Justifying NO answers?

Does anyone have a creative way to justify self-explanatory no answers grinning smiley? I got a follow-up email for a shop and left one no answer unjustified. They asked if they offered the company credit card at any time during the shop, No. So, I put in my standard "no one offered the credit card" line and moved on.

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I think they just want to make sure you really meant no, so I just repeat the comment - as you did in your update.

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Thanks to all the forum members!
If I scroll down the wrong way, sometimes my computer changes my answers, then when I can't submit, I wonder why they think I have "that" answer. Then I see that is really what it says. I have to be careful in getting away from certain sections of the questionnaires.
Because the questions are mainly structured so that a "no" answer means that the sales agent missed a vital "mar,k" requiring an explanation is to make certain that you meant to answer "no." If answering "no" was as easy as saying "yes" a careless (or lazy, or curb-stoning) shopper could cost a target a bonus, a raise, or even the job. The requirement for an explanation is a little insurance for the target.

Based in MD, near DC
Shopping from the Carolinas to New York
Have video cam; will travel

Poor customer service? Don't get mad; get video.
RIMS Wrote:
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> Does anyone have a creative way to justify
> self-explanatory no answers grinning smiley? I got a follow-up
> email for a shop and left one no answer
> unjustified. They asked if they offered the
> company credit card at any time during the shop,
> No. So, I put in my standard "no one offered the
> credit card" line and moved on.


My response is usually, "I was not offered the company credit card at any time during the shop"
Yeah, just repeat and move on.


Also, make sure you double-check your answers as thoroughly as an SAT. I did a USPS shop where I clearly marked that there was nobody in the lobby, but when I turned it in the editor shot me an email to ask what the clerk in the lobby was doing as I hadn't marked anything. I had to explain to her that while I glanced over my answers before submitting, I must have missed that my arrow keys changed a "no" to a "yes." She fixed it and I still got paid, but a more careful look would have saved us both the hassle.
Ok--it just seemed like a self explanatory answer but it sounds like you all do the same. I thought maybe I was missing something about the No answers grinning smiley.
I had a stupid one the other day that I got marked down on because I had to explain it...and it wasn't a no answer, it was a YES! The question was something like, "Did employee ask you why you want to buy item, yes/no" I marked yes then got an e-mail from the proofreader requiring me to elaborate. I did and received one point off for the proofreader having to ask. Given that the report states to justify No answers, not Yes, I was a little ticked, but it doesn't change what I earn so I'm moving on.
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