A few paid survey sites reviewed do pay relatively well in cash. But
questionable middleman sites hype hypothetical, best-case scenarios that
can't possibly apply to each and every consumer for each and every hour
of participation. In the real world, the likelihood that you'll often
earn the higher of the hyped amounts is slim. Besides the reality that
most online paid surveys simply don't pay much, you must be invited to
complete them. To be invited, you must fit targeted demographics. That alone limits your earnings right off the bat, as you can't possibly fit every demographic.
Subsequently,
despite what questionable middleman sites imply in their "dream job"
hype, it's unlikely that you'll earn a living from paid surveys and
other marketing research. You will, however, likely earn or win some
extra spending money, or free or discounted goods or services.
Most
reviewed paid survey sites effectively promise not to share
personally-identifiable information or not to share it without your
consent. It's an industry standard by which legit marketing research
firms are bound. But many membership sites reviewed don't make either
promise, or do so only in a limited or wishy-washy way. Unauthorized
go-betweens don't have to honor marketing research privacy standards.
So,
by joining a membership site, you might have also rolled out the red
carpet for it or its "marketing partners" to solicit you. Your
personally-identifiable information is worth a small fortune to direct
marketers, especially since the U.S. Federal Trade Commission pushed for
legislation in 2002 to stop unsolicited telemarketing calls. Ask
yourself if a few extra bucks, iffy sweepstakes and other token rewards
are worth the aggravation of dealing with potentially dozens of
pestering privacy invasions that offer nothing for your time.
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