Ask HN: Is there any part-time dev jobs listing?
I'm a CS student and also a web developer on my free time. I've been freelancing for several companies with modern PHP frameworks (Laravel) and some other companies that use Ruby (on Rails) for the past couple years, mostly backend and API work.
I've been getting most of my jobs from oDesk (yeah..), which is a major PITA. Even when the client is decent (which is hard to find but possible) I still have to deal with a 10% pay cut and that stalker tracking software that doesn't even work properly on OS X.
There's an huge offer for full-time jobs listings and I was wondering if:
a) Is there a listing for people looking for part-time only?
b) If not, are there enough companies and freelancers looking for part-time jobs/people?
I'm currently running out of work and I'd be up for creating a simple website (similar to http://nomadjobs.io to give you an idea) for this specific situation if there's a need for it.
TL;DR: CS Student. Finding part-time dev work is hard. Should I create a website for people in my situation?
19 comments
[ 4.7 ms ] story [ 83.1 ms ] threadIt's hard to attract jobs without candidates and even harder to attract candidates without having open jobs. Worst of all in your case is that you content(job post) has a short lifespan.
It's possible but don't do it unless you're passionate about it.
Try these for PT work. http://gun.io http://codementor.io http://meetup.com
Assuming you live in a major city, there are lots of Meetups hosted at co-working offices. These spaces are brilliant for someone like you looking for work because they are flush with bootstrapped companies who only need a little bit of work. They have a little bit of cash, motivated, and potentially right on the verge of launching/reaching scale.
Once you're in the office space, find out how to get invited to whatever messageboard they use for internal communication. You will use it to advertise your services. After you get signed up into their chat system, just walk around the meetup and start introducing yourself.
Also it's frustrating that many of the "mentees" are students who are desperate to turn in a homework assignment the very next day after they post for codementor.
I enjoy teaching the younguns, but please don't leave it until the very last minute.
I am definitely interested in part time development work, and am not aware of any sites that have that as their main differentiator.
OP, it'd be interesting to see this site up and running. However, I'd think carefully about what kind of part time work you are trying to have listed on the site:
Part time work is harder to find because there are certain fixed costs of managing labor, and it's nice if you can amortize those across as many hours/week as you can, but as a contractor it helps me have more than one opportunity to earn income at one time.You'll have some challenges to solve in order to enter but IMO it's worth it
I believe it pays way more than elance / odesk (however, I didn't really try hard there because prices are so low it would have barely sustained me) but my rate is still way below a good consultant rate of say 1k$ per day.
But it's good enough to live well even in an expensive city such as Luxembourg.
Just mind it's an investment so you should be good at what you're doing and have a few spare days spread throughout the next weeks in order to jump through all their coding / interview hoops.
Cheers,
What worked for me is instead create an open-source project or even mini-project like some JS plugin, make a LinkedIn account, get your StackOverflow account, make sure each refers to the other, then (drum roll), you'll get offers flying in and you'll have to fend them off or start ignoring them as they will get annoying and that's a better problem to have.
The funny thing is, if you create that site, you'll probably get great offers because of that rather than a listing itself but beware of making another odesk that marginalizes its workers and try to attract big dollar companies to look at that rather than chump-changers.