Searching on paid survey review you come upon several different sites with reviews of paid survey sites. Are these reviews
real? Do they have useful information? Can they be helpful? The answer is, "Well, it depends." This article explains, "Depends on
what?"
Are Paid Survey Reviews Any Help?
Scouting around trying to find a good paid survey site, a guide company to help you get started with paid online surveys, you
sometimes come across so-called, "Review Sites". Are these any good? Can they be of any help? Is their information at all useful? How
far can you trust them?
The answers depend on what kind of review site we are talking about.
Are we talking about real paid survey review sites? Or are we talking about bogus
"review" sites, of one of the many types that exist?
Let's enumerate them:
Real:
1. Serious review sites. These will normally be comparing more than 10 paid survey sites, using objective
criteria, measuring performance, making periodic reviews (since companies and conditions change rapidly), offering comparisons, and
periodically coming to different conclusions in their rankings.
These are signs of a serious review site, and yes, this type can be very helpful.
2. Semi-serious, Good ol' Boy sites. These will list 3-6 paiod survey sites that "they have compared" and
found to be good. On that basis, they recommend them, etc. The web page goes up and remains unchanged for months or years. Maybe those paid
survey sites were good at one time, but now?
Still, some of these sites name well-regarded paid survey sites, so they may not be the best but they are not all bad.
This type of site can be of some help, better than nothing, but they are not the best.
Bogus:
3. Sham sites, set up by or sponsored by paid survey sites as a kind of self-promotion. These are
"Paid Survey Review" sites in name only. You can see various of those scattered about.
Look at the sites closely and you will see that they do not look "live". Webpages are old, outdated. Many details
such as privacy policy and contact information are missing or non-existent.
Site has no feel, no depth to it. Comparisons are short on details, sponsor companies always show up in the top three.
There is no discussion about ranking criteria, you are expected to take that on faith.
This type of site is not credible and is of no informational use. (Except maybe to note that the sponsors are not
long on scruples or ethics!)
4. "Straw Man" sales pitches. These generally start off with something like, "We checked out 197 paid survey sites and 97%
of them were scams. There were only three that were any good. But those three are really good and we have their contact information
here"
Reading the text a bit you will note that they often play it fast and loose with the numbers, saying one thing at one time and
something else at another.
This type of site is a sales site, setting up "Straw Men" and then knocking them over to make the product they are trying to sell
look better! What they have to say is self-serving, highly suspect and not at all helpful.
In summary, the full answer is that Paid Survey Review sites can be either very helpful, somewhat helpful
or totally useless, depending on the site. Judge for yourself now that you know what to look for.
Just make a note of the signs as explained above and it will not be very difficult to distinguish which is which.
An earlier version of, "Paid Survey Reviews - Are They Any Help?" is a published article written by Jorge
Chavez. To open a new page to view the article at ezinearticles.com,Click Here.