Paid Surveys: A Surprising Way to Relax
Answering paid surveys takes you to another zone
Pro and leisure runners experience “runner’s high,” when after feeling tired of running, the body shifts to producing plenty of endorphins—also known as happy hormones. In this state, runners feel a sense of elation and they feel good over all.
Answering a number of paid surveys in one sitting can emulate the feeling one gets from experiencing runner’s high. Although answering simple surveys requires little effort from you, answering them in bulk—one after another—naturally shifts your brain to focus-mode. Despite the focus, little or no stress at all is physically put upon you because honest answers (which all paid surveys, like Cash Surveys Only, expect from you) always come naturally. The feeling is almost like watching light cartoons, only this time, you’re typing a little.
Some questions are really funny
Weird and funny questions find their way in a lot of paid surveys. While you, as a respondent, may find these questions entertaining, companies that commission the survey use these questions as a way to: a) verify your answer to a previous question by asking the same question differently, b) simply give your mind a break, especially if a survey is particularly long, or c) just make you smile.
More often than not, the questions are arranged in clusters that determine personal information, product knowledge, and category usage and so on. If you are perceptive enough, the more paid surveys you answer, the more you get to know yourself as a consumer. Answering paid surveys becomes just like leafing through magazines that help you become a smarter consumer. Only this time, the input and analysis are entirely yours.
No deadlines, no quotas, and you still earn
And earning well means extra cash. While everyone is stressing about the dismal economy, an increasing number of companies would like to get to know their market better. This means more survey opportunities for you. Just remember to watch where your extra income is going and you’ll be fine.
