Working at Home As A Chat Agent For The Chat Shop

The Chat Shop is a company that hires home chat agents to do a wide variety of jobs, including everything from customer support to sales.

The company represents a large number of corporations from a diverse set of industries. They are based out of the UK, but they hire in the US as well (currently only accepting applicants in FL, GA, TN, & TX).

Working for The Chat Shop

The Chat Shop expects their agents to work with more than one client at a time, and often you may even have to juggle multiple conversations at once.

One example given on the website was helping a customer deal with a technical problem involving an online Video on Demand service, while simultaneously helping another customer decide what sort of vacation to go on.

Because of these unique work conditions, they expect their chat agents to be flexible people, technically savvy, and quick to adapt. Obviously, you’ll also need a certain talent for multitasking.

They stressed that each work situation—day by day, and moment by moment—is totally different than the last.

Every chat will have its own unique issues for you to deal with, so there’s very little repetition. You won’t be able to fall into a comfortable pattern and go on autopilot while doing this job. You need to stay alert, and always be ready to change gears.

Chat Shop Pay Rate

Chat agents start out at $10 hourly.

Scheduling with The Chat Shop

The information on scheduling from their website is a bit vague. From what I can gather there is a degree of work flexibility, but you have to commit to 35 or 40 hours a week. You can get time off if you need to, but you have to let them know in advance.

One report I found was from a US worker who mentioned having to adjust to UK hours, so it’s possible that most of their client companies are UK based, which would be an important consideration if you have an issue with working unusual hours.

Requirements to Apply

The exact requirements mentioned on their website are as follows:

  • Native-level English with outstanding sentence structure, spelling and grammar
  • High levels of organization and attention to detail
  • Strong ability to multi-task and stay focused in high-pressure situations
  • Meticulous learner and inquisitive mind
  • Upbeat and positive personality
  • Typing speed of 80+ WPM, error free
  • Able to work 35-40 hours each week

Of the above, the typing speed requirement is probably the most concrete and specific. They have a link to a test on their sign-up page where you can check your typing speed and see if you measure up.

Technical Requirements

There is no mention of any special equipment needed for the job. Obviously you’ll require a computer with internet access, but it’s doubtful that their chat interface is particularly resource intensive, so any average computer may well do the job.

Application Process

The sign-up is actually quite simple. You just send them your CV and an email with answers to four simple “fill in the blank” questions.

The questions focus on your personality, your attitude, and the way you view the job. They aren’t technical questions, and they aren’t the sort of questions you can study for.

Feedback

I found that the feedback on The Chat Shop from Glassdoor.com was mostly quite positive.

Many people went out of their way to praise the staff, who are apparently easy to work with and helpful.

There were also quite a few people who mentioned a potential for advancement in the company if you do the job well enough. According to those who gave positive reviews, the work itself is easy enough as long as you’re comfortable multitasking and have decent people skills.

The consensus view seems to be that The Chat Shop is a very solid and reliable work flexibility, and probably worth trying to get if the pay sounds reasonable to you.

There were, however, a few complaints here and there.

One reviewer mentioned that the company can be sloppy in the way they handle their clients, and suggested that these difficulties end up causing problems for chat agents during their day-to-day work.

This person also said that the company is more concerned with quantity than quality, and that they expect the agents to learn too much information in too short a time. You’ll apparently need to be able to act as though you’re an expert on topics that you may have only a basic knowledge of.

Another complaint was that many of the client companies you’ll have to work with have somewhat questionable reputations.

You may have to sell products that aren’t really all that great, and you might occasionally find yourself dealing with angry customers who didn’t get what they thought they were purchasing.

Also, like many other work at home opportunities, you don’t get any work flexibility with this job—no paid time off, or insurance, or any other major perks.

This is, to some extent, par for the course when it comes to work at home jobs. For some it will be a big issue, and for others it won’t.

One point of contention where I found a plethora of both positive and negative comments among reviewers was the quality of the initial training program.

One of the most frequent complaints among those who gave poor reviews was that the training was inadequate, and left workers without the required skills to navigate difficult chat situations.

But there were just as many who actually went out of their way to praise the training. So it’s hard to say which view is the correct one. Maybe it depends on what skills you already have from past experience in other jobs.

How to Get Started

If this sounds like an opportunity that could work for you, go HERE, read everything over, and put in your application.

The four questions you’ll need to answer to get the job, and the email address where you have to send your CV are both on the bottom left corner of the page.

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6 thoughts on “Working at Home As A Chat Agent For The Chat Shop”

  1. I applied here, went through the interview process and was offered a job. The training was honestly a joke, I was trained for two days on companies I had never heard of and really didn’t have a lot of preparation time to try to become familiar because I was thrown to chats the second day. One client my supervisor failed to train me on at all, and then questioned me about why I wasn’t “up to par” on that client. I was then told that I was being moved to another team to handle “beauty clients” which I thought may be better considering I am a female who uses those types of products. Three days before the move to that team, I received a direct message from my supervisor and the supervisor in training that they wanted to meet with me via join.me. I was told I was being let go because I just wasn’t performing the way I should have been. I let them know my thoughts regarding the training (lack thereof) and the incredible inconsistencies that seemed to occur every single day. I was contacted by someone in human resources a few days later stating they wanted to offer me my job back; I declined. I have worked a chat job from home before and it was nowhere near the headache this was!

  2. I recently applied to Chat Shop and it proved as much a waste of time as it did a bullet dodged. Their requirements as far as typing goes is kind of ridiculous, but I achieved that. Then spent the night researching their website ahead of my interview the next day. The interview itself dragged on over a half hour, and I had gotten a very important phone call I had been expecting. It was from a health professional, so I told them via chat how sorry I was but I had to take this. After a few moments, the chatter checked in and I told them just a few more moments. She ultimately ended the interview and told me they’d be in contact the next day. Well, the next day came and I didn’t get the job. They ask you if you’re flexible and what that means to you, and having total disregard for someone’s urgent health matters is not my idea of flexibility. As I said, though, it’s a blessing in disguise. They pay once a month via wire transfer, and their pay is a mere $9.50 US. I understand for some that’s better than nothing and even better than minimum wage, but here in Canada, next week it’ll be $2 higher than this position offers. What the job essentially is is sitting in front of your computer waiting for people to browse the website you’re on and then cold calling them. On their own site, I would get pop up boxes of people asking if I have chat integrated into my website. This is not there as a support agent where inquiring minds ask you questions, rather it’s cyber telemarketing. They also expect you to maintain up to 3 separate chats with a 30 second response time, so essentially you’re just sitting there staring at your computer the whole shift waiting for any movement. It’s boorish and deserves both better pay and commission. At that point I was just going through the motions, but when I heard and learned more about it, I realized it’s not worth the pay and if management isn’t able to appreciate the difficulty of getting ahold of people the week of Christmas, then they’d obviously not be flexible in other areas. You can’t ask for flexibility if you’re not flexible yourself.

  3. Hi Anna!

    I really want to extend my appreciation to you for always sending your e-mails about work at home leads. It really helps me a lot. Thank you so much

    Please do not get tired making and sending these e-mails to us.

  4. Hi Anna,
    Thanks for the great review! Just wanted to add my two cents in regarding the interview I had with them earlier this year..The interview was via chat with “Amy”. She asked me a few of the usual interview questions of course. And then came the “mock chat” part which was…Well let’s just say after she wanted to do a 4th mock chat after saying she wanted “more” of my personality to shine through, I told her I was done with the interview. (By this time the chat interview was going on 2+ hours).I told her if I were going to do anymore “mock chats” they would be in a training class! I thanked her for the time and peaced out. Not worth the effort (for me anyway) for a job that offers zero medical benefits benefits and no job stability from a few people I know who have worked there this year..

    Again, just my two cents! Hope this helps someone else.

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