When do I get paid? grinning smiley

Ok. I've been doing mystery shopping for a few weeks. I've been paid by 1 MSP already. I read all the agreements the first time when I signed them, and I understand that I won't be paid for most of these jobs for a time around 6-8 weeks.

That's fine, I'm not planning on seeing much money from this until around the new year. But what I didn't think to do was mark down when I do a job what that particular MSP's pay schedule is. I have a spreadsheet that I'm using to track all of my gigs; actually, it's a spreadsheet that I downloaded from a thread on this page. But I'm signed up with so many MSPs now that I can't possibly remember which ones pay on which schedule.

Is that something you guys do? How do you know when you should be paid? I definitely want to figure out some way of tracking all this so I know if payment is overdue BUT I don't want to spend a ton of time on it unless i actually have problems getting paid.

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The first thread under the Mystery Shopping Companies section is about pay dates. Check it out. I don't keep up with when each invoice is due. I understand many shoppers do and they mark each job paid on the spreadsheet. I don't do that. I have a job folder on each job and I keep it in an open file until it's paid. Then I send it to storage. I know roughly when everybody pays, but you can't depend on a certain date with most of these companies. Just know about when they pay you and realize it can vary a bit. I have been doing this since December 2009 and I haven't been stiffed yet but I believe there were three jobs that were overlooked for payment until I called it to someone's attention. So, yes, they do a really good job but you still need to keep up.

Mary Davis Nowell. Based close to Fort Worth. Shopping Interstate 20 east and west, Interstate 35 north and south.
In my spreadsheet I create a page for each month. When I am paid for a job I note it and highlight the row in blue. When a page is all blue, I move it to the back of the 'stack' so that the currently open months are the tabs closest to the left. When there is a 'straggler' keeping a month from closing out, it is time to take a look at it. I know from experience that Service Sleuth is the slowest to pay company I ever work for, followed by Service with Style. I don't worry with them much because eventually they will pay. If some other company has not paid, it is time to do some checking. I have one shop left unpaid from September that I have inquiry in on. October has 'the usual suspects' not having paid yet, but they should be within the next week or two.

What I am saying is that most companies do a darn good job of paying within a reasonable period. Rarely do I have a shop that is not paid 'in a timely manner'. So it is far easier to go investigate a straggler than do the research for each shop as I go.

There are a couple of companies who claim to have sent payment that the payment does not arrive 50% or more of the time so I have to chase payments. I just stop working for companies that make me jump through hoops to get paid. One goof on their part in 5 years is acceptable, one every 3-4 months is absolutely not.
I just mark it on my spreadsheet when they pay me--the date and what form of payment. If a company is all alone as unpaid in their section of the spreadsheet, I take a closer look. Last time I did that, it turned out I hadn't sent in a required w-9, so it's definitely worth keeping tabs.

We are all here on earth to help others....What on earth the others are here for I don't know.

--W. H. Auden
I take a more hands on approach than most of the responses so far: When I add a job to my spreadsheet, I put the expected pay date and the payment method. I have 3 sheets in my exel workbook to track jobs: "To Do", "Payment Pending" and "Paid". When a job is paid I replace the expected payment date with the actual payment date, and cut the whole row out of "Payment Pending" sheet and insert it into the "Paid" sheet.
If I want to know how long a company usually takes to pay, I just check my "Paid" sheet and sort by that MSC name. I mostly know when and how the companies I work with all the time pay, so that's easy to fill in. But if it's a new (to me) company, I'll look at the thread that Mary referenced above and put in an expected payment date based on that sheet if I can't find the payment terms easily on the MSC's site.
My spreadsheet is very in depth: I have formulas to calculate the fees I've earned this year (and earned but not been paid yet, and haven't earned but have scheduled, etc.). I also track mileage on this sheet, so I have formulas that take into account the mileage deduction for each job so that I can see what my approximate net income for the year is (I don't bother adding in other expenses besides mileage since I don't have many, but if I want to add it in the future, it could be easily done... I do track those expenses on... you guessed it! Another sheet on the spreadsheet). The mileage calculations are good because I can enter the job info including payment amount and mileage to get a ballpark idea of what my net would be before I take a job if I want.
Everyone's got their own method, but I like being able to look and see "Oh, I've got about $200 that should hit Paypal this week, cool" (By sorting the "Payment Pending" Sheet in ascending order by expected payment date). But I guarantee that there are some people who would find my method insane, and I'd be just as unhappy with their's. Good luck!

Shopper in California's Bay Area
I keep meaning to add a mileage column to my spreadsheet, and not doing it. Think I'll do it right this second, thanks for the reminder @CaliGirl925.

We are all here on earth to help others....What on earth the others are here for I don't know.

--W. H. Auden
Spreadsheets are second nature to me so Ive been thinking of tweaking the one I'm using. I got it from a thread on this forum the newbie section. I just don't know if i want to do the work of backfilling all the expected payment dates.
I would not do the backfilling at all. If it is something you want to track, as you set up your sheet for 2016 you can add a column to do that. Since you are comfortable with spreadsheets you may want to make a workbook out of it with a page for each month, a recap page to accumulate year to date totals, a page for who shops whom, a page for shop expenses (purchases made for your business, like equipment or office supplies), etc. etc. I also have added a column to give jobs my own job number, which if I have resorted my sheet by company, for example, allows me to re-sort by my job number and have the shops back in the sequence completed (which is when I give them their job number).
@CaliGirl925 wrote:

I take a more hands on approach than most of the responses so far: When I add a job to my spreadsheet, I put the expected pay date and the payment method....
...Everyone's got their own method, but I like being able to look and see "Oh, I've got about $200 that should hit Paypal this week, cool" (By sorting the "Payment Pending" Sheet in ascending order by expected payment date). But I guarantee that there are some people who would find my method insane, and I'd be just as unhappy with their's. Good luck!

We share a similar insanity, CaliGirl925. I have an expected paid column and I also have a "days open" column that automatically calculates once payment is received. I like to see at a glance how much I can expect in and when.

@CeciliaM, I've only been MSing for three months now. I have a master list spreadsheet with the MSC, my username, pw, payment method (Paypal, direct deposit, etc.) and approximate pay schedule per the ICA.

I used to see a life coach pretty regularly.... back when they were called bartenders.
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