Anyone With Project Payday? Help?

United States
April 25, 2008 8:37pm CST
I signed up recently. It was during when I had to complete 1 trial offer to become a member which isn't bad. I signed up and a few days later in the trial I cancelled but I am curious about that. In order to make money using Method 1 which is advised for newcomers, you have to sign up for these offers and I already know over half of them I'm not going to want to keep. So is it ok after I complete an offer to wait a few days, maybe like half of the trial offer (if it's 14 day trial, after 7 days cancel and etc)then cancel? It won't hurt my membership? I remember in the video it was explained that if you cancelled right after you sign up it can lead to your account being suspended and such.
1 person likes this
1 response
@reinydawn (11643)
• United States
26 Apr 08
I tried project payday and it really wasn't worth the hassle for me. Yes, you are supposed to only sign up for offers that you truely are interested in and that you might even keep. But, the truth of the matter is, if I could sign up for free or $1 to quit smoking (I don't smoke) then I was doing it and calling in before my trial period was over to cancel. Usually, you want to cancel as close to the end of the trial period as possible - day 12 of 14. And if the last day is a weekend, do it on Thursday. Then you have to be careful because even if you cancel something they sometimes don't really cancel it and you get charged a couple times before you realize it. After a while, all the offers are the same - you can only do an offer one time - and you are out of offers. Then half the time they claim you didn't do something right - like clearing your cookies - and you wont get credit. Or, when you start to pay people to go green for you, they want to get paid as soon as they green, but 3 days later they go red on you. You're stuck. I wasn't pleased with it at all. I wouldn't reccommend it to people - even though some claim they make $1,000/week doing it. I don't even know that I ended up breaking even.