Hello,
I just started shopping in Feb. I am amazed at what is out there for work. All of the trails and errors I have experienced to this stage of the process that I am going through, to try my hand at full-time work, has helped me to weed out the crap. I am still trying to keep my shopper email box free of all the bogus things I looked into while getting started. I am reporting a lot of junk that comes to me as spam, but it is finally getting to the point of good shop information being sent to my box. I am finally starting to find my stride. I wouldn't hesitate to give good insight about the do's and don'ts of finding good shops to family members and friends, but you are right, the rest is close to the vest! Even to family members and friends, I couldn't reveal everything. I would want them to want it as much as I do, and do good hard research on their own.
M. Monty
Flash Wrote:
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> Most of us truly respect our Independent
> Contractor Agreements and the Posting Guidelines
> of this forum. If we discuss a particular shop by
> client name, other shoppers doing those shops know
> what we are talking about. If we discuss a
> particular company by name it is generally due to
> company based issues rather than individual shop
> issues. You can't discuss name both in the same
> thread.
>
> As far as real names . . . some think it is a
> great idea to use real names, yet all it takes is
> being mildly critical of one company being unfair
> to get you terminated by them. And indeed some
> companies have gone out of their way to figure out
> who shoppers are anyway to teminate them. What
> come companies consider confidential, others do
> not. I recently heard of one shopper who was
> given a very low score on an otherwise good shop
> because they identified a complaint about a
> problem back to the shopper and declared they had
> broken confidentiality.
>
> As far as who shops what specific regions, it
> would be a foolish shopper who gave up all of
> their personal research of who shops their area.
> There is enough competition in most markets
> already so it is a good business decision to play
> your cards close to your chest. Generically,
> Jobslinger.com can give folks an idea of who is
> shopping their area and if a shopper is
> unable/unwilling to do their homework beyond that,
> why should someone in their 'area' hand them the
> 'answer key' on a silver platter?
>
> While all of us are more than willing to help
> others (and our presence here speaks to that),
> there are limits to how much of our business we
> need to give away. Of course a shopper who is
> unwilling/unable to do their own research and
> finds signing up with lots of companies to see
> what is available to them just a waste of their
> time will not last long in this business anyway.
M. Monty
MSPA Silver Certified.
Undercover Essentials video certified
PV 500 ECO...Will Travel