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@shopperbob wrote:
Many years ago, I was assigned a Kroger store built in the late 50s. The planners did not include public rest rooms; usage required passing through the employees back room. On the bulletin board, I read a shopper's description, but it was not of me.
Liked by: whatwhatdb
@lpd8112525 wrote:
Hello,
One recent company I worked for is refusing payment because the client reported that the staff member at the store could identify me as a mystery shop. I did not complete the survey in the store.
The mandatory script and questions on the guidelines do look suspicious. It also asks you to do a follow-up call to the same location after your visit asking for directions, which also looks suspicious, especially if the staff member answering the phone recognizes your voice from a visit earlier that day.
I never went out of protocol, but the script and questions set me up for failure and now they are siding with the client.
Has anyone ever encountered a similar issue? I just feel very hurt and upset because I was completely compliant.
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Liked by: amyann2, Morledzep, pegleg2000, sestrahelena, Isaiah4031a, olympia tennenbaum, BirdyC, KathyG, Luna126
Liked by: Morledzep, sestrahelena, olympia tennenbaum, BirdyC, GinnyLynn, Amarsir, Luna126
@lpd8112525 wrote:
Hello,
One recent company I worked for is refusing payment because the client reported that the staff member at the store could identify me as a mystery shop. I did not complete the survey in the store.
The mandatory script and questions on the guidelines do look suspicious. It also asks you to do a follow-up call to the same location after your visit asking for directions, which also looks suspicious, especially if the staff member answering the phone recognizes your voice from a visit earlier that day.
I never went out of protocol, but the script and questions set me up for failure and now they are siding with the client.
Has anyone ever encountered a similar issue? I just feel very hurt and upset because I was completely compliant.
@olympia tennenbaum wrote:
@lpd8112525 wrote:
Hello,
One recent company I worked for is refusing payment because the client reported that the staff member at the store could identify me as a mystery shop. I did not complete the survey in the store.
The mandatory script and questions on the guidelines do look suspicious. It also asks you to do a follow-up call to the same location after your visit asking for directions, which also looks suspicious, especially if the staff member answering the phone recognizes your voice from a visit earlier that day.
I never went out of protocol, but the script and questions set me up for failure and now they are siding with the client.
Has anyone ever encountered a similar issue? I just feel very hurt and upset because I was completely compliant.
I feel like I would press on that comment and ask how they identified you. Some of the requirements of shops must absolutely be a tip off. I was recently required to ask one of a few different silly questions. After I asked if the hummus was vegan I noticed that the whole place was being cleaned from top to bottom.
What I don't get is that if I'm an employee and I'm able to identify a mystery shopper, why would I want to let that be known? I'd prefer to ID them and do an amazing job any time I see them.
@luckygirl0100 wrote:
@olympia tennenbaum wrote:
@lpd8112525 wrote:
Hello,
One recent company I worked for is refusing payment because the client reported that the staff member at the store could identify me as a mystery shop. I did not complete the survey in the store.
The mandatory script and questions on the guidelines do look suspicious. It also asks you to do a follow-up call to the same location after your visit asking for directions, which also looks suspicious, especially if the staff member answering the phone recognizes your voice from a visit earlier that day.
I never went out of protocol, but the script and questions set me up for failure and now they are siding with the client.
Has anyone ever encountered a similar issue? I just feel very hurt and upset because I was completely compliant.
I feel like I would press on that comment and ask how they identified you. Some of the requirements of shops must absolutely be a tip off. I was recently required to ask one of a few different silly questions. After I asked if the hummus was vegan I noticed that the whole place was being cleaned from top to bottom.
What I don't get is that if I'm an employee and I'm able to identify a mystery shopper, why would I want to let that be known? I'd prefer to ID them and do an amazing job any time I see them.
For medical reasons I went on the auto immune protocol diet in late December. I ask if things are vegan all the time because it knocks off about 75% of the ingredients I can't eat anymore. And since I'm still new to the diet, I haven’t learned which brands add crap to what should be a simple/ not very many ingredient list in a food.
[/quote]@sandyf wrote:
Speaking of not silly questions, I would definitely not qualify the hummus question as silly at all. There are many additives companies add to extend their line to a variety of the same product. I have seen all sorts of additives in hummus. My grocery store has at least ten flavors of hummus. A vegan or even more often a non vegan shopping for a vegan friend or guest might easily ask that question.
This and other questions do not seem silly. What is silly is the same question every round esp in smaller markets where the same person shops the same store over and over with the same employees to ask.
@lpd8112525 wrote:
Hello,
One recent company I worked for is refusing payment because the client reported that the staff member at the store could identify me as a mystery shop. I did not complete the survey in the store.
The mandatory script and questions on the guidelines do look suspicious. It also asks you to do a follow-up call to the same location after your visit asking for directions, which also looks suspicious, especially if the staff member answering the phone recognizes your voice from a visit earlier that day.
I never went out of protocol, but the script and questions set me up for failure and now they are siding with the client.
Has anyone ever encountered a similar issue? I just feel very hurt and upset because I was completely compliant.
I feel like I would press on that comment and ask how they identified you. Some of the requirements of shops must absolutely be a tip off. I was recently required to ask one of a few different silly questions. After I asked if the hummus was vegan I noticed that the whole place was being cleaned from top to bottom.
What I don't get is that if I'm an employee and I'm able to identify a mystery shopper, why would I want to let that be known? I'd prefer to ID them and do an amazing job any time I see them.
@olympia tennenbaum wrote:
@sandyf wrote:
Speaking of not silly questions, I would definitely not qualify the hummus question as silly at all. There are many additives companies add to extend their line to a variety of the same product. I have seen all sorts of additives in hummus. My grocery store has at least ten flavors of hummus. A vegan or even more often a non vegan shopping for a vegan friend or guest might easily ask that question.
This and other questions do not seem silly. What is silly is the same question every round esp in smaller markets where the same person shops the same store over and over with the same employees to ask.
For context, I had to order a meat item for dine in and then ask that. I clearly am not vegan then. It seemed like a big tip off because the employees all tore around cleaning like crazy after that. In the context of that shop and those requirements, it really felt as if it tipped me off as a shopper.
If this comes up again you can just say you are going to a pot luck for a Vegan friend so you have to bring something or that one of your dinner guests will be vegan. Vegans are allowed to eat at the table if meat is being served to others. And you are allowed to make two different entrees for dinner. I do it all the time.
Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 03/17/2023 06:03PM by sandyf.
Liked by: BusyBeeBuzzBuzzBuzz, Amarsir
@sandyf wrote:
@olympia tennenbaum wrote:
@sandyf wrote:
Speaking of not silly questions, I would definitely not qualify the hummus question as silly at all. There are many additives companies add to extend their line to a variety of the same product. I have seen all sorts of additives in hummus. My grocery store has at least ten flavors of hummus. A vegan or even more often a non vegan shopping for a vegan friend or guest might easily ask that question.
This and other questions do not seem silly. What is silly is the same question every round esp in smaller markets where the same person shops the same store over and over with the same employees to ask.
For context, I had to order a meat item for dine in and then ask that. I clearly am not vegan then. It seemed like a big tip off because the employees all tore around cleaning like crazy after that. In the context of that shop and those requirements, it really felt as if it tipped me off as a shopper.
If this comes up again you can just say you are going to a pot luck for a Vegan friend so you have to bring something or that one of your dinner guests will be vegan. Vegans are allowed to eat at the table if meat is being served to others. And you are allowed to make two different entrees for dinner. I do it all the time.
It was a dine in shop. Nothing ordered to go.
@olympia tennenbaum wrote:
@sandyf wrote:
@olympia tennenbaum wrote:
@sandyf wrote:
Speaking of not silly questions, I would definitely not qualify the hummus question as silly at all. There are many additives companies add to extend their line to a variety of the same product. I have seen all sorts of additives in hummus. My grocery store has at least ten flavors of hummus. A vegan or even more often a non vegan shopping for a vegan friend or guest might easily ask that question.
This and other questions do not seem silly. What is silly is the same question every round esp in smaller markets where the same person shops the same store over and over with the same employees to ask.
For context, I had to order a meat item for dine in and then ask that. I clearly am not vegan then. It seemed like a big tip off because the employees all tore around cleaning like crazy after that. In the context of that shop and those requirements, it really felt as if it tipped me off as a shopper.
If this comes up again you can just say you are going to a pot luck for a Vegan friend so you have to bring something or that one of your dinner guests will be vegan. Vegans are allowed to eat at the table if meat is being served to others. And you are allowed to make two different entrees for dinner. I do it all the time.
It was a dine in shop. Nothing ordered to go.