Free List of Work at Home Jobs: 12/05/07

Writing Jobs
Writer for Men’s Buying Guide
Writer for Educational Projects
Interview Me and Write Articles for My Website
Seeking Mama’s with Writing Mojo
Website Content/SEO Writer
One-Time Jingle Writer
Museum Grant Writer
Professional PR Writer
Seasoned Writer Needed

Technical Jobs
Freelance Web Developer
PHP Developer
Web Developer/SEO
Flash/Web Developer

Design Jobs
Freelance Production Artist
CAD Design of Screw Mechanism
Graphic Artist
T-Shirt Designer
Graphic Designers Needed

Everything Else
Proofreader - Initial Training in NYC
Freelance Marketing/Ad Copy
Hebrew English Editor

I’m looking for suggestions on new jobs I should be searching for, as well as, a better way of listing them. Let me know what you guys want to see. Leave a comment or respond to the email if you get it delivered.

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4 Responses to “Free List of Work at Home Jobs: 12/05/07”

  1. Steve, as far as suggestions on new jobs is concerned, how about listings for people who don’t have college degrees, who didn’t study programing, design or writing.
    More types of jobs that the average person could do.
    I realize that the easy answer is Data Entry, what everybody would like to do. Since that is probably out of the question, on a mass scale anyway, maybe short term, one time projects, (entering data into excel spreadsheets, typing documents from hard copy), would be the answer. At least until a company comes to realize the actual benefits of the telecommuter.
    As far as better listings, I guess you could include the pay rate with the title to help those who are looking for work based on pay. How a quick note on education requirements for the position? Or maybe a note if the company is willing to train.
    Your listing of titles by groups is very clear from my standpoint.

  2. Thanks for the feedback Mike. The reasoning behind the lack of ‘anybody can do it jobs’ is because these jobs are either: quickly filled or exploited to hell. Searching ‘data entry’ in craigslist will yield 500 spam postings for every 1 legitimate post. There just isn’t enough time in the day to weed through them all. That’s not even mentioning overseas competition. From a business standpoint, would you pay $10/hr to an American worker or $2/hr to an Indian outsourcing firm for the same work? Hopefully this puts it into perspective as to why jobs everyone can do aren’t usually listed.

    I’ll try and include pay rate and I’ll make notes on education requirements.

    Thanks for the feedback. Truly appreciated.

  3. Hi Steve,

    I think everything looks great!

    I don’t think your going to get consistent info as far as pay and education requirements for each post.
    I think it’d kludge things up having some info here and there, incomplete.

    Plus, it’s extra work for you. C’mon, I can read the posts myself if I’m interested.

    On another note:
    I’d like to see more feedback from those who actually have gotten jobs off the list.
    Or elsewhere, for that matter…

    Are most “success stories” from those who have worked and online job post into a telecommute job, or from those who have turned an on location job into a telecommute job, or from those who have started their own businesses and are working from home.

    I want to see more forum-style action, baby!
    More community involvement!

  4. The old site used to have a forum, but hardly anyone participated in it. Is there enough interest in bringing it back? Is this something everyone would want?

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