@LisaSTL wrote:
Are all their upscale restaurant reports really due the same night? I find it odd they wouldn't prefer a shopper submit it the next day after they have come out of their food coma.
@LisaSTL wrote:
What do you mean by "I pushed ACL: and "they notified me?" Have you even contacted them prior to the shop to request a deadline of the following morning or afternoon?
@marg704 wrote:
I just did a fitness shop for $20. The questionnaire was long with lots of narrative. Reporting took too long. Compared to other fitness shops I've done, I would consider it low pay for the amount of work reporting.
Maybe 4? And then a bunch of others showed up at 10. The delay might have been because I dropped some not-as-described phone shops and had to bump back up my rating.@Rousseau wrote:
About how many no-fee shops did you have to invest in before you started to get fees?
@PasswordNotFound wrote:
Maybe 4? And then a bunch of others showed up at 10. The delay might have been because I dropped some not-as-described phone shops and had to bump back up my rating.@Rousseau wrote:
About how many no-fee shops did you have to invest in before you started to get fees?
You're nicer than I am. I finished the one that I already had a lot of time invested into, and then I emailed the scheduler canceling all the others. They were definitely NOT as described. She was unhappy and unpleasant, and she tanked my internal rating (temporarily; it scrolled off). SO not worth it. Why couldn't she just be upfront? Tell me it's a dog of a shop that you're having trouble filling and offer me something in return. Don't pretend it's "easy" and then give me a gotcha email threatening me if I don't complete them. *sigh* It's unfortunate because I wanted one of her other shops, and don't have a chance with it now.@SoCalMama wrote:
OMG I hated those shops with a passion. I sucked it up for a few months and then bowed out.
@Flash wrote:
ACL can do nothing about the reimbursement amount--that is contracted for, as is the amount of tip.
@SteveSoCal wrote:
@Flash wrote:
ACL can do nothing about the reimbursement amount--that is contracted for, as is the amount of tip.
I would counter that ACL certainly can do something about it's contracted reimbursement limits. Don't we always advise shoppers to renegotiate if they don't like the terms of an assignment? Why can't that hold true for MSC's?
Yes, it would involve standing up to their client of behalf of their shoppers and insisting that a bigger reimbursement be offered, which is why I have come to the conclusion that they care more about attracting clients than making reimbursement limits reasonable for shoppers. The fact that shoppers are probably out $$ to perform the shop is a benefit that they SELL to the clients!