its not free. u have to write detailed & often lengthy report. u are being paid for your time & report. reimbursed is better word than free.@ceasesmith wrote:
I have mentored a few people. Usually I just ask the MSC, as many of them even PAY for referrals -- and no better way to get a referral than to say "I know you enjoy going to the Aquarium. If you signed up with XXX company, you could go for free". And that particular company DOES pay a referral fee!
having password to this forum really doesnt mean anything. its a public forum visited by many scammers among other undesirables.@ShopWhisperer wrote:
There are so many more shops I could do if only I knew who shops them. So many more friends who could be recruited, too. We should be able to tell friends and family we are recruiting who shops whom. I don't see why we couldn't discuss such things in password-protected forums. It's so frustrating!
Is signing up for every last MSC the only way!?
@MSNinja wrote:
having password to this forum really doesnt mean anything. its a public forum visited by many scammers among other undesirables.@ShopWhisperer wrote:
There are so many more shops I could do if only I knew who shops them. So many more friends who could be recruited, too. We should be able to tell friends and family we are recruiting who shops whom. I don't see why we couldn't discuss such things in password-protected forums. It's so frustrating!
Is signing up for every last MSC the only way!?
why is signing up w/many mscs that can increase earning potential such a burden for some. i dont get it. instead of vegging out in front of tv u can have tv on in background while u sign up for more mscs. multitasking.
@Iamme wrote:
If only life could be perfect.
The problem with the theory of wanting to know what local places are shopped? It changes! Companies do contracts, contracts run their course, and someone else picks it up.
@Iamme wrote:
there's the occasional shop - someplace only shopped maybe once a year? Or a big push with one company over a three-month period.
Also, recruiting friends and family to become competition isn't exactly smart. If they live outside a 100 mile radius, maybe, but I've actually shopped on visits to relatives, so maybe not.
@ShopWhisperer wrote:
Having a password blocks bots and spiders like google, so the content is not available by web search. You have to sign up to view the info, and for 99% of the people, that info will be useful.
I assume they don't disclose to protect their clients from being poached, and also to prevent their clients' employees from signing up with the MSC to learn the shop requirements and schedules. Although that's valid, someone who really wants that info will find a way to get it.
Signing up for a zillion MSCs means getting a hundred zillion emails. There are so many companies I've signed up with that I've never worked with. Waste of my time. I don't have a TV to veg out with. I would rather hear that XYZ shops ABC restaurant and just sign up with them. Easy peasy.
@LisaSTL wrote:
It is not a surprise after only a few months you haven't seen a lot of shops yet. Out of the 150 MSCs I've signed with over nine years, at least 60% have resulted in work at one time or another. Many MSCs provide the option to defer giving your SSN until you actually perform shops.
The point of signing with a lot of companies is to have the broadest base of potential shops. Many of us can attest to being registered for several years then being pleasantly surprised when a MSC gets a new client or has a special project. In the early days there are options for targeting companies. Sign up with all of the aggregate job boards to see which MSCs currently have work in your area. With few exceptions, registrations take a couple of minutes so even signing with 100 companies can be done in several hours. Spread out over a month it would be less than an hour a week.
@JASFLALMT wrote:
You forgot one other person that could get blamed: you. You told them to sign up with blah blah blah company and their report got rejected so it's YOUR fault for recommending the MSC (nevermind that they turned the shop in late or missed a guideline requirement).
@ShopWhisperer wrote:
@Iamme wrote:
The problem with the theory of wanting to know what local places are shopped? It changes! Companies do contracts, contracts run their course, and someone else picks it up.
That's actually a big reason why secrecy hurts us. How many times have changes left you out of the loop? Wouldn't it be great to ask who got the client so you can keep shopping?