So the U.S. economy has lost 1,250,000 jobs over the past 3 months. Staggering number.
It's not just a number for some folks--it's real life.
May you find some good leads here, and my fingers are crossed for you.
Here are today's leads:
Tech Jobs
Educational Technology Specialist
C# Developer: must be in Eastern time zone
Principal Statistical Programmer
Quality Analyst with QTP
Service Demand Analyst
Mobile Developer
C++ Technical Writer and Help Desk
Reliability Engineer
Senior Training and Development
Software Engineer
Technical Support Help Desk
C# Developer: onsite training in Springfield, IL, telecommuting possible after
Senior Actionscript Developer: 75% telecommuting, located in L.A.
Programmer for PC Casual Game
Principal Architect Pega Rules Process Commander
Data Sharing and Privacy Expert
.NET Web Designer
Electrical Engineer
Pacbase Developer
Web-Based Support
VB.NET: onsite in Austin, TX once per week
SPSS Statistical Programmer
Customer Service Jobs
Customer Service Reps
Bilingual (Spanish and English) Financial Counselor/CSR
Finance Jobs
Cost/Schedule Analyst
Marketing/Management/Sales Jobs
Management Consultant/Analyst
IT Sales and Marketing Rep
Account Manager
National Steel Sales Representative
Employee Benefits Rep
ECM (Documentum) Sales to Life Science Industry: must live on east coast
Sales Representative: must live near NYC
Senior Health information Management Consultant
ITIL Services Field Sales Representative
Licensed P&C Agent
Editorial Jobs
Educational Writer
Medical Writers
Legal Jobs
Patent Prosecution Attorney: half-time telecommute, Reston, VA
In-house Contracts Paralegal
Attorney
Part-time Residential Real Estate Paralegal
Misc Jobs
Graphic Designer
Scams, underpaid assignments, abusive clients, overpriced freelance marketplaces - I've seen them all. Join me as I fumble through how NOT to work at home.
Friday, December 5, 2008
Thursday, December 4, 2008
Telecommuting Job Leads December 4, 2008
I'm reading more and more stories about people being laid off. Thanksfully, Congress passed an extension for unemployment benefits, so hopefully that gives people some (small) comfort.
The first, and only, time I was laid off was in 2002. Because I was laid off within a year of the 9/11 attacks, my unemployment was extended for 52 weeks. It took that long to finally find the right job.
May you find work faster than I did.
And away we go...
Print/Web Designer
Bond Producer
Senior SQL 2005 Reports Developer
Programmer
Lead Oracle Configurator
AutoSys Administrator
Area Sales Manager
Technical Writers
PM/Project Coordinator: near Ewing, NJ
C++ Developer
Post-Sales Solutions Architect
Security IA/Analyst
Sr. .NET Developer
SAP PP (PI) Consultant
VOIP Network Analyst
Senior Java Software Engineer
eLearning Trainer
SAP Senior Consultant
Business Development/Account Manager
Managed Services Operations: third shift
Copy Writer
Lawson Financials Project Manager
Senior Websphere Architect
Integration Technology Specialist
Bilingual Help Desk Analyst, German
Bloggers
Online Media Sales Account Executive
Vocational Field Case Manager
RN Field Case Manager
Outside Sales
Staff Adjuster: Orlando, FL area
Commercial Sales Representative
Medical Coder: 90 days onsite, then work at home
Case Manager
New York State Online Teacher
The first, and only, time I was laid off was in 2002. Because I was laid off within a year of the 9/11 attacks, my unemployment was extended for 52 weeks. It took that long to finally find the right job.
May you find work faster than I did.
And away we go...
Print/Web Designer
Bond Producer
Senior SQL 2005 Reports Developer
Programmer
Lead Oracle Configurator
AutoSys Administrator
Area Sales Manager
Technical Writers
PM/Project Coordinator: near Ewing, NJ
C++ Developer
Post-Sales Solutions Architect
Security IA/Analyst
Sr. .NET Developer
SAP PP (PI) Consultant
VOIP Network Analyst
Senior Java Software Engineer
eLearning Trainer
SAP Senior Consultant
Business Development/Account Manager
Managed Services Operations: third shift
Copy Writer
Lawson Financials Project Manager
Senior Websphere Architect
Integration Technology Specialist
Bilingual Help Desk Analyst, German
Bloggers
Online Media Sales Account Executive
Vocational Field Case Manager
RN Field Case Manager
Outside Sales
Staff Adjuster: Orlando, FL area
Commercial Sales Representative
Medical Coder: 90 days onsite, then work at home
Case Manager
New York State Online Teacher
Wednesday, December 3, 2008
Telecommuting Job Leads December 3, 2008
Happy job hunting!
Lead J2EE Developer: must be local to Clayton, MO
Senior Clinical Quality Analyst
Senior/Principal Biostatistician
Environmental Specialists
.NET Developer: short training in Boston, MA, then telecommute
Quality Analyst with QTP
Service Demand Analyst
Tax Accountant
Client Relationship Manager
Major Account Sales
Electronic Health Record Project Manager
NASCO Benefits Coder
Telephone RN Case Manager: 6 months onsite, then full telecommute
Mobile Programmer J2ME
PHP Developer
Marketing Director
Data Entry: must live near Phoenix, AZ
MMOG Database Developer
Freelance Flash Designer
Senior Web Programmer: occasional onsite work in Vancouver
PHP/ASP Hybrid Developer
Arabic to English Translator
ZEND/PHP/MySQL Developer
Graphic Designer and Web Designer: some meetings onsite in San Diego, CA
Part-time Proposal Writer: some onsite meetings in San Diego, CA
Consultant/Project Manager
Software Developer
Senior Mechanical Design Engineer
Online French Editor/Tutor
Online Spanish Editor/Tutor
Native Spanish Speakers Needed
Sales Rep for Chocolate Company
Recipe Editor, China Site
Sharepoint Interface Designers
Customer Support Help Desk
Lead J2EE Developer: must be local to Clayton, MO
Senior Clinical Quality Analyst
Senior/Principal Biostatistician
Environmental Specialists
.NET Developer: short training in Boston, MA, then telecommute
Quality Analyst with QTP
Service Demand Analyst
Tax Accountant
Client Relationship Manager
Major Account Sales
Electronic Health Record Project Manager
NASCO Benefits Coder
Telephone RN Case Manager: 6 months onsite, then full telecommute
Mobile Programmer J2ME
PHP Developer
Marketing Director
Data Entry: must live near Phoenix, AZ
MMOG Database Developer
Freelance Flash Designer
Senior Web Programmer: occasional onsite work in Vancouver
PHP/ASP Hybrid Developer
Arabic to English Translator
ZEND/PHP/MySQL Developer
Graphic Designer and Web Designer: some meetings onsite in San Diego, CA
Part-time Proposal Writer: some onsite meetings in San Diego, CA
Consultant/Project Manager
Software Developer
Senior Mechanical Design Engineer
Online French Editor/Tutor
Online Spanish Editor/Tutor
Native Spanish Speakers Needed
Sales Rep for Chocolate Company
Recipe Editor, China Site
Sharepoint Interface Designers
Customer Support Help Desk
Tuesday, December 2, 2008
Telecommuting Job Leads December 2, 2008
One thing to keep in mind with these leads: I don't post "commission only" jobs. there a LOTS of them out there, so if you're looking for commission-only sales jobs, you won't find them here.
I will post "base + commission" jobs, however.
Happy job hunting--here we go with leads--there's even one for a PROFESSIONAL KNITTER in there!
Network System Administrator
Bookkeeper
Joomla Web Programmer
.NET Developers
Wordpress Content Poster
PR Representative
Passionate Bloggers Wanted
Administrative Human Resources Coordinator
Account Executive
Senior Developer
Sales and Marketing Associate
Marketing Manager
Flash Motion Graphics Expert
Freelance CGI Coder
Online Content Manager/Producer
OOP Programmer
Public Relations
Online Editor
Office Assistant: partial telecommute, near Stamford, CT
Conference Producer
Website Conversion
Graphic Designer
Moderator and Marketing Associate
Cold Fusion Developers: local to NYC
Grant Writer
Editor/Writer
Blogger on frugal topics
E-Commerce Website and SEO
Market Research Analyst
Online Librarians and Internet Researchers
Professional Knitter Needed: near NYC for meetings
Article Writer
Marketing/Admin Support
PR Assistant for Online Video Game Company: onsite in Orange County, CA at times
Attorney Editor
Finance and/or Economics Editors
Web Consultant/Editor
Quickbooks Bookkeeper: onsite near Philadelphia at times
MES Developer: within Philadelphia area
Immigration Attorney
I will post "base + commission" jobs, however.
Happy job hunting--here we go with leads--there's even one for a PROFESSIONAL KNITTER in there!
Network System Administrator
Bookkeeper
Joomla Web Programmer
.NET Developers
Wordpress Content Poster
PR Representative
Passionate Bloggers Wanted
Administrative Human Resources Coordinator
Account Executive
Senior Developer
Sales and Marketing Associate
Marketing Manager
Flash Motion Graphics Expert
Freelance CGI Coder
Online Content Manager/Producer
OOP Programmer
Public Relations
Online Editor
Office Assistant: partial telecommute, near Stamford, CT
Conference Producer
Website Conversion
Graphic Designer
Moderator and Marketing Associate
Cold Fusion Developers: local to NYC
Grant Writer
Editor/Writer
Blogger on frugal topics
E-Commerce Website and SEO
Market Research Analyst
Online Librarians and Internet Researchers
Professional Knitter Needed: near NYC for meetings
Article Writer
Marketing/Admin Support
PR Assistant for Online Video Game Company: onsite in Orange County, CA at times
Attorney Editor
Finance and/or Economics Editors
Web Consultant/Editor
Quickbooks Bookkeeper: onsite near Philadelphia at times
MES Developer: within Philadelphia area
Immigration Attorney
Monday, December 1, 2008
Telecommuting Job Leads December 1, 2008
Welcome to December! I hope job hunting goes well, and you enjoyed Thanksgiving. Tomorrow there will be FAR more leads as I expand listings.
Here are the leads:
Freelance Writers to Complete Books
Freelance Editors
Freelance SEO Article Writers: clocik on "Freelance Opportunity!" in the loer left corner for the PDF.
Customer Service/Order Management
Courthouse Researchers
Segmentation Editors
Writer for Research Reports
Business Developer
Account Executive
PHP Developer
MarCom Writer: onsite once a week in Austin, TX
Embedded System Developer
Chief Software Architect and Business Analyst
Geriatric Care management: mostly work at home
Customer Service
CLE Administrator: some onsite work in Boston, MA
Embedded System Developer
Online Media Sales: Chicago/Midwest-based
Telephone Triage Nurses
Software Developer: meets once a week in Dallas/Plano TX area
Web Designer: meets once a week in Dallas, TX area
Lawyer/Article Writer
Mid-Level Web Developer
Computer Software Sales: base plus commission after 3 months
Executive Assistant/Operations Coordinator: onsite 1-3 meetings/week in Boulder, CO area
Part-time Law Student Needed
Webmaster
Open-Source Web Programmer: occasional onsite meetings in Long Beach, CA
Administrator/Office Manager: onsite training near L.A.
Web Programmer: 3 hours/week onsite near L.A., otherwise work at home
Here are the leads:
Freelance Writers to Complete Books
Freelance Editors
Freelance SEO Article Writers: clocik on "Freelance Opportunity!" in the loer left corner for the PDF.
Customer Service/Order Management
Courthouse Researchers
Segmentation Editors
Writer for Research Reports
Business Developer
Account Executive
PHP Developer
MarCom Writer: onsite once a week in Austin, TX
Embedded System Developer
Chief Software Architect and Business Analyst
Geriatric Care management: mostly work at home
Customer Service
CLE Administrator: some onsite work in Boston, MA
Embedded System Developer
Online Media Sales: Chicago/Midwest-based
Telephone Triage Nurses
Software Developer: meets once a week in Dallas/Plano TX area
Web Designer: meets once a week in Dallas, TX area
Lawyer/Article Writer
Mid-Level Web Developer
Computer Software Sales: base plus commission after 3 months
Executive Assistant/Operations Coordinator: onsite 1-3 meetings/week in Boulder, CO area
Part-time Law Student Needed
Webmaster
Open-Source Web Programmer: occasional onsite meetings in Long Beach, CA
Administrator/Office Manager: onsite training near L.A.
Web Programmer: 3 hours/week onsite near L.A., otherwise work at home
Sunday, November 30, 2008
Not a telecommuting job, but worthwhile: Work for the Census 2010
The federal government is taking applications for 2010 Census Workers.
The jobs generally pay around $18 per hour, and most workers will work a total of 5-10 weeks, going house to house in teams to ask people to complete the 2010 Census interviews. You can work part-time as a census taker, and even if you have a full-time job you can work evenings and weekends to be a census taker as a second job.
In some regions, longer-term jobs are available (starting now through the end of the census). This can be a great stepping stone to a federal job.
Give it a shot!
The jobs generally pay around $18 per hour, and most workers will work a total of 5-10 weeks, going house to house in teams to ask people to complete the 2010 Census interviews. You can work part-time as a census taker, and even if you have a full-time job you can work evenings and weekends to be a census taker as a second job.
In some regions, longer-term jobs are available (starting now through the end of the census). This can be a great stepping stone to a federal job.
Give it a shot!
Thursday, November 27, 2008
Internet Program: $1,600 per month in passive income on eHow? How?
I frequent writer message boards, and came across a woman on WAHM.com who claimed, a few months ago, to be making $700 per month on eHow. I didn't quite believe it at first.
eHow is a revenue-sharing site for "How to" articles. eHow is the site where Demand Studios articles are published. If you are a Demand Studios writer, then you are paid $5 to $15 for writing an eHow article--you get that money upfront and release all rights to the article.
If you are an eHow writer, you write for yourself in the eHow Writer Compensation Program (WCP). You make NO money upfront, but you get a percentage of ad revenue from readers reading your articles, clicking on ads, etc.
$1,600 a month is what the writer from last summer is up to now. She's published around 300 articles and earns $1,600 in PASSIVE income (older articles continue to earn money while she does nothing). Other writers following in her footsteps are reporting making $400, $500, more in passive income on eHow as well.
I decided to give this a whirl.
I've made $2.17 so far, with 3 articles and 1800 page views (you generally earn a specific amount per 1,000 pageviews). The more "friends" you have on eHow, the more likely you are to gain readers, which gains pageviews, which gains earnings. I've written articles on How to Get a Customer Service Telecommuting Job and How to Get a Writing Telecommuting Job, plus I threw in How to Cook a Gluten-Free Christmas Dinner for kicks :p
Generating passive income on eHow takes patience. Most writers report putting 20 articles per month on eHow, with first month earnings in the $10-$20 range. You gain "friends" on eHow, put a link to your articles in signature lines on email and on message boards, and you continually add more articles. By the time you hit 200 articles (by the way, an article takes me 10 minutes to write--we're not talking about long how-tos here) you can easily hit $200 per month, and go up from there.
Passive income is great because you only do the work once, but you reap the rewards on an ongoing basis. You're paid once per month, via PayPal, as long as your income is $10 or more. It's very simple, and the interface is easy to use.
Yet another tool to consider.
Happy Thanksgiving!
eHow is a revenue-sharing site for "How to" articles. eHow is the site where Demand Studios articles are published. If you are a Demand Studios writer, then you are paid $5 to $15 for writing an eHow article--you get that money upfront and release all rights to the article.
If you are an eHow writer, you write for yourself in the eHow Writer Compensation Program (WCP). You make NO money upfront, but you get a percentage of ad revenue from readers reading your articles, clicking on ads, etc.
$1,600 a month is what the writer from last summer is up to now. She's published around 300 articles and earns $1,600 in PASSIVE income (older articles continue to earn money while she does nothing). Other writers following in her footsteps are reporting making $400, $500, more in passive income on eHow as well.
I decided to give this a whirl.
I've made $2.17 so far, with 3 articles and 1800 page views (you generally earn a specific amount per 1,000 pageviews). The more "friends" you have on eHow, the more likely you are to gain readers, which gains pageviews, which gains earnings. I've written articles on How to Get a Customer Service Telecommuting Job and How to Get a Writing Telecommuting Job, plus I threw in How to Cook a Gluten-Free Christmas Dinner for kicks :p
Generating passive income on eHow takes patience. Most writers report putting 20 articles per month on eHow, with first month earnings in the $10-$20 range. You gain "friends" on eHow, put a link to your articles in signature lines on email and on message boards, and you continually add more articles. By the time you hit 200 articles (by the way, an article takes me 10 minutes to write--we're not talking about long how-tos here) you can easily hit $200 per month, and go up from there.
Passive income is great because you only do the work once, but you reap the rewards on an ongoing basis. You're paid once per month, via PayPal, as long as your income is $10 or more. It's very simple, and the interface is easy to use.
Yet another tool to consider.
Happy Thanksgiving!
Wednesday, November 26, 2008
Too weird to label: SELL your Box Tops for Education on eBay?
Now this is a new one for me, and I'm fairly jaded when it comes to ways people make money on eBay. While selling those Box Tops for Education you find on food boxes doesn't rise to the level of selling used panties or cloth diapers designed for adults with baby fetishes (I'm not making this stuff up, folks--I wish I were!), it's still weird.
Box Tops for Education are those small, square labels on the tops of various General Mills food items (cereals, snack bars, toilet paper packaging). You cut out the Box Tops and send them to your kid's school. The school turns them in for money ($.10 per box top) to buy computers, supplies, etc.
Now that's all fine, and so you send a hundred a year in with your third grader, and you do your duty and it's all good, right?
Here's where eBay comes in. Someone, at some point in time, realized that maybe they could clip and sell those Box Tops for a little PayPal fundage, right?
And somewhere out there was a buyer, perhaps a parent who forgot to clip those Box Tops, or who wanted their little third grader to send in the requisite number of Box Tops and be like all the other kids.
So seller meets buyer on eBay, PayPal is exchanged, and all is good.
But riddle this one with me: why are Box Tops selling for MORE THAN $.10 each on eBay? I'm looking at auctions with sellers selling 100 Box Tops for $14.99 with free shipping...$17.99 with free shipping?
In WHAT free market system do items sell for MORE than they're worth (other than AIG paper)?
I'm going to guess it's the Parent Wars.
You know--those parents who want their third grader to send in the MOST Box Tops. $100 dropped on buying up five or six hundred Box Tops is nothing if their kid is #1!
I'm being snarky (ish). I can't think of any other explanation for this phenomenon.
(Wait...I started this blog post with a point...)
So--start clipping. You buy the products already. This is FOUND MONEY. Bundle the Box Tops in groups of 100 and get an extra $15 here and there.
Report back if you figure out why the Box Tops sell for so much!
Telecommuting Job Leads November 26, 2008
This will be a fairly short list, as even HR takes a break and winds down for the holiday!
Take a look at this article on how to find customer service telecommuting jobs. If you're looking to work at home as a CSR, this is a great launching place.
Happy job hunting!
Remote Technical Support: $13.50 to $15 per hour
Dot Net Nuke Programmer: $50 per hour
Publicity/Media Placement and Speaking Booker: pay not listed
Healthcare Legal Writer: $30 per hour
Senior Drupal Developer: $62K-$68K
Java Web Developer: pay not listed
Freelance Desktop Publishing: pay not listed
Appointment Setting and Lead Generation: pay not listed
Illustrator: pay not listed
Medical Illustrator: pay not listed
Coldfusion UI: must be in Somerville, MA area for monthly meetings
Applications Engineer: $95K to $105K plus bonus
Office Administrator: must be near Schaumburg, IL, for occasional meetings
Experienced C#/ASP.NET Programmer: pay not listed
Personable Sales Geek: pay not listed
Content Writer: 15 hours per week, $8 per hour
Network Engineer: $45K-60K
Take a look at this article on how to find customer service telecommuting jobs. If you're looking to work at home as a CSR, this is a great launching place.
Happy job hunting!
Remote Technical Support: $13.50 to $15 per hour
Dot Net Nuke Programmer: $50 per hour
Publicity/Media Placement and Speaking Booker: pay not listed
Healthcare Legal Writer: $30 per hour
Senior Drupal Developer: $62K-$68K
Java Web Developer: pay not listed
Freelance Desktop Publishing: pay not listed
Appointment Setting and Lead Generation: pay not listed
Illustrator: pay not listed
Medical Illustrator: pay not listed
Coldfusion UI: must be in Somerville, MA area for monthly meetings
Applications Engineer: $95K to $105K plus bonus
Office Administrator: must be near Schaumburg, IL, for occasional meetings
Experienced C#/ASP.NET Programmer: pay not listed
Personable Sales Geek: pay not listed
Content Writer: 15 hours per week, $8 per hour
Network Engineer: $45K-60K
Tuesday, November 25, 2008
Telecommuting Job Leads November 25, 2008
Happy job search! Here are today's leads:
IT Specialist: $58K-$108K per year, federal government job
Marketing Specialist: $82K-$107K per year, federal government job
Transportation Specialist: $107K-$139K per year, federal government job
Transportation Specialist: $103K-$134K per year, federal government job
Administrative Advisor: $98K-$127K per year, federal government job
Records and Directives Management Officer: $82K-$127K per year, federal government job
Adjunct Instructors for Spanish Language and Hispanic Literatures: pay not listed
Adjunct English Instructor: pay not listed
Online Forensic Psychology Instructors: pay not listed
Adjunct Online Sociology Instructor: pay not listed
Adjunct Online Nursing Instructor: pay not listed
Online Faculty, Pharmacology: pay not listed
Online Faculty, Sociology: pay not listed
Online Faculty, Psychology: pay not listed
Assorted Online Faculty Positions: see website for details and to apply
Website Project Manager: pay not listed
iPhone Application Developer: pay not listed
Online Advertising Sales: base plus commission, part-time
Java and BREW Developers: salary plus equity
Freelance HR/Employment Law Writer: $25K, contract
Non-Profit Development Officer: pay not listed
Senior Consultant, ICMI Consulting: pay not listed
Senior Graphic Designer/Web Developer: 10-15 hours per week, must be onsite occasionally in Oakland, CA office
SEO/SEM Director: pay not listed
Interactive Web Producer: pay not listed
Estate Plan Drafting and Elder Law specialist: pay not listed, part-time
Tele-Sales and Marketing: base plus commission, prefer in Bay area
Travel Writer/Community Manager: $1,000 per month
Part-time Software Engineer: must be in Seattle area, but is telecommute job
Medical Billing: pay not listed
Lead PHP and Python Developer: pay not listed
Blogger wanted: 4-8 hours per week
Software Developer: limited to specific geographical areas listed in posting
Rails Developer: Raleigh, NC area only
PHP Developer with CakePHP: Raleigh, NC area only
Data Entry: $10 per hour, part-time, must be able to train onsite in Stratford, CT
Manager, Development and Communications: 30 hours per week, must be available for meetings in Bergen and Essex County
SEO Expert: pay not listed
Freelance Web Developer: pay not listed
Market Research: $10 per hour
Broadband Industry Blogger: part-time, pay not listed
Blog Writer: $20 per 600-word post
Payroll/Benefits Administrator: 6-8 hours per week, must be near L.A. for occasional onsite meeting
Supervising Document Review Attorney: pay not listed
Drupal Wizard: pay not listed
VB.NET Developer: pay not listed
Web 2.0 Manager: $12.50 per hour
Ski and Snowboard Instructor Writers: $8 per tip
P and C Agent/Underwriter: base plus commission, may work from home after initial training in Denver, CO office
Educational Sales Executive: $1,000 per trade show, 15-20 shows per year, plus commission
XML Content Management Professionals: pay not listed
If you like this, please Digg it up!
IT Specialist: $58K-$108K per year, federal government job
Marketing Specialist: $82K-$107K per year, federal government job
Transportation Specialist: $107K-$139K per year, federal government job
Transportation Specialist: $103K-$134K per year, federal government job
Administrative Advisor: $98K-$127K per year, federal government job
Records and Directives Management Officer: $82K-$127K per year, federal government job
Adjunct Instructors for Spanish Language and Hispanic Literatures: pay not listed
Adjunct English Instructor: pay not listed
Online Forensic Psychology Instructors: pay not listed
Adjunct Online Sociology Instructor: pay not listed
Adjunct Online Nursing Instructor: pay not listed
Online Faculty, Pharmacology: pay not listed
Online Faculty, Sociology: pay not listed
Online Faculty, Psychology: pay not listed
Assorted Online Faculty Positions: see website for details and to apply
Website Project Manager: pay not listed
iPhone Application Developer: pay not listed
Online Advertising Sales: base plus commission, part-time
Java and BREW Developers: salary plus equity
Freelance HR/Employment Law Writer: $25K, contract
Non-Profit Development Officer: pay not listed
Senior Consultant, ICMI Consulting: pay not listed
Senior Graphic Designer/Web Developer: 10-15 hours per week, must be onsite occasionally in Oakland, CA office
SEO/SEM Director: pay not listed
Interactive Web Producer: pay not listed
Estate Plan Drafting and Elder Law specialist: pay not listed, part-time
Tele-Sales and Marketing: base plus commission, prefer in Bay area
Travel Writer/Community Manager: $1,000 per month
Part-time Software Engineer: must be in Seattle area, but is telecommute job
Medical Billing: pay not listed
Lead PHP and Python Developer: pay not listed
Blogger wanted: 4-8 hours per week
Software Developer: limited to specific geographical areas listed in posting
Rails Developer: Raleigh, NC area only
PHP Developer with CakePHP: Raleigh, NC area only
Data Entry: $10 per hour, part-time, must be able to train onsite in Stratford, CT
Manager, Development and Communications: 30 hours per week, must be available for meetings in Bergen and Essex County
SEO Expert: pay not listed
Freelance Web Developer: pay not listed
Market Research: $10 per hour
Broadband Industry Blogger: part-time, pay not listed
Blog Writer: $20 per 600-word post
Payroll/Benefits Administrator: 6-8 hours per week, must be near L.A. for occasional onsite meeting
Supervising Document Review Attorney: pay not listed
Drupal Wizard: pay not listed
VB.NET Developer: pay not listed
Web 2.0 Manager: $12.50 per hour
Ski and Snowboard Instructor Writers: $8 per tip
P and C Agent/Underwriter: base plus commission, may work from home after initial training in Denver, CO office
Educational Sales Executive: $1,000 per trade show, 15-20 shows per year, plus commission
XML Content Management Professionals: pay not listed
If you like this, please Digg it up!
Internet Programs: ChaCha Guide
I signed up to be a ChaCha Guide a long time ago, and then (ducks head in shame) never followed through. Now, ChaCha is exploding everywhere, turning into quite the trend on parenting sites such as Sybermoms and Mothering, with busy moms earning $.05 or $.10 per question throughout the day.
What is ChaCha? Basically, people using mobile phones can send a text message to ChaCha--a question, such as "Where are the cafes with free WiFi in Leominster, MA?" The ChaCha guide, logged in to his or her system, does a quick search engine search, finds the answer, and text messages the answer back, with links.
That's the BASIC explanation. You start at a low level on ChaCha and then prove yourself as a ChaCha guide. I was rather blase about the program until the ladies (I use that term loosely) at Sybermoms began signing up one after the other and nattering on about ChaCha. When one ChaCha guide commented that she'd done 228 questions, at $.10 each, in one day, my ears perked up. That's $22.80 for the day, for doing quick searches and texting.
From the ChaCha FAQ:
The ChaCha guides I know are either stay-at-home/work-at-home mothers or folks who already have office jobs where they can answer questions during their down time (and technically pull a salary while making something on the side).
Anyone ChaCha? Unfortunately, ChaCha isn't hiring right now--they have 4 levels of Guides (including transcription), but you can check the site regularly to see when they resume hiring.
Post your comments, PLEASE!
What is ChaCha? Basically, people using mobile phones can send a text message to ChaCha--a question, such as "Where are the cafes with free WiFi in Leominster, MA?" The ChaCha guide, logged in to his or her system, does a quick search engine search, finds the answer, and text messages the answer back, with links.
That's the BASIC explanation. You start at a low level on ChaCha and then prove yourself as a ChaCha guide. I was rather blase about the program until the ladies (I use that term loosely) at Sybermoms began signing up one after the other and nattering on about ChaCha. When one ChaCha guide commented that she'd done 228 questions, at $.10 each, in one day, my ears perked up. That's $22.80 for the day, for doing quick searches and texting.
From the ChaCha FAQ:
How and how much do I get paid?
Guides are paid on a per-transaction basis. The more efficient you can be, the more you can make. Guide pay currently averages $3 to $9 per hour, though many top Guides earn more than that. See specific roles for the amount of pay per transaction. Payments are made one of two ways: via a debit card from First Internet Bank of Indiana, or via direct deposit to your bank account once a month if your account reaches $100 or greater.
The ChaCha guides I know are either stay-at-home/work-at-home mothers or folks who already have office jobs where they can answer questions during their down time (and technically pull a salary while making something on the side).
Anyone ChaCha? Unfortunately, ChaCha isn't hiring right now--they have 4 levels of Guides (including transcription), but you can check the site regularly to see when they resume hiring.
Post your comments, PLEASE!
Monday, November 24, 2008
Telecommuting Job Leads November 24, 2008
Happy Monday!
I'm working on adding a wider range of job opportunities, so please let me know what you're looking for. LOTS of teaching jobs today!
Post your job needs in the comments and give me some ideas!
Here we go:
Customer Service: $24K-29K, salaried full-time, must train for 6 weeks in St. Louis, MO in January
Customer Service: $25K-$30K, full-time salaried, must be able to train for 6 weeks in Pittsburgh, PA, in January
Virtual High School English and History Teachers: pay not listed, FL and NV only
Virtual High School Math and Science Teachers: pay not listed, FL and NV only
Virtual Operations Assistant for Educational Consulting Company: 30 hours/week, flex time, pay not listed
Health Educator: pay not listed, must reside in Portland, OR area
Trainer/Consultant: some onsite meetings in Manhattan, KS, pay not listed
Adjunct Teacher: pay not listed
Virtual Classroom Administrative Assistant: $10.50 to $11 per hour
Healthcare Legal Writer: $30 per hour
Freelance Basketball Journalist: pay not listed, Atlanta area
IM Specialist: pay not listed
Audio/Video Tech/Dev: pay not listed, occasional onsite meeting in Austin, TX
Administrative Assistant: 10 hours per week, $8 per hour
Immigration Attorney: pay not listed
Web Designer/Graphic Artist: pay not listed
Artist for Website Design: pay not listed
EMR/EHR/PHR: pay not listed
Bookkeeper: part-time, must be onsite for some meetings near Evanston, IL
Web Designer/Developer: onsite once a week in Chicago
Community News Writer: west Houston area, part-time, pay not listed
iPhone Bloggers: $10 to $15 per post
.NET Developer: 4 hours per day, pay not listed, must be near L.A. for some onsite meetings
Website Developer: 15-30 hours per week, must be near NYC, pay not listed
Nutrition and Dietitian Writer: pay not listed
Graphic Artists/Illustrator: pay not listed
Social Media Marketing Influencer: $10 to $15 per hour
Web Programmer: pay not listed
Part-time Contract Paralegal: pay not listed
3D Artist for Game Development: pay not listed
MMOG Database Developer: pay not listed
MMOG C++ Game Client Developer: pay not listed
Bookkeeper: onsite 2-3 hours per week in Beaverton, otherwise work from home, $10-$15 per hour, 12 hours per week
Article Writer: $12 to $15 per hour--hint: put links to the two requested samples in your resume. Do not send new, original writing in the event that this might be a scam.
PHP Programmer: $70K to $90K plus equity
Country Recipe Editor, China: pay not listed
Ruby Contractor: pay not listed
Law Student Bloggers: $20 per hour
Sales Assistant/Administrator: fluent in German, pay not listed
Controller/Bookkeeper: mostly work at home, D.C. area
Japanese Fluent Licensed Attorneys: pay not listed
Writers: pay not listed
I'm working on adding a wider range of job opportunities, so please let me know what you're looking for. LOTS of teaching jobs today!
Post your job needs in the comments and give me some ideas!
Here we go:
Customer Service: $24K-29K, salaried full-time, must train for 6 weeks in St. Louis, MO in January
Customer Service: $25K-$30K, full-time salaried, must be able to train for 6 weeks in Pittsburgh, PA, in January
Virtual High School English and History Teachers: pay not listed, FL and NV only
Virtual High School Math and Science Teachers: pay not listed, FL and NV only
Virtual Operations Assistant for Educational Consulting Company: 30 hours/week, flex time, pay not listed
Health Educator: pay not listed, must reside in Portland, OR area
Trainer/Consultant: some onsite meetings in Manhattan, KS, pay not listed
Adjunct Teacher: pay not listed
Virtual Classroom Administrative Assistant: $10.50 to $11 per hour
Healthcare Legal Writer: $30 per hour
Freelance Basketball Journalist: pay not listed, Atlanta area
IM Specialist: pay not listed
Audio/Video Tech/Dev: pay not listed, occasional onsite meeting in Austin, TX
Administrative Assistant: 10 hours per week, $8 per hour
Immigration Attorney: pay not listed
Web Designer/Graphic Artist: pay not listed
Artist for Website Design: pay not listed
EMR/EHR/PHR: pay not listed
Bookkeeper: part-time, must be onsite for some meetings near Evanston, IL
Web Designer/Developer: onsite once a week in Chicago
Community News Writer: west Houston area, part-time, pay not listed
iPhone Bloggers: $10 to $15 per post
.NET Developer: 4 hours per day, pay not listed, must be near L.A. for some onsite meetings
Website Developer: 15-30 hours per week, must be near NYC, pay not listed
Nutrition and Dietitian Writer: pay not listed
Graphic Artists/Illustrator: pay not listed
Social Media Marketing Influencer: $10 to $15 per hour
Web Programmer: pay not listed
Part-time Contract Paralegal: pay not listed
3D Artist for Game Development: pay not listed
MMOG Database Developer: pay not listed
MMOG C++ Game Client Developer: pay not listed
Bookkeeper: onsite 2-3 hours per week in Beaverton, otherwise work from home, $10-$15 per hour, 12 hours per week
Article Writer: $12 to $15 per hour--hint: put links to the two requested samples in your resume. Do not send new, original writing in the event that this might be a scam.
PHP Programmer: $70K to $90K plus equity
Country Recipe Editor, China: pay not listed
Ruby Contractor: pay not listed
Law Student Bloggers: $20 per hour
Sales Assistant/Administrator: fluent in German, pay not listed
Controller/Bookkeeper: mostly work at home, D.C. area
Japanese Fluent Licensed Attorneys: pay not listed
Writers: pay not listed
The $100 day
Plenty of online workers--especially those who work from home as freelance writers or internet program junki...er, professionals--set daily goals for earning. This keeps you motivated. It sets an end time for work (you're done when you've completed $100 worth of work), which is important when you work from home. It keeps the money flowing. You can insert your own benefit as you think of reasons for working toward the $100 day.
You can choose a different number...$50, $150, $200. $100 per day, 5 days per week, is $2,000 per month. Not bad for anyone working from home.
How do you do it? Take a look at the older posts here:
Associated Content
LetterRep
Demand Studios
BrightHub
I'm only listing sites that can pay off immediately, or within a week or so. Demand Studios and BrightHub both require that you apply (send resume, fill out web form), so those are contingent upon acceptance. Once accepted, you pick up assignments.
You could, for instance, in 1 day write 4 articles for Associated Content--the pay is very low there ($4-6 per article these days), but you do get residual income (ongoing ad revenue share). You could then write 2 letters for LetterRep; if accepted, that's $20. Write 3 $15 articles for Demand Studios (article fees range from $5 to $20 now). Write 2 articles for BrightHub and earn $20 (plus residuals).
That's 9 articles (each in the 400 word range), 2 letters (250 words each), and around $101-$109 for the day. If 9 articles and 2 letters sounds like a lot, it is--but it's very doable once you get going, and this is your typical work-from-home, earn $100/day scenario.
All of these sites pay via PayPal. Associated Content and Demand Studios pay weekly, while LetterRep and BrightHub pay monthly. This is why steady, constant work is important--you keep a pipeline of money coming in.
Give it a try! In the meantime, keep checking back for telecommuting job leads--I post them around 3pm EST.
You can choose a different number...$50, $150, $200. $100 per day, 5 days per week, is $2,000 per month. Not bad for anyone working from home.
How do you do it? Take a look at the older posts here:
Associated Content
LetterRep
Demand Studios
BrightHub
I'm only listing sites that can pay off immediately, or within a week or so. Demand Studios and BrightHub both require that you apply (send resume, fill out web form), so those are contingent upon acceptance. Once accepted, you pick up assignments.
You could, for instance, in 1 day write 4 articles for Associated Content--the pay is very low there ($4-6 per article these days), but you do get residual income (ongoing ad revenue share). You could then write 2 letters for LetterRep; if accepted, that's $20. Write 3 $15 articles for Demand Studios (article fees range from $5 to $20 now). Write 2 articles for BrightHub and earn $20 (plus residuals).
That's 9 articles (each in the 400 word range), 2 letters (250 words each), and around $101-$109 for the day. If 9 articles and 2 letters sounds like a lot, it is--but it's very doable once you get going, and this is your typical work-from-home, earn $100/day scenario.
All of these sites pay via PayPal. Associated Content and Demand Studios pay weekly, while LetterRep and BrightHub pay monthly. This is why steady, constant work is important--you keep a pipeline of money coming in.
Give it a try! In the meantime, keep checking back for telecommuting job leads--I post them around 3pm EST.
Friday, November 21, 2008
Telecommuting Job Leads November 21, 2008
Here are today's job leads--good luck with your search! Flash Developers are in high demand today.
I'll be back on Monday with new leads.
Graphic Designer: pay not listed
CAD Drafting Subcontractor: pay not listed
Ruby/Rails Developer: pay not listed
Marketing ans Sales: hourly plus commission, pay not listed
Website Needed: $4,150 for project
Work Naked: PHP Developer: pay not listed
Accounts Receivable/Bookkeeper/Executive Assistant: up to 35 hours per week, $90 per hour
Social Networking Programmer: pay not listed
Part-time Executive Assistant/Conference Coordinator: 10-15 hours per week, must be onsite for occasional meetings in Lexington, MA, $20-$25 per hour
Flash Designer: pay not listed
Sales/Account Representative: salary plus commission, pay not listed
PR Representative: see ad for compensation details
FileMaker Developer: part-time, pay not listed
Flash Developer: pay not listed
Document Review Attorney: pay not listed
Assistat to CEO/Founder: 10 hours per week, up to $20 per hour
Graphic Artists: pay not listed
NYC Design/Culture Blogger: $15 per hour or possible trade for housing--see ad for details
Family Law Paralegal: $30 to $40 per case
Medical Biller: pay not listed
Web Designers and Developers: pay not listed
Native Language Conversational Tutors: pay not listed
Excel Pro: pay not listed
Japan Customer Service Agent: must be IN Japan, $29K+
ASP.net and MySQL: $25 per hour
Conference Salesperson/Coordinator: $32K +, Orange County
Attorney Editor: pay not listed
Web Development Engineer and Operations Lead: pay not listed
Certified CPT Coder: pay not listed
Contract Web Development Professional: $35 per hour
WPF/XAML Animation Programmer: pay not listed
CSS, DHTML Site Builder: up to $45 per hour, must be near Puget Sound
I'll be back on Monday with new leads.
Graphic Designer: pay not listed
CAD Drafting Subcontractor: pay not listed
Ruby/Rails Developer: pay not listed
Marketing ans Sales: hourly plus commission, pay not listed
Website Needed: $4,150 for project
Work Naked: PHP Developer: pay not listed
Accounts Receivable/Bookkeeper/Executive Assistant: up to 35 hours per week, $90 per hour
Social Networking Programmer: pay not listed
Part-time Executive Assistant/Conference Coordinator: 10-15 hours per week, must be onsite for occasional meetings in Lexington, MA, $20-$25 per hour
Flash Designer: pay not listed
Sales/Account Representative: salary plus commission, pay not listed
PR Representative: see ad for compensation details
FileMaker Developer: part-time, pay not listed
Flash Developer: pay not listed
Document Review Attorney: pay not listed
Assistat to CEO/Founder: 10 hours per week, up to $20 per hour
Graphic Artists: pay not listed
NYC Design/Culture Blogger: $15 per hour or possible trade for housing--see ad for details
Family Law Paralegal: $30 to $40 per case
Medical Biller: pay not listed
Web Designers and Developers: pay not listed
Native Language Conversational Tutors: pay not listed
Excel Pro: pay not listed
Japan Customer Service Agent: must be IN Japan, $29K+
ASP.net and MySQL: $25 per hour
Conference Salesperson/Coordinator: $32K +, Orange County
Attorney Editor: pay not listed
Web Development Engineer and Operations Lead: pay not listed
Certified CPT Coder: pay not listed
Contract Web Development Professional: $35 per hour
WPF/XAML Animation Programmer: pay not listed
CSS, DHTML Site Builder: up to $45 per hour, must be near Puget Sound
Thursday, November 20, 2008
Earnings Update: Associated Content, LetterRep, Demand Studios, and more
So, Demand Studios brought me a tidy income of around $2000. I'm not 100% done with them, but they've changed policies, and many of their articles pay $5 now instead of $15. In addition, they hired a variety of editors who appear never to have actually read their own style guide. I got a number of articles returned to me with editing requests that sounded like a 6th grader wrote them, so I decided to put Demand Studios on the back burner. It was nice while it lasted, and I hope those who still write for DS are enjoying the work and that it goes well.
Associated Content: I've published a handful of new pieces with them recently, and my top offer appears to be stuck at $5.79. While that isn't bad for a 400-word article I bang out in 10 minutes, it's excruciating for a well-researched article that took an hour. I do make $20-$25/month on residual income, though (translation: I get paid for nothing. Page views for my existing 138 articles generate "passive income" for me). I need to work on registering my existing articles with more sites to get more exposure and page views, to increase my passive income. Check out my article on Getting Rid of Student Loan Debt here.
BrightHub is promising--I've written two articles for them so far ($10 each), both accepted right away, and the editor is WONDERFUL. I plan to increase my writing for them soon, but we just moved (ugh!) and I picked up two contracts with educational publishers recently (yeah!), so that will cut into my keyword article writing.
Good old LetterRep just sent me an email--I made a sale on a year-old letter I wrote there! That same letter has now sold 4 times, generating $40 for me. I need to turn my attention back to LetterRep and generate some standard letters that will be "evergreen" (have long-standing appeal). Passive income is the BEST income :)
I also received a little more than $25 from Ebates--their special deal I blogged about came through for me. That was a nice PayPal!
How are your internet income efforts going? Post in the comments.
Associated Content: I've published a handful of new pieces with them recently, and my top offer appears to be stuck at $5.79. While that isn't bad for a 400-word article I bang out in 10 minutes, it's excruciating for a well-researched article that took an hour. I do make $20-$25/month on residual income, though (translation: I get paid for nothing. Page views for my existing 138 articles generate "passive income" for me). I need to work on registering my existing articles with more sites to get more exposure and page views, to increase my passive income. Check out my article on Getting Rid of Student Loan Debt here.
BrightHub is promising--I've written two articles for them so far ($10 each), both accepted right away, and the editor is WONDERFUL. I plan to increase my writing for them soon, but we just moved (ugh!) and I picked up two contracts with educational publishers recently (yeah!), so that will cut into my keyword article writing.
Good old LetterRep just sent me an email--I made a sale on a year-old letter I wrote there! That same letter has now sold 4 times, generating $40 for me. I need to turn my attention back to LetterRep and generate some standard letters that will be "evergreen" (have long-standing appeal). Passive income is the BEST income :)
I also received a little more than $25 from Ebates--their special deal I blogged about came through for me. That was a nice PayPal!
How are your internet income efforts going? Post in the comments.
Telecommuting Job Leads November 20, 2008
Here we go, folks--telecommuting job leads for November 20. Best of luck, and please post any information you might get in the comments--for instance, if any of these leads is bogus, or if you get a bounce-back on the email, please comment so I can revise the post and save people the wasted time.
Job searching is so time-sucking--that's why I'm doing these posts, to help telecommuters and telecommuter wannabees to save time!
Best of luck!
Technical Writer: pay not listed
Associate Attorney: must be admitted to bar in VA/MD/DC, part-time, flexible hours, pay not listed
Lead Architect: must live in DC area to be available for some small team meetings, $120K+
Financial Services Part-time Administrative Assistant: 10 hours/week, $10-$12 per hour
Women of the Web Editor/Blogger: $100 per month plus ad revenue share
Flash Developer: part-time, pay not listed
Carbon Footprint Consultant: part-time, two-month assignment, with on-site meetings occasional in DC
Senior Web and User Interface Designer: pay not listed
Sales Manager: must be in San Francisco area, $45K-$55K plus bonus
Marketing Manager: pay not listed
Database Developer: pay not listed
Photo Editing/Image Processing: $100 per project
Appointment Setter: $15 per hour plus bonus
RN Office/Business Manager: $75K plus bonus, San Francisco area
Customer Service Representative: 8am-4pm Pacific time, $8-$10 per hour
Computer Programming Consultant: $25-$35 per hour
Omnigraffle Freelancer: 20 hours per week, $40-$50 per hour
Administrative Assistant: 20 hours per week, pay not listed
Flash Ad Creator: contract, pay not listed
PR Account Executive: sports-related, pay not listed
Regional Sales Manager (NYC, NJ): commission-only for 3 months, then base ($15K-$20K) added
Spanish Translator: $500 project
Illustrator/Print Designer: pay not listed
Renewal Specialist: pay not listed
Telephone Sales Representative: base plus commission, pay not listed
Software Developer: must live within commuting distance of Wilton, CT office; can telecommute after training
Book Sales Agent and Marketer: base plus commission, part-time
Adobe LiveCycle Forms Developer: pay not listed
Clothing Sales representative: salary plus commission
Flash Designer: must be near Los Angeles for occasional onsite meetings
Flash AS3 Developer: 5-week job, $50 per hour
Microsoft Network/Exchange Server Specialist: $75 per hour
Healthcare Field SAles Representative: metro Denver area, home-based
Senior Drupal Developer: $62K-$68K
Web Designer: must be able to go to North Dallas office from time to time
Freelance Artist/Adventure Game Illustrator: pay not listed
Accounts Payable: $14 per hour
Web/Flash Developer: 1 full-time, 1 part-time job, must be in metroWest/Boston area, pay not listed
QA person: part or full-time, pay not listed
Humorous Political Monologue Writer: pay not listed
Technical Editor and Desktop Publishing: pay not listed
Sales Representative for European Company: Atlanta-based, commission only for 3 months, base or commission after that time period
PHP, MySQL, X-Cart Developer: part-time, 30-40 hours/week
Technology Sales Position: $12-$19 per hour plus commission
National Accounts Manager: pay not listed, must register at MediaBistro to view (free registration)
Job searching is so time-sucking--that's why I'm doing these posts, to help telecommuters and telecommuter wannabees to save time!
Best of luck!
Technical Writer: pay not listed
Associate Attorney: must be admitted to bar in VA/MD/DC, part-time, flexible hours, pay not listed
Lead Architect: must live in DC area to be available for some small team meetings, $120K+
Financial Services Part-time Administrative Assistant: 10 hours/week, $10-$12 per hour
Women of the Web Editor/Blogger: $100 per month plus ad revenue share
Flash Developer: part-time, pay not listed
Carbon Footprint Consultant: part-time, two-month assignment, with on-site meetings occasional in DC
Senior Web and User Interface Designer: pay not listed
Sales Manager: must be in San Francisco area, $45K-$55K plus bonus
Marketing Manager: pay not listed
Database Developer: pay not listed
Photo Editing/Image Processing: $100 per project
Appointment Setter: $15 per hour plus bonus
RN Office/Business Manager: $75K plus bonus, San Francisco area
Customer Service Representative: 8am-4pm Pacific time, $8-$10 per hour
Computer Programming Consultant: $25-$35 per hour
Omnigraffle Freelancer: 20 hours per week, $40-$50 per hour
Administrative Assistant: 20 hours per week, pay not listed
Flash Ad Creator: contract, pay not listed
PR Account Executive: sports-related, pay not listed
Regional Sales Manager (NYC, NJ): commission-only for 3 months, then base ($15K-$20K) added
Spanish Translator: $500 project
Illustrator/Print Designer: pay not listed
Renewal Specialist: pay not listed
Telephone Sales Representative: base plus commission, pay not listed
Software Developer: must live within commuting distance of Wilton, CT office; can telecommute after training
Book Sales Agent and Marketer: base plus commission, part-time
Adobe LiveCycle Forms Developer: pay not listed
Clothing Sales representative: salary plus commission
Flash Designer: must be near Los Angeles for occasional onsite meetings
Flash AS3 Developer: 5-week job, $50 per hour
Microsoft Network/Exchange Server Specialist: $75 per hour
Healthcare Field SAles Representative: metro Denver area, home-based
Senior Drupal Developer: $62K-$68K
Web Designer: must be able to go to North Dallas office from time to time
Freelance Artist/Adventure Game Illustrator: pay not listed
Accounts Payable: $14 per hour
Web/Flash Developer: 1 full-time, 1 part-time job, must be in metroWest/Boston area, pay not listed
QA person: part or full-time, pay not listed
Humorous Political Monologue Writer: pay not listed
Technical Editor and Desktop Publishing: pay not listed
Sales Representative for European Company: Atlanta-based, commission only for 3 months, base or commission after that time period
PHP, MySQL, X-Cart Developer: part-time, 30-40 hours/week
Technology Sales Position: $12-$19 per hour plus commission
National Accounts Manager: pay not listed, must register at MediaBistro to view (free registration)
Wednesday, November 19, 2008
Telecommuting Job Leads November 19, 2008
Welcome to today's Telecommuting Job Leads. These are real jobs, with real pay (hourly, salary, or contract), and NOT commission-only jobs.
Read on, click, apply, and good luck!
Telephone Lead Generator: pay not listed
Wholesale Account Executive: $65K-75K salary
Bookkeeper/Executive Assistant: $17/hour, 25-35 hours/week
AutoCAD Expert:$50-$75 per project
Embedded C++/Qt Developers: pay not listed
Web/Content Writer: pay not listed
Security System I Sales Rep: appears to be for Vermont, New Hampshire, Maine, and/or Massachusetts residents
Independent Web Designer: pay not listed
Customer Care Representative: $30-$120 per book publishing client
Marketing Independent Contractor: pay not listed, 30-40 hours/week
PHP/SQL Guru: pay not listed
Foreign Language Content Analysts: pay not listed
Patient Advocate: Florida only, pay not listed
Web Designer and Day-to-day Content Provider: pay not listed
PHP/MySQL Developer: part-to-full-time, no pay listed
News Writer: part-time, $15/hour
Women in Photography Editor/Blogger: $100/month plus ad revenue for 5 blog posts/week
Private School Exam Curriculum Developer: pay not listed
Freelance Business Blogger: $10-15/post plus bonus
Online Virtual Auditorium Moderator: pay not listed
Business Development and Sales Manager/Director: $30/hour part-time, full-time in 3 months
Software Developer for WEb Harvest project: pay not listed
Technical Support Engineer/Pre-Sales Engineer: pay not listed
Customer Care and Tech Support: pay not listed
MBA Admissions Essay Editor: $200 per client
Account Manager: pay not listed
Medical Marketing: $15-$25 per hour or commission
Loan Officer: pay not listed
Experienced Web Developer: pay not listed
Loan Originator/Processor: pay not listed
Customer Service: 40 hours/week, $9.50/hour, Oregon residents only
National Account Director of Government Sales: $80K-$90K base
Windows/Linux Sys Admins: pay not listed
Press Release Writer: $100 per press release, several per week
On Call Scheduler: pay not listed
Project Scheduler, SureTrak: pay not listed
Freelance Web Designer: pay not listed
Joomla Web Developer: pay not listed
Category Editors: $12-$15/hour
Customer Service Representative: close to San Francisco, pay not listed
Read on, click, apply, and good luck!
Telephone Lead Generator: pay not listed
Wholesale Account Executive: $65K-75K salary
Bookkeeper/Executive Assistant: $17/hour, 25-35 hours/week
AutoCAD Expert:$50-$75 per project
Embedded C++/Qt Developers: pay not listed
Web/Content Writer: pay not listed
Security System I Sales Rep: appears to be for Vermont, New Hampshire, Maine, and/or Massachusetts residents
Independent Web Designer: pay not listed
Customer Care Representative: $30-$120 per book publishing client
Marketing Independent Contractor: pay not listed, 30-40 hours/week
PHP/SQL Guru: pay not listed
Foreign Language Content Analysts: pay not listed
Patient Advocate: Florida only, pay not listed
Web Designer and Day-to-day Content Provider: pay not listed
PHP/MySQL Developer: part-to-full-time, no pay listed
News Writer: part-time, $15/hour
Women in Photography Editor/Blogger: $100/month plus ad revenue for 5 blog posts/week
Private School Exam Curriculum Developer: pay not listed
Freelance Business Blogger: $10-15/post plus bonus
Online Virtual Auditorium Moderator: pay not listed
Business Development and Sales Manager/Director: $30/hour part-time, full-time in 3 months
Software Developer for WEb Harvest project: pay not listed
Technical Support Engineer/Pre-Sales Engineer: pay not listed
Customer Care and Tech Support: pay not listed
MBA Admissions Essay Editor: $200 per client
Account Manager: pay not listed
Medical Marketing: $15-$25 per hour or commission
Loan Officer: pay not listed
Experienced Web Developer: pay not listed
Loan Originator/Processor: pay not listed
Customer Service: 40 hours/week, $9.50/hour, Oregon residents only
National Account Director of Government Sales: $80K-$90K base
Windows/Linux Sys Admins: pay not listed
Press Release Writer: $100 per press release, several per week
On Call Scheduler: pay not listed
Project Scheduler, SureTrak: pay not listed
Freelance Web Designer: pay not listed
Joomla Web Developer: pay not listed
Category Editors: $12-$15/hour
Customer Service Representative: close to San Francisco, pay not listed
Telecommuting Jobs: How to Find Them
I have been telecommuting since 1998. Sometimes I have been a full-time employee, while most of the time I have been a contract worker or I make money from my own projects.
I have worked in writing, marketing, user interface testing, research, and accounting over the years. It's been a mixed bag :)
My husband telecommutes as well, full-time, and has since 1998. In his case, he works for a large corporation and is a full employee, with benefits. He travels as needed for business meetings (those are rare). Otherwise, all meetings are conducted by conference call, and he works from a home office here.
We know a LOT about how NOT to work at home. But what you're wondering is: how do *I* get a chance to work at home?
I've been writing for the past two years about ways to make money from Internet programs and freelancing opportunities. What I'm about to expand into is telecommuting: real job leads for real jobs that allow you to work from home.
Every day, starting today, I'll post a list of jobs found on the Internet that are telecommuting-specific. Who cares if your employer is based in Texas and you work in Massachusetts? Or if you're based in France but find a job with a publisher in New York? The beauty of telecommuting is that it doesn't matter where you're located: you're hired based on the quality of your work, not where you live.
I read on a variety of message boards and so many people are desperate to telecommute. Come back to this blog daily to find hot telecommuting job leads, with NO FEE like some places, and post comments on your experiences.
Good luck!
I have worked in writing, marketing, user interface testing, research, and accounting over the years. It's been a mixed bag :)
My husband telecommutes as well, full-time, and has since 1998. In his case, he works for a large corporation and is a full employee, with benefits. He travels as needed for business meetings (those are rare). Otherwise, all meetings are conducted by conference call, and he works from a home office here.
We know a LOT about how NOT to work at home. But what you're wondering is: how do *I* get a chance to work at home?
I've been writing for the past two years about ways to make money from Internet programs and freelancing opportunities. What I'm about to expand into is telecommuting: real job leads for real jobs that allow you to work from home.
Every day, starting today, I'll post a list of jobs found on the Internet that are telecommuting-specific. Who cares if your employer is based in Texas and you work in Massachusetts? Or if you're based in France but find a job with a publisher in New York? The beauty of telecommuting is that it doesn't matter where you're located: you're hired based on the quality of your work, not where you live.
I read on a variety of message boards and so many people are desperate to telecommute. Come back to this blog daily to find hot telecommuting job leads, with NO FEE like some places, and post comments on your experiences.
Good luck!
Wednesday, October 29, 2008
Freelancing: BrightHub
I applied for BrightHub on Monday. Was accepted immediately to write for two sections: Green Living and Personal Finance. Received an electronic contract and signed it.
Got a message from my editor, and yesterday I read through their content management system. BrightHub's CMS is more complex than Associated Content, Constant Content, or Demand Studios. BrightHUb expects the writer to do much of the SEO legwork, which is fine for me--I've been doing meta tags since 2004 :)
I created a two-page store (more page views!) and as a writer I earn $10 as upfront pay plus 80% of ongoing ad revenue for the article. Because it's a two-pager, that's extra ad revenue. A 1 pager can be as short as 300 words, though, with the same upfront pay.
The editor I'm assigned to (each section or "channel" as a different editor) for Green Living is great, and my article was approved this morning. Less than 3 days from application to publication is a record in the blind CMS UGC world.
Read my article here:
Finding Green Contractor Reviews
BrightHub is more professional than AC or DS--they expect more SEO knowledge (or at least the willingness for the writer to learn some more complex SEO). Demand Studios has taken a nosedive in terms of editing quality and review turnaround, and they recently dropped their pay for writer-submitted titles from $15 to $5, so writers will be searching for a new venue. BrightHub might be it.
Got a message from my editor, and yesterday I read through their content management system. BrightHub's CMS is more complex than Associated Content, Constant Content, or Demand Studios. BrightHUb expects the writer to do much of the SEO legwork, which is fine for me--I've been doing meta tags since 2004 :)
I created a two-page store (more page views!) and as a writer I earn $10 as upfront pay plus 80% of ongoing ad revenue for the article. Because it's a two-pager, that's extra ad revenue. A 1 pager can be as short as 300 words, though, with the same upfront pay.
The editor I'm assigned to (each section or "channel" as a different editor) for Green Living is great, and my article was approved this morning. Less than 3 days from application to publication is a record in the blind CMS UGC world.
Read my article here:
Finding Green Contractor Reviews
BrightHub is more professional than AC or DS--they expect more SEO knowledge (or at least the willingness for the writer to learn some more complex SEO). Demand Studios has taken a nosedive in terms of editing quality and review turnaround, and they recently dropped their pay for writer-submitted titles from $15 to $5, so writers will be searching for a new venue. BrightHub might be it.
Monday, October 6, 2008
WAHM.com: a Great place to find ideas
So I've been busy working and writing, but check WAHM.com's writing board every day for ideas.
I most recently learned about HotelsByCity.com and their paid blogging positions, checked in on LifeTips' latest issues, and read up on rentacoder.com and textbroker.com
The parents at WAHM.com have given me so many ideas--so I need to give them some link love.
WAHM.com
I most recently learned about HotelsByCity.com and their paid blogging positions, checked in on LifeTips' latest issues, and read up on rentacoder.com and textbroker.com
The parents at WAHM.com have given me so many ideas--so I need to give them some link love.
WAHM.com
Saturday, June 28, 2008
Internet Program: Sell your old papers, book reviews, etc. for $15 each
Essay mills, paper sales, and so forth aren't new. The Internet, though, has made them more widely available. Technology is catching up, though; companies such as Turnitin.com allow professors and teachers to compare papers with a database of known papers, to weed out plagiarism.
Oboulo.com is one of the newest players in the "we only sell these papers as 'reference guides' and would never encourage anyone to turn one of these papers in as their own" websites. What's unique about Oboulo, though, from the writer's standpoint, is that they pay a flat fee, upfront, for your work.
In addition, while Oboulo is new in the English language world, they're not new in France and Brazil, where they've gained tremendous popularity.
Here's how it works: register at Oboulo and upload a document you want to sell. Fair warning: you have to sign a "work for hire" contract, which means you've just signed the copyright over to Oboulo. If you're a grad student and you might publish part or all of a paper, BAD MOVE.
You can't retain/reuse any of your paper if you sell it to Oboulo and later the Journal of Very Important Tenure Track Jobs comes a-calling and wants your paper titled "Shakespeare, Transgender, and Amazon's Mechanical Turk: Amorphous Social Dichotomies, Sexual Economies, and Scatalogical Digressions of Microlending Communities in .NET".
On the other hand, if your review of Emile Zola's "Germinal" from 1990 is just molding in the closet, why not spend 15 minutes typing it up and make $15?
If you're so inclined to sell your work to worried-well undergraduates who have money to burn, then you get a straight $10 for selling your work to Oboulo, but you can get $15 if you enter MY "ambassador" code when you upload a paper: 70bbbe
I used someone else's ambassador code, uploaded an old paper I never plan to use again, and it was accepted within 24 hours. Payment is processing (haven't received it yet). $15 via PayPal (yes, you have to use PayPal).
Yes, I make money when you use this code. It is the Jedi Way of the Internet Ref ID. You make an extra $5 when you use my code, so have a gallon of gas on me (but hurry before prices go up).
70bbbe
Oboulo.com is one of the newest players in the "we only sell these papers as 'reference guides' and would never encourage anyone to turn one of these papers in as their own" websites. What's unique about Oboulo, though, from the writer's standpoint, is that they pay a flat fee, upfront, for your work.
In addition, while Oboulo is new in the English language world, they're not new in France and Brazil, where they've gained tremendous popularity.
Here's how it works: register at Oboulo and upload a document you want to sell. Fair warning: you have to sign a "work for hire" contract, which means you've just signed the copyright over to Oboulo. If you're a grad student and you might publish part or all of a paper, BAD MOVE.
You can't retain/reuse any of your paper if you sell it to Oboulo and later the Journal of Very Important Tenure Track Jobs comes a-calling and wants your paper titled "Shakespeare, Transgender, and Amazon's Mechanical Turk: Amorphous Social Dichotomies, Sexual Economies, and Scatalogical Digressions of Microlending Communities in .NET".
On the other hand, if your review of Emile Zola's "Germinal" from 1990 is just molding in the closet, why not spend 15 minutes typing it up and make $15?
If you're so inclined to sell your work to worried-well undergraduates who have money to burn, then you get a straight $10 for selling your work to Oboulo, but you can get $15 if you enter MY "ambassador" code when you upload a paper: 70bbbe
I used someone else's ambassador code, uploaded an old paper I never plan to use again, and it was accepted within 24 hours. Payment is processing (haven't received it yet). $15 via PayPal (yes, you have to use PayPal).
Yes, I make money when you use this code. It is the Jedi Way of the Internet Ref ID. You make an extra $5 when you use my code, so have a gallon of gas on me (but hurry before prices go up).
70bbbe
Sunday, June 22, 2008
Internet Program: Amazon's Mechanical Turk (this is a weird one, folks...)
So imagine a freelance site where you can make anywhere from $.01 (yes, one penny) to $8 for anywhere from 3 seconds of work to about an hour.
Amazon Mechanical Turk does this. Register using an existing Amazon.com account. Sign up for Amazon Payments (they walk you through it). And then go to Amazon Mechanical Turk and find, oh, 15,000 possible "freelance" jobs. Labeled "Human Intelligence Tasks or HITs, these are bite-sized jobs that you do, and you earn real money doing them.
I've earned ONE ENTIRE PENNY using their system, have another THIRTY CENTS waiting to be approved, and will earn another $.50 shortly! Woo hoo!
You won't get rich doing this. Really. But you can convert the pocket change into Amazon.com gift certificates. You can find something fun to do in between reading about Jamie Lynn Spears and Yahoo's demise.
:)
Amazon Mechanical Turk does this. Register using an existing Amazon.com account. Sign up for Amazon Payments (they walk you through it). And then go to Amazon Mechanical Turk and find, oh, 15,000 possible "freelance" jobs. Labeled "Human Intelligence Tasks or HITs, these are bite-sized jobs that you do, and you earn real money doing them.
I've earned ONE ENTIRE PENNY using their system, have another THIRTY CENTS waiting to be approved, and will earn another $.50 shortly! Woo hoo!
You won't get rich doing this. Really. But you can convert the pocket change into Amazon.com gift certificates. You can find something fun to do in between reading about Jamie Lynn Spears and Yahoo's demise.
:)
Friday, May 30, 2008
Internet Program: UPromise
UPromise is simple: register your grocery and drugstore cards, and your credit cards, with UPromise and get small bits of cash back toward college.
I joined in 2002 and now have slightly more than $300 in my account. Once you register your cards, it's passive income.
But for years I thought it had to go straight into a college account called a 529, and opening a 529 involves a fee and paperwork, so I didn't bother.
I recently learned, though, that you can just request a check from UPromise, up to $150 per quarter, and they will send it.
I sent my request off back in December and haven't heard back. I'll try again. That's $300 I didn't have to earn (about $50 a year). You never know if you have some hidden cash there, so if you have an account, check it out: UPromise check request.
I joined in 2002 and now have slightly more than $300 in my account. Once you register your cards, it's passive income.
But for years I thought it had to go straight into a college account called a 529, and opening a 529 involves a fee and paperwork, so I didn't bother.
I recently learned, though, that you can just request a check from UPromise, up to $150 per quarter, and they will send it.
I sent my request off back in December and haven't heard back. I'll try again. That's $300 I didn't have to earn (about $50 a year). You never know if you have some hidden cash there, so if you have an account, check it out: UPromise check request.
Thursday, May 29, 2008
Freelancing: Today.com
Today.com is hiring, and the pay is not so great: $1 per 100+ word post for your first 30 days as a blogger, plus $2 per 1,000 page views.
Now, to be fair, most writers can write 100 words and post them on a blog in about 3-4 minutes. But Today.com limits bloggers to 1 post per day, and makes no guarantees about earnings beyond the first 30 days. You're encouraged to Digg and Stumble and all that Social Media 2.0 The World Is Our Friend jazz, which is great, until you realize you've spent 20 minutes social media-ing a $1 job. How's that hourly rate?
A number of freelancers/write-from-home folks have taken the plunge, because Today.com lets you pick your topic, and off you go--like Associated Content, but with guaranteed pay for 30 days. And who knows where it will go--if you can streamline your time, research, topics, and promotion, it could lead to passive income, like Associated Content and eHow. Nothing like making $25-30/month like I do now for doing, well, nothing with my Associated Content account for almost a year. That's 2 lattes a week! Can you feel the buzz?
If you can get into a decent passive income stream with Today.com, it might be worth a try.
Now, to be fair, most writers can write 100 words and post them on a blog in about 3-4 minutes. But Today.com limits bloggers to 1 post per day, and makes no guarantees about earnings beyond the first 30 days. You're encouraged to Digg and Stumble and all that Social Media 2.0 The World Is Our Friend jazz, which is great, until you realize you've spent 20 minutes social media-ing a $1 job. How's that hourly rate?
A number of freelancers/write-from-home folks have taken the plunge, because Today.com lets you pick your topic, and off you go--like Associated Content, but with guaranteed pay for 30 days. And who knows where it will go--if you can streamline your time, research, topics, and promotion, it could lead to passive income, like Associated Content and eHow. Nothing like making $25-30/month like I do now for doing, well, nothing with my Associated Content account for almost a year. That's 2 lattes a week! Can you feel the buzz?
If you can get into a decent passive income stream with Today.com, it might be worth a try.
Monday, May 19, 2008
Brijit is dead :(
According to Brijit's homepage, and to an email I received:
Brijit had one of the best publishing platforms I've seen, and I've seen plenty since I started dabbling with content management systems in 1998/99.
What a shame. I hope Brijit gets some funding and comes back better than ever. in the meantime, that's one more income stream for some readers that is gone. :(
You've reached this page because, at the moment, Brijit is out of money and can no longer afford to bring you the world in 100 words. We're working hard to find a way forward for our service and hope to relaunch in the not-too-distant future. Thanks to all our loyal readers and writers. And to our Brijit writers: payments in full for all abstracts published through May 15 will be made next week.
Brijit had one of the best publishing platforms I've seen, and I've seen plenty since I started dabbling with content management systems in 1998/99.
What a shame. I hope Brijit gets some funding and comes back better than ever. in the meantime, that's one more income stream for some readers that is gone. :(
Saturday, May 3, 2008
Freelancing: More on Demand Studios, $15 per article
So I briefly mentioned Demand Studios a few posts ago. I received an email from them shortly after, inviting me to write for them using their new content management system. I went in and checked it out.
They pay $15 for writing one "eHow" article. You can claim up to 10 articles at a time (or less, of you like) and you have 1 week to write them. The articles expire if you don't write them by the deadline, and then go back into the content management system queue for others to claim and write.
The writing system is simple: there is a basic form you follow, and it's 1000% better than Associated Content's submission form, and has a much better look and feel than Constant Content as well.
If you know your topic well, you can write an entire article in 15-20 minutes. The article is approved, and you receive an email informing you that it was approved and to expect PayPal payment within 7 days. I received my approval and then payment within 3 days, so I am impressed.
Like Associated Content, though, I wonder if this is just the beginning of a process that will decline in quality. When AC began, they paid a relatively steady $10-12 per article and accepted almost all submissions. Then as supply increased, they lowered their payments and began rejecting more. Now writers are lucky to be paid at all, with some experiencing 50% rejection rates and $3.01 payments.
So--get in now while Demand Studios is paying well. Go to their site at http://www.demandstudios.com to apply.
They pay $15 for writing one "eHow" article. You can claim up to 10 articles at a time (or less, of you like) and you have 1 week to write them. The articles expire if you don't write them by the deadline, and then go back into the content management system queue for others to claim and write.
The writing system is simple: there is a basic form you follow, and it's 1000% better than Associated Content's submission form, and has a much better look and feel than Constant Content as well.
If you know your topic well, you can write an entire article in 15-20 minutes. The article is approved, and you receive an email informing you that it was approved and to expect PayPal payment within 7 days. I received my approval and then payment within 3 days, so I am impressed.
Like Associated Content, though, I wonder if this is just the beginning of a process that will decline in quality. When AC began, they paid a relatively steady $10-12 per article and accepted almost all submissions. Then as supply increased, they lowered their payments and began rejecting more. Now writers are lucky to be paid at all, with some experiencing 50% rejection rates and $3.01 payments.
So--get in now while Demand Studios is paying well. Go to their site at http://www.demandstudios.com to apply.
Sunday, April 20, 2008
Internet program: Ebates $10 bonus right now
I've been using Ebates for ages--1999? 2000? I've earned around $400 in dribs and drabs. You get a percentages of online purchases back as a rebate (Ebate) by shopping through their links. Like MyPoints, you earn something for activity you do everyday. Unlike MyPoints, you get straight cash with Ebates, instead of points that you exchange for gift cards.
Ebates is having a no-brainer, simple promotion right now: sign up, make 1 purchase through Ebates, and get a $10 bonus ($5 cash, $10 Target gift card--your choice). Learn more here: Ebates $10 promotion.
In the interest of full disclosure: I earn a gift card when you sign up through this link. Such is the Way of the Internet Kickback.
Ebates is having a no-brainer, simple promotion right now: sign up, make 1 purchase through Ebates, and get a $10 bonus ($5 cash, $10 Target gift card--your choice). Learn more here: Ebates $10 promotion.
In the interest of full disclosure: I earn a gift card when you sign up through this link. Such is the Way of the Internet Kickback.
Wednesday, April 9, 2008
Freelancing: Demand Studios
Well, fiddle-dee-dee! I may be rich someday! Just checked and through the end of February 2008, I've earned $1.74 on Squidoo!
I also have $.50 sitting in my Constant Content account. Hmmm. Time to post more articles.
I haven't posted anything new on Associated Content since June, but I make a steady $20 per month. My most popular article? Check it out.
Here's another site to try: Demand Studios. They send assignments out in groups of 10. 10 articles for $150. They pay via PayPal, and get good reviews from folks at Associated Content.
Happy earning!
I also have $.50 sitting in my Constant Content account. Hmmm. Time to post more articles.
I haven't posted anything new on Associated Content since June, but I make a steady $20 per month. My most popular article? Check it out.
Here's another site to try: Demand Studios. They send assignments out in groups of 10. 10 articles for $150. They pay via PayPal, and get good reviews from folks at Associated Content.
Happy earning!
Tuesday, April 8, 2008
Charter Member at HomeStars, Bzzagent, and more....
Try this: HomeStars Click on "You're invited to become a Charter Member"--you earn a $20 Amazon gift certificate for writing 5 reviews of local home improvement contractors and retailers, telling 5 friends, and filling out your basic profile.
You can also try BzzAgent at BzzAgent
I joined about 3 years ago. Got some great coupons for cream cheese--just as I went dairy-free. Oops.
I've known folks who received free Senseo machines back when they were the hot new thang. I just donated mine to Goodwill because frankly, the pods suck, are expensive, and the machines (we used a Melitta and later the Senseo) leak.
And more...check out Constant Content again. I mention it because apparently, this blog is the 4th ranked term when you do a Google search for "Constant Content," and I think that's cool.
You can also try BzzAgent at BzzAgent
I joined about 3 years ago. Got some great coupons for cream cheese--just as I went dairy-free. Oops.
I've known folks who received free Senseo machines back when they were the hot new thang. I just donated mine to Goodwill because frankly, the pods suck, are expensive, and the machines (we used a Melitta and later the Senseo) leak.
And more...check out Constant Content again. I mention it because apparently, this blog is the 4th ranked term when you do a Google search for "Constant Content," and I think that's cool.
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