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"How to Live Large, and Largely For Free: Jennifer
Voitle's Way"
A Laid-Off Wall-Streeter Eats, Travels And Stays in
Hotels as Part of Work
By ROBERT
FRANK, Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. -- On the breezy patio of the
Local Golf Course here, Jennifer Voitle was hard at
work.
"Cheers," she said, hoisting a frosty Corona with
lime. Tanned and relaxed after playing a few holes,
she finished up the beer and ate a cheeseburger. The
golf and burgers were all part of the job, as were
the strict instructions from her boss to "consume at
least one alcoholic beverage."
Her morning jobs were equally trying. She went dress
shopping, stopped into a bank to cash a check and
visited a Saturn dealership to look at new cars.
After golf, she was headed to Manhattan for dinner
at a nice Italian restaurant. All these activities
were paid jobs. Her total earnings for the day:
about $300. "Can you believe they call this work?"
she said.
Jennifer Voitle has mastered the Freebie Economy. A
former investment-bank employee who was laid off two
years ago, Ms. Voitle has found a new career in the
arcane world of dining deals, gift certificates and
"mystery shopping," where companies pay her to test
their products and services. She gets paid to shop,
eat at restaurants, drink at bars, travel and even
play golf. Last month, she made nearly $7,000 from
her various freebie adventures. By the end of the
year, she could be making more than she did in
investment banking, not counting her steady supply
of handouts.
She gets free gas, free groceries and free clothes.
When her car breaks down, she gets paid to have it
repaired. She can make $75 for test-driving a SUV,
$20 for drinking at a bar and $25 for playing arcade
games (she keeps any winnings). Golfing is her
latest passion, and in addition to playing on
courses around the country free of charge, she gets
free food and drinks and gifts from the pro shop.
Weekend trips to Hawaii and Mexico? "I don't pay for
anything except occasional meals," she says. She
does much of her work on a free hand-held computer.
"My friends tell me I should just get a job," says
Ms. Voitle, who is slim and blond and gives her age
as "somewhere over 30." But, she says, "most
full-time jobs out there don't make economic sense."
Number-Cruncher
Ms. Voitle never planned on becoming a freeloader. A
trained engineer and financial expert, with four
advanced degrees and a gift for numbers theory, Ms.
Voitle worked for years as a number-cruncher for
Detroit's auto factories. Her real dream was to make
it big on Wall Street. In 2000, she got her break
when Lazard LLC, the storied investment bank, hired
her to analyze fixed-income derivatives in the
firm's asset-management business.
Single, with a salary of more than $100,000, Ms.
Voitle bought a house in leafy Baldwin, N.Y.,
complete with a pool and gym. She spent weekends
golfing, traveling or playing with her cats --
Continental and Northwest. In the fall of 2001, she
was laid off. With thousands of other
investment-bank workers losing their jobs, Ms.
Voitle couldn't find any financial work. Last
summer, her unemployment checks ran out and both her
electricity and phone were shut off.
"I woke up one morning and said, "That's it. I have
to start looking for money, wherever I can find it,"
she says.
Trolling the Internet, she discovered an ad for
mystery shopping. "I thought, this looks too good to
be true," she says. Mystery shoppers get paid to
sample a company's service or products and write a
report on their experience. For companies, mystery
shopping is popular way of checking on quality. For
Ms. Voitle, it was a quick source of cash and
freebies.
Her first assignment was a local grocery store,
where she received free groceries and $10 for a
quick report. She worked her way up to gas stations,
clothing stores and restaurants. She quickly
discovered that the best-paying mystery shopping
jobs were for upscale businesses like banks and
high-end car dealers. She earns $75 for test-driving
an upscale SUV, compared with about $30 for a more
common, cheaper car.
Volume is critical. On any given day, she will
mystery shop gas stations, grocery stores, golf
courses, clothing stores, casinos, hotels, insurance
companies and restaurants. She even gets paid to
shop for apartments and interview for jobs. She can
make as much as $50 for applying for a job at a
major company, and reporting back on the performance
of the people who do the hiring. The only catch: If
she's offered a job, she has to turn it down. "For
someone who's unemployed, I get a lot of job
offers," she says.
Not that freeloading is easy. Ms. Voitle spends most
of her day racing around New York in a battered
Mercury minivan, piled high with files and road
maps, empty 7-Eleven cups and nutrition bars. She
says she usually gets home after 11 p.m. and writes
reports on her computer until 1 or 2 in the morning,
starting again the next day at 6:30. Her cellphone
rings constantly. Usually the calls are from
companies that use her as a shopper.
"A golf course in Hawaii?" she says to a recent
caller. "I think I can do that."
Beyond mystery shopping, Ms. Voitle also collects
gift certificates, travel deals, two-for-one coupons
and cross-promotional deals. She does detailed
cost-benefit analyses of most of her deals. She's
always on the lookout for what she calls "freebie
synergies," or combining multiple deals to get more
value. Before she sets out each morning, she plans a
detailed travel route to make sure she hits the
greatest possible number of stores.
On a recent morning in Long Island City, she mystery
shopped a bank and earned a quick $15 for visiting
the teller and trying to cash a check. She spotted a
car dealership across the street and got a $50 gift
certificate to Target for test-driving a car --
another cross-promotion. Pulling out of the car
dealership, she saw a bridal shop and made another
$15 for trying on dresses for half an hour.
Ms. Voitle does have a few real jobs -- but they
also include multiple freebies. She stocks
grocery-store shelves for consumer companies,
getting as much as $13 an hour in salary and $100 a
day in travel expenses, which she can use to
subsidize her mystery shopping. On Sundays, she
sells printers at a computer store, where she can
buy technical books for $1 and sell them on the
Internet for $50. She can write off her cellphone
bills because she provides preparatory phone
interviews for people looking to find work on Wall
Street.
"I couldn't believe there were all these
opportunities out there," says Gordon Stewart, a
friend of Ms. Voitle's who works in finance. "She's
discovered this whole other economy."
So far, Ms. Voitle's ventures haven't attracted any
scrutiny. She follows the general rule of her
employers not to mystery shop more than three of the
same businesses a day and to file detailed reports
on her store visits. She once mystery shopped so
many grocery stores during one period that the
mystery-shopping company put her on grocery
suspension for three months. Ms. Voitle mystery
shops for several concerns, including
mystery-shopping firms ICC Decision Services and
Customer Perspectives LLC.
Judi Hess, president of Customer Perspectives,
Hooksett, N.H., confirms that Ms. Voitle has done
several mystery shops for the company over the past
year and that "we wouldn't keep using her unless she
was a good shopper." A spokesman for ICC Decision
Services declines to comment on Ms. Voitle.
Ms. Voitle says her ultimate goal is to return to
Wall Street or get a job at a large financial
institution. If that fails, she's considering
writing a book or holding seminars on living for
free. "I think it could help a lot of unemployed
people," she says. "But I'm not sure they'd pay for
it.
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