Flash, you've summed it up well. Why the sniping?
Brak - what is triple platinum? Are you just being facetious?
Flash Wrote:
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> The preferences we each have as shoppers seem to
> inevitably lead to the taunting of shoppers who
> perform shops the taunters find somehow ‘beneath
> their dignity’ or ‘pay peanuts’. I have a good
> shopper friend who performs shops I would not
> touch with the proverbial 10’ pole. Why? Because
> they work for her and are incorporated into routes
> she runs. Why don’t I? Because they do not exist
> along those routes I run these days. Yet I do $3
> shops that are convenient for me, and that is less
> than she gets for her ‘peanuts’ shops. I am
> willing to spend an hour writing up a $50 dinner
> shop for which I receive no fee. Some shoppers
> feel that if they are paid no fee the shop is not
> worth it and are angry at the company that has
> the’nerve’ to not pay a fee.
>
> For a new shopper there is validity in working
> with the lower paying companies to get started.
> First, those shops put very little of the
> shopper’s time or resources at risk. Those
> companies tend to pay more quickly than other
> companies so a new shopper doesn’t get discouraged
> waiting 3 months for their first payment. Those
> companies also tend to offer more complete
> instructions. Those who have shopped a while get
> annoyed with reading and getting tested on ‘simple
> and self evident’ instructions, but for those who
> are new to the business those same instructions
> give a clear idea of what is expected of them. We
> speak of ‘rookie mistakes’ such as forgetting to
> get the receipt (or losing it), forgetting to
> check the restroom, not getting a name or
> description, etc. We all were rookies once and
> aren’t we glad that we didn’t get that $50 dinner
> shop rejected because we lost the receipt or
> forgot to ask for the itemized one.
>
> But once a new shopper is ready to move on to
> better paying work, there is no reason that they
> need to stop doing the lower paying quick shops if
> they work for them. Sure, knowing that if nobody
> takes them the prices are likely to go up is an
> important piece of knowledge. I don’t think I
> ever heard about bonuses on shops until I had
> performed 50-60 shops. In my market the low
> paying shops work for somebody at lower bonus
> amounts than they work for me. That is fine. For
> all I know they live next door to the location or
> drive by it on a daily basis to pick up the kids
> from school. It is none of my business. My
> business is to do the jobs that work for me, when
> they work for me and with companies I am
> comfortable working with. But even the low paying
> companies sometimes come up with sweet jewel jobs.
> My $3 shops company came through last year with a
> $100 sweetheart deal. I’m seeing some $30 jobs
> on their board that are too far to be worth it to
> me, but I will jump on them with both feet when
> they are close enough to justify the drive time.
> Some very time consuming $7.50 shops I do are with
> a company that came up with jobs that paid $70 for
> two hours of my time last year.
>
> So why the sniping? Are we about to suggest
> another one of those ridiculous boycotts of low
> paying companies? Those come and go about once a
> year it seems because shoppers don’t realize just
> how few shoppers read forums, much less follow the
> suggestions of others. Not taking jobs you are
> comfortable with performing is only doing yourself
> harm. The only work I would suggest shoppers
> avoid is work for companies that are not paying as
> per their contract for accepted work.
>
> So work with the companies that work for you and
> don't work for those that don't and realize that
> each of us is in a different location with
> different opportunities and goals.