This was an interesting interview. I was called and told that I would have an interview with Mr. X (i'm not gonna mention names). I went down to their office in orange and met with this nice lady, who introduced herself, she was not Mr. X. I answered a few questions told her about myself, she told me to come in on Monday to meet Mr. X (same as above). I came back to meet Mr. X , the 'interview' was supposed to start at 9am, but I was called in at 9:45. During this time I filled out a sheet where I waived any rights to income for that day, and it said I was a volunteer.
I then met with Mr. X for like 30 seconds, and was introduced to a guy I was supposed to shadow. Got into this guys car and we went off to some social security office. From what I easily got out of this guy, you spend your time signing up low income people for free cell phones, which include unlimited voice and text. It's part of a program partnering sprint and the government and is for people on medicaid and medicare. It's a pure commission position, in which every person who you get to sign up for service nets you 9 bucks, the goal is to make 500 signups at which point you become the next level where you can build your own team. At which point you get credit for everyone under you, once you have enough people and credit under you, you can become the next level of manager where you get to open up your own business and you make 6 dollars of everything that everyone who is under you makes. This is literally a pyramid. But they claim it's not a pyramid.
After spending a few hours I got called out, and had to go. The guy was like "ok bye". So I asked "your not gonna drive me back to the office?" . To which he replies "you signed a waiver that says your a volunteer". To which I inform him just because someones a volunteer doesn't mean you can drive them out to the field and ditch them. However, he was right, it would't have been totally fair of me to expect him to spend a half hour of his selling time driving me, since apparently he wasn't really being compensated for letting people shadow him beyond the possibility they might join his team and get him promoted. He was a decent enough guy, but the fact that the company promotes driving people out to the field and stranding them there is pretty distasteful.
I would strongly suggest avoiding this place. From what I inferred they base the supposed pay rates off impossible to meet goals, and as you get higher towards supposedly having your own office the goals become increasingly impossible, and then they fire you. Also, this is a pyramid.