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Possible £50 for car or home insurance mystery shopping

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Former_MSE_Wendy
Former_MSE_Wendy Posts: 929 Forumite
I've been Money Tipped! Newshound! PPI Party Pooper Chutzpah Haggler
edited 26 October 2009 at 12:16PM in Insurance & life assurance
Updated June 09
What's this all about?

Consumer Intelligence, a consumer research company, recruits shoppers to help carry out insurance market research throughout the year. If your car or home insurance (must be both building and contents) is due to be renewed and you're willing to spend around 1.5 hours taking part in market research you could earn up to £50 for your time.

It's unlikely that everyone who registers will be asked to take part in an insurance survey but you may be contacted about other mystery shopping surveys in the future.


How to register

Go to the recruitment page and click through to the sign up page. Here you need to enter your name, email, details on your car and home insurance and a few questions on your shopping habits. This takes about 1 minute.

Your details will then be screened by Consumer Intelligence, to check when your insurance expires etc., who will send through details of any surveys you can take part in.

You should be contacted within a few days if you’re selected. If you’re not selected you should get an email within a week or so letting you know about other surveys going on. All emails have an unsubscribe option if you no longer want to be contacted.


What you’ll need to do

If you’re asked to take part, you’ll be asked for your opinion about 5 or 6 insurance companies, and will then need to get quotes directly from them in one of two ways depending on which survey you're asked to complete:

Phone: Quotes are usually carried out by phone, and you’re asked to record the calls using a special call recording system so that the way the call centre agent handled the call can be analysed.

Online: If you’re asked to get internet quotes you’ll need to pass on all of the quote references.

The insurance companies tend to be major UK brands but may not be companies that you would normally get a quote from.

Once you’ve got each quote you need to complete a short questionnaire about what happened and at the end you’re asked to fill in a wrap-up questionnaire to see if your initial opinion has changed and what you think the companies could do to improve.

Importantly you do not need to buy insurance from any of the companies you have contacted. You can still renew via a comparison site or by using cashback (though ensure you delete your cookies first, for more info see AboutCookies), if this is what you normally do.


What about people with unusual circumstances?

You can still take part if you have unusual circumstances, such as motability issues, lots of points on your licence etc. This actually gives a good range of results to the survey.


For more info on doing surveys and mystery shopping to make cash see the Boost your income guide.

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Comments

  • Thanks for this MSE Wendy,

    Fingers crossed I'm recruited! ;)
  • raskazz
    raskazz Posts: 2,877 Forumite
    MSE_Wendy wrote: »
    Phone: Quotes are usually carried out by phone, and you’re asked to record the calls using a special call recording system so that the way the call centre agent handled the call can be analysed.

    If it's just pure market research (i.e. the companies involved haven't asked or agreed to participate) I'm surprised that they are asking people to do this. Recording any phone call without informing the other party is legally dubious:

    http://www.ofcom.org.uk/static/archive/oftel/consumer/advice/faqs/prvfaq3.htm

    [FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]"Can I record telephone conversations on my home phone?

    Yes. The relevant law, RIPA, does not prohibit individuals from recording their own communications provided that the recording is for their own use. Recording or monitoring are only prohibited where some of the contents of the communication - which can be a phone conversation or an e-mail - are made available to a third party, ie someone who was neither the caller or sender nor the intended recipient of the original communication. For further information see the Home Office website where RIPA is posted.
    [/FONT]

    [FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]Do I have to let people know that I intend to record their telephone conversations with me?
    [/FONT]
    [FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif] No, provided you are not intending to make the contents of the communication available to a third party. If you are you will need the consent of the person you are recording." [/FONT]
  • Thanks very much, MSE Wendy. :D I'm hoping I'm recruited.
    Take the first step.
    Even if you cannot see the whole staircase,
    Just take the first step.
    ~MLK, Jr~
  • philhuff
    philhuff Posts: 290 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 100 Posts Photogenic
    raskazz wrote: »
    [FONT=Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif]"...[/FONT][FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]Recording or monitoring are only prohibited where some of the contents of the communication - which can be a phone conversation or an e-mail - are made available to a third party ... [/FONT][FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]provided you are not intending to make the contents of the communication available to a third party. If you are you will need the consent of the person you are recording."[/FONT]

    You would probably find that the terms of employment for the agents mean that permission is explicitly provided for calls to be recorded for quality and training purposes, and covers such recordings being made by a contracted third party.
    MSE are supporting our journey from Staples2Naples for SPARKS. Join us.
  • joegw
    joegw Posts: 791 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 500 Posts Combo Breaker I won, I won, I won!
    Good post, thanks Wendy!
    :) Thanks to all who post comps! :)
  • Don't forget if you do any work as a mystery shopper you will have to sign up as self employed with HMRC. :D
    Ex board guide. Signature now changed (if you know, you know).
  • Kaos_2
    Kaos_2 Posts: 521 Forumite
    Don't forget if you do any work as a mystery shopper you will have to sign up as self employed with HMRC. :D
    Are you sure? I used to be a mystery shopper and worked for over 20 different companies and was certainly NEVER self employed. You work for the Market Research companies that carry out the mystery shopping and pay tax accordingly :confused: (Remembering to claim it back at the end of the year if it is your only income as it is highly unlikely to exceed your personal allowance!) :D
    If a post is helpful to you, please take a second to click "thanks", it makes us feel all warm and fuzzy inside! :)
  • raskazz
    raskazz Posts: 2,877 Forumite
    philhuff wrote: »
    You would probably find that the terms of employment for the agents mean that permission is explicitly provided for calls to be recorded for quality and training purposes, and covers such recordings being made by a contracted third party.

    I know, that's why I started the post with "If it's just pure market research (i.e. the companies involved haven't asked or agreed to participate)..." ;)

    I only brought it up because some mystery shoppers were recording calls to a previous employer of mine without the company's consent.
  • Yogibear
    Yogibear Posts: 459 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 100 Posts Photogenic Combo Breaker
    Don't forget if you do any work as a mystery shopper you will have to sign up as self employed with HMRC. :D
    aye ,right:rolleyes:
    please do not pick on me for my grammar,I left school at fifteen and worked in the building trade for 55years ,

    Chalk and slate csc:D
  • lkmc01
    lkmc01 Posts: 967 Forumite
    has anyone else had an email back from them yet. I have, done understand it thou.

    I went though the questions and it said yes you have qualified and someone will be in touch, give us your name and address, so I did. I thought it had finished and I'd qualified,

    but then it said, on a new page would you be interested in Halal car insurance and I ticked no. Then it said sorry you are not applicable.

    So where do I stand?

    do you think I am applicable for the first phone surveys and then it is asking me about a completly different mystetry shopper study?

    :confused:
This discussion has been closed.
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