
The Best Paid Survey Advice You Can Get
I have been doing paid surveys for
the last 24 months
and I've learned a few things about how to get the most from them. This is just some of the things I learned to do before and after joining a paid survey panel and how to qualify for more panels. Enjoy my paid survey advice.
Before joining ANY panels, I suggest you get another e-Mail address. This way, all e-Mailed surveys will have their own e-Mail account, keeping your main account clean (especially if you signed up for a scam site by mistake) and alerting you more easier when you have a survey waiting. You can use Gmail or Hotmail for this.
What type of sites do you want to join? Legit ones. You know a site is NOT legit if it asks for money. Even if it what they are offering is access to a database of free survey sites, you still shouldn't pay for what's already free. Also, look for a the stamp of approval from a respectable 3rd party group.
Now, when you know you've stumbled upon a real deal, see how they compensate you. Sites usually compensate participants one of three ways:
1) Sweepstakes
2) Points
3) Cash/Money
Cash is the one you want. Points are work like carnivals, you need a certain number of points to win a prize. Sweepstakes don't even guarantee you anything; you bet your points and hope fortune smiles upon you.
Now when you start getting surveys, these are a few techniques I use to improve my chance of qualifying and not being dropped mid-way through the survey.
• When you are asked whether you or someone you know works for _______ industry, always mark "None of the Above"
• Never choose the "Prefer not to answer" option. If they ask, they want an answer.
• When asked if you are the primary decider/shopper/etc. say you are (Note: Don't say you are the primary decider about your something if you know nothing about it. They expect you know and will ask questions about it.)
• Don't take too long answering questions
• Provide answers that are consistent with one another
This is I what I do and it has worked out nicely for me, so feel free to use this paid survey advice and I hope it's of use to you.
