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Getting Started Mystery Shopping
by Melanie Jordan
One of the most common
questions I get from people who are looking to get started in mystery
shopping is "how do I get started?" If you intend to make
mystery shopping a real career rather than just getting "paid to
shop" it's important to get started off on the right foot. Mystery
shopping can either be the road to overworked and underpaid, or if you do
it correctly, it can be quite lucrative for a legitimate, work-at-home,
flexible job.
Unfortunately, the most common error newbie mystery shoppers make is that
they go berserk applying to mystery shopping company web sites left and
right. Signing up with companies is the last thing you want to do
when you are just starting out--unless you want to be a new mystery
shopper with sore fingers saying "I applied to 100 companies but I
didn't hear anything".
Going directly to companies, especially if you don't have any, or have
very little mystery shopping experience, is a waste of time in my opinion.
Most companies are inundated with requests from newbies wanting to become
mystery shoppers; what they want are experienced shoppers they can count
on. Think of a "real world" job search. If you just
apply to companies all over the place without any experience, or knowing
if they even have any job
openings, it's going to be a fruitless effort.
Another big reason why applying to company web sites is a waste of time is
that the largest and best companies outsource their assignments to
schedulers--the middlemen of the industry. So companies don't bother
going through their own databases. The real way to get started in
mystery shopping is to get connected to schedulers in a way that makes you
stand out from the crowd and gets assignments coming to you. Okay,
you ask, how do I get connected to schedulers? I go over the many
ways to do this in great detail, along with lots of other great tips and
techniques in my book "The Perfect Work-At-Home Job: Mystery
Shopping". But
here's one way:
Go to http://mysteryshopcoach.cjb.net.
At the bottom of that page is a link to "Mystery Shoppers
Resource", a great site for mystery shopping leads almost exclusively
posted by schedulers. The webmaster, Julie Moreau, will even e-mail you
each time she updates the page (e-mail to jmoreau1@aol.com,
please mention I referred you). When you see a job posting in your
area, simply follow the instructions and apply. There's a lot more
to being a professional, top-earning mystery shopper than just this, but
it's a way for you to dabble and get a feel for what is possible.
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