@SteveSoCal wrote:
@mysterioso412 wrote:
Maybe stupidly, I’m also taking fewer mystery shopping jobs. I do it after my main job, but, I don’t take any now unless they are very high paying or literally on my way to/from work/other errands
That's not stupid at all. It's utilizing MS in a way that's beneficial to you , and you will get a higher average value for each shop that way.
Anyone losing their job and hoping to replace it with MSing is making the mistake IMHO. The best value of MSing work is augmenting traditional employment, or retirement/disability. It was never meant to be a full-time job and while some can make that work, those who are getting the best value from are not doing it full-time.
A big mistake I made long ago was relying on MS to get me through a period of unemployment, when I doubled down on the shopping. In retrospect, I could have cut back on MSing and invested more time into finding a new job, then recovered quicker.
I agree with this and got into shopping in 2007 after a job loss. I qualified for unemployment but wanted to "do something" besides being home and job searching. I was lucky and found a new job in 2 mths but trying to make a full-time income on MS was a grind back then and still would be today. Now I need the benefits that MS'ing doesn't provide - like health insurance, and with kids, I need a more predictable schedule.