@BarefootBliss wrote:
I wonder if those kind of shoppers even exist anymore..
@BarefootBliss wrote:
for the shopper groomed to take on more sophisticated assignments...I assume (?) it's someone who kept taking on assignments of greater and greater complexity until the MSC felt confident they could whatever kind they needed....maybe there was no networking required?
@MsJudi wrote:
Off topic, but SteveSoCal, are you familiar with the TV show Bull? In my mind I picture Michael Weatherly when I read your posts..sophisticated, but fun. Do you resemble him?
@SteveSoCal wrote:
I think the answer is somewhere in between. A lot of my opportunities came from MSC owners sharing my information with one another, and schedulers as well. But you need to get your foot in the door somehow, so having a track record with one MSC is surely a way to get started. They would probably reach out to you if they had better opportunities.
Many of the more sophisticated jobs require debriefs (I.e. Meeting with hotel/resort managers before leaving the property. These days a lot more happen on Zoom as well). I think just about every MSC I have done a debrief for has met me in one way or another in advance of giving me the assignment. I certainly would not send in someone unknown to do that, no matter how good their scores were.
And I don't think Zoom is enough if you are setting up an in-person meeting with a shopper. What if they have terrible body odor, or halitosis? What if they smell like alcohol in any meeting before noon? I am pretty certain that meeting me in person gave many MSCs the confidence to send me in on high profile assignments.
@BayShopper22 wrote:
My path is similar to Steve's. I also worked as a scheduler and editor at one point. I have met many MSC owners and schedulers in person. Some shoppers are big BS'er online and are not presentable or articulate in person.
I used to do debriefs and meetings with the clients frequently. Lately, I am focused more on my career and less on big shops and accounts.
@BarefootBliss wrote:
When I first got into MSing.....2017ish...there were lots more full time shoppers here...
after a month or more, I threw my hands up, thinking there was no way I could build it beyond my little pile of simple shops.
As far as I could tell then, the people who got the best, most lucrative work, had worked their way up not by doing more shops, but by networking....
They suggested to others, to attend the conferences and seminars....
to get to know the schedulers personally, to develop relationships...to
become friends with the MSC staff.
At the time I already had a full time day job, so I never went that direction...
years later, I still haven't....many reasons.
So I have a question...did you start small - a few jobs here and there and then take on more work as you gained experience?
Did you network in person? Did you go to conferences? did that lead to more or better work for you?
@AZwolfman wrote:
I was a full-time mystery shopper with no other income from my beginning in 2008. Attending an event may had helped me if I had attended within my first year of mystery shopping. I attended 3 "national" events during my next few years after I had done hundreds of shops, but those events did nothing for me. To me, they were just expensive social gatherings that necessitated my taking off work.
I have always had more shops available to me than I have had the time to do them (pandemic era excluded). I like to believe that I have brought that about by being dependable, taking some tough shops, new shops, and out-of-town shops, by making sure my reports read and look as professional as I can make them, embracing technology to save time, and most importantly by building a relationship with my schedulers and shopping companies.
"Take a few hard ones, show them that you are dependable, turn in quality work, and they will give you more of the easy ones." --Me
@SteveSoCal wrote:
@BayShopper22 wrote:
My path is similar to Steve's. I also worked as a scheduler and editor at one point. I have met many MSC owners and schedulers in person. Some shoppers are big BS'er online and are not presentable or articulate in person.
I used to do debriefs and meetings with the clients frequently. Lately, I am focused more on my career and less on big shops and accounts.
And I think we first met in person at a shopper event...right?
Networking!