Make Extra Money: Become a Mystery Shopper
Link Up With Mystery Shopper Web Sites,
But Watch Out For Scams
By TORY JOHNSON
ABC News
Many people have heard of mystery shopping, but not all of us
understand exactly what it's really about.
Mystery shopping is focused on monitoring and improving service
quality to ensure consistency with brand standards using anonymous
resources. A growing trend involves home-based mystery shoppers
who conduct their work by calling (as opposed to visiting) catalog
companies, call centers and others, which accounts for 15 percent
of the industry, according to trade group Mystery Shopping Providers
Association.
With mystery shopping, an individual walks into a retail, grocery
or convenience store, a restaurant, or a gas station to measure
specific behaviors and make certain observations. Among them:
associate greetings, the length of time to be served, the availability
of merchandise, the knowledge of the sales team, and so on.
Many companies request "shops" of their own locations as well
as those of their competitors. It enables them to understand how
their services stack up against the competition both generally
and in specific areas.
One hypothetical example: Mystery shopper assignments might measure
the wait in line at Target versus Wal-Mart. A hypothetical assignment
might also measure how much information a Best Buy sales associate
in electronics knows about a specific digital camera, compared
with the sales associate at Circuit City.
Another option involves merchandising, where you're charged with
helping manufacturers and retailers present their product consistent
with brand standards in a retail environment to generate sales.
You may assemble displays, distribute coupons, sample food, restock
shelves or demonstrate products. The needs and the skill levels
vary; companies post opportunities for people to sample cheese
in grocery stores and they also look for techies to demonstrate
a new video camera during in-store promotional events.
In both cases mystery shopping and merchandising retailers don't
hire shoppers or merchandisers directly; all of this is handled
by a third-party vendor. You accept an assigned task and then
to get paid you must prove that you've completed it, which is
typically done by answering and submitting an online survey about
the experience. You might also be required to take photographs
of your work, specifically for merchandising assignments. It's
all spelled out in advance before you agree to the work.
According to Market Force, a nationwide leader in mystery shopping
and merchandising among top brands, some of the requirements in
the online questionnaire for a mystery shop may include: