@PasswordNotFound wrote:
Nice to know about AZ. I'm guessing that they're going to be willing to pay more travel on that then.
To clarify, if the purpose of your trip is for anything other than the shop, it's not deductible FOR THAT SHOP. It doesn't mean you couldn't deduct it for another reason.@Tarantado wrote:
I don't see why traveling to a work-related conference would be an "iffy" business expense if the sole-purpose of the conference would be to furnish your skills, increase your network and better your relationships with schedulers all with the intent of advancing your mystery shopping business.
@elizhd wrote:
The method listed is N, NN, :NN, N:NN, NN:NN, N:NN:NN. Does anyone know what this means?
@SteveSoCal wrote:
As far as not seeing assignments, it's my understanding that with Shopmetrics it will disappear once it been completed by another shopper, or removed from the system. I can't say for sure what happened to the assignments, but I believe all shoppers can see all assignments that are available.
@SteveSoCal wrote:
As far as not seeing assignments, it's my understanding that with Shopmetrics it will disappear once it been completed by another shopper, or removed from the system. I can't say for sure what happened to the assignments, but I believe all shoppers can see all assignments that are available.
@Professional Guest wrote:
Q1: In your experience, what percentage of assignments are "removed from the system"?
Q2: What are some reasons why an assignment would be removed?
@SteveSoCal wrote:
@LisaSTL wrote:
Really Steve? So full time shoppers are poor dolts who could never in their entire life frequent an upscale establishment, freak out if payment is a few days late and can't ask about or order wine?
That's not what I wrote, Lisa. You are bending my words to fit your argument.
There are plenty of examples on this forum of shoppers claiming that Coyle does not pay well, plenty of examples of shoppers being upset about payments being a few days behind for all companies and also plenty of people concerned about having a large charge on their credit cards. That's not all shoppers, but it is a good number of them.
I have also helped to answer questions many times from shoppers here who booked a fine dining job and were concerned about ordering wine. I'm just saying that non FT shoppers are often a better fit.
I am here giving advice to anyone who wants to get a foot in the door. I'm doing what I can to change the stereotype of full-time shoppers, but that stereotype exists for a reason. I have trained hundreds of shoppers over the phone and met dozens of them, and edited thousands of reports from them. My opinion is based on that experience.
(edit for typo)
@helpmehelpyou wrote:
Q: is it possible that your estimation and opinion gave them the "push" needed to pay even less?
That wasn't the question.@bgriffin wrote:
The IRS does not make a distinction on if it is deductible for a particular shop or not. It is strictly either deductible or not deductible.
@ShopperFun99 wrote:
Q: Did Coyle lose the fine dining clients in Las Vegas? There used to be quite a few posted every month?
@luckygirl0100 wrote:
Q: How many days should I make sure I'm available to answer questions after a report is submitted?
@LindaM wrote:
Q: Do you write out "ten" or use "10" in the narrative?