulers often have absolutely nothing to do with that unfortunately.
I think many of us understand that. My particular point is aimed at the powers that be (not that they'll ever see my post!).
But people here have said (and I'm not enough of an insider to know how true, or not, this is) that schedulers get "bonus pots" and *can* give out bonuses but choose not to, or choose to offer $2 or $3 ones--because they get to keep whatever they don't give out. Again, I have no clue as to whether this is correct, but I do think it adds to the perception that schedulers have more flexibility with bonuses than what we might know. Therefore, unfortunately, schedulers often are the targets of dissatisfaction when a bonus is requested and not given, or one is offered at less than asked for. Although one MSC I work for never pays at base; their jobs go on the board with bonuses already attached. That's always nice to see, and I don't know if this is coming out of some "discretionary scheduler fund" or from the MSC bosses.
And maybe this varies by MSC.
@Chix wrote:
Let me ask you this - when getting a quote for WHATEVER - do you always choose the most expensive one at the highest rate? Just asking.
@joanna81 wrote:
I don't like the practice, but if you do the math, you understand the "why".
Let's say they have 1000 shops to schedule and they need to be done in a month.
Week 1: $9 pay. 600 shops get scheduled at $9 each = $5400
Week 2: 400 shops remain. They bump to $11 and another 100 get picked up = $1100
Later in Week 2, the fee goes to $15 and 200 shops get picked up = $3000
Week 3: We are close to deadline! Go to $25. The last remaining 100 at $25 each = $2500.
Grand total for this method is $12,000.
If they start the shops at a middleground number let's say $17, all 1000 shops get picked up at $17 for a cost of $17,000.
If you were a MSC, wwyd?
@Koyote1 wrote:
I find if you take the lower, you get locked into a recurring month after month. If you hold out, there's a good chance you are one and done. In the long run taking lower is better. Plus more are offered before posting.
That's what I did with prepaid cards. I started with 3 shops, now my route is 20. Plus they kick up a few bucks on the ones they have to get done