I don't feel the need to make some arbitrary number that is set in stone. I often rate my days pay as opposed to hourly pay. If I am going to leave home I want to make at least $14. That's right here at home in town. Less than 5 miles away. Since I live in a somewhat rural suburb I can't make much here so I like to compile little day routes. If I drive 75 miles and it's on the interstate where I can drive it in an hour or so, and make $75 I consider that worth it. It's fast and easy and I can be home in time to spend the afternoon doing something else. If i put together a route of shops that takes longer, but I still might make only 75. However, due to the nature of the roads and surrounding area, I still consider that worth it because I live in beautiful horse country and driving the rural roads through the horse farms and country side is delightful. I would do it anyway but I wouldn't get to as much because I would be working at something else. So much like S.E.A., I enjoy the traveling through beautiful countryside and consider it a major perk of what I do.
So if there is some perk to it for you, whether its reimbursements to nice restaurants or hotels, being able to basically nix the grocery bill (I do that) , or test driving new cars, then you may not need to focus so much on hourly rates which don't make that much sense for mystery shopping anyway, IMO. I decide how much I want to make in a day and I won't leave home to go to a neighboring town for less than $40, which is often 3-4 quick, cheap shops. That's ultra-cheap but like Cease, if I were working a minimum wage job I would have to work 5 or more hours to make it and I'd be stuck in one place with people I couldn't avoid.
The variety of things I do is yet another perk I like. I do routes of bank shops, routes of gas stations, routes of post offices, and routes of grocery stores and convenience stores. In between the routes I do phone shops and apartment shops. Every day is different for me and I love that.
I don't have a boss and that is yet another perk. A major one, and yet I manage to bring in anywhere from 4-7 hundred extra a month regularly.
What do you consider the perks of mystery shopping?
So if there is some perk to it for you, whether its reimbursements to nice restaurants or hotels, being able to basically nix the grocery bill (I do that) , or test driving new cars, then you may not need to focus so much on hourly rates which don't make that much sense for mystery shopping anyway, IMO. I decide how much I want to make in a day and I won't leave home to go to a neighboring town for less than $40, which is often 3-4 quick, cheap shops. That's ultra-cheap but like Cease, if I were working a minimum wage job I would have to work 5 or more hours to make it and I'd be stuck in one place with people I couldn't avoid.
The variety of things I do is yet another perk I like. I do routes of bank shops, routes of gas stations, routes of post offices, and routes of grocery stores and convenience stores. In between the routes I do phone shops and apartment shops. Every day is different for me and I love that.
I don't have a boss and that is yet another perk. A major one, and yet I manage to bring in anywhere from 4-7 hundred extra a month regularly.
What do you consider the perks of mystery shopping?