Brand Ambassador (Street Marketing) - Manhattan, NY ($69 / 3hrs)
Oppizi
About the role
Brand Ambassador (Street Marketing) – Manhattan, NY
$23/hr (3 hrs per shift) + Bonus | Flexible Shifts | Immediate Start
Looking for a flexible, high-energy role where you can earn great pay, stay active, and be part of fast-growing campaigns across Manhattan.
At Oppizi, we’re scaling rapidly to support one of our key partners and we’re hiring motivated Brand Ambassadors to join us on the ground.
🕒 Flexibility
- Each shift is 3 hours
- You control your schedule: Choose up to 3 shifts per day (Morning, Lunch and Evening).
💼 What You’ll Do
As a Brand Ambassador, you’ll be the face of top food delivery and lifestyle brands, engaging directly with the public and driving real results.
- Distribute flyers in high-traffic areas.
- Engage with potential customers and explain offers.
- Drive conversions and track performance.
- Represent exciting brands in a professional, energetic way.
Requirements
👀 Who We’re Looking For
We’re prioritizing candidates who can hit the ground running in a fast-paced NYC environment:
- Reliable, punctual, and professional.
- Available for multiple shifts per week.
- Must have a smartphone with data.
*Previous experience in street marketing, events, or sales is highly preferred.
Benefits
💰 Compensation
- $23 per hour (guaranteed).
- Performance-based bonuses (earn more based on results).
- Bi-weekly payments.
- Flexible scheduling — you choose your shifts
👉 Apply Now
It takes less than a minute:
- Go to: https://www.oppizi.com/brand-ambassadors
- Click “Join Us” and submit your details
Learn more:
https://oppizi.com/us/en/brand-ambassadors/
759,000+ hidden jobs like this
Oppizi and thousands of companies post here first — often days before LinkedIn or Indeed. Your first 5 applications are free; go Pro to apply without limits.
Everything Pro unlocks:
- Unlimited applications — free stops at 5
- Track every application in one place
- Apply straight to the source, one click
- Save & organize roles you love
- Roles pulled from company boards before the big sites