$50/hour seems really low. It makes me think that the elves are inexperienced or that this is just a thin wrapper around Mechanical Turk or oDesk.
EDIT: This was not meant to be a criticism of whoever built this, but a bit of marketing advice.
As someone who might use a service like this, I would pause before using short-term contract programmers that cost $50 an hour. Consultancies bill out fresh grads at rates considerably higher than that, and if there's any slack time at all between tasks then the elves are being billed out at less than $50/hour. That rate seems more suspiciously cheap than like a good deal.
At the start the founders will fill the requests, and slowly onboard staff. While the founders are filling the requests they're possibly running at a "loss" from opportunity cost, but I can easily see them being willing to do that.
Wrapping odesk or MTurk is the last thing they'd want to do. It kills the edge they have, of zero project management overhead.
Yeah, I do a fair amount of small Python gigs in my free time and $50 seems a bit low to me as well. Just talked to a head hunter the other week, and was told their Python devs are commanding much more than $50/hr. Makes me wonder what was going on behind the curtains here as well.
Not just that it's low, it's also a fact that little jobs have more uncovered overhead. It's a new domain that you have to wrap your head around, etc. No body knows right off the top of their head to get everything done. I don't see the pricing as viable.
Assuming the workers are employed full-time, $25/h is about $4000/month. That's a pretty good salary for an average programmer in Portugal (Europe!), even before taxes.
On the other hand, these elves are getting paid $50/hour while they do market research and get free product ideas. I'm guessing the only reason they charge is because no one would trust a free service.
Damn, I just wish I had built this first. Well done.
Interesting. I've just converted it back to a salary figure for the UK. As a salary that works out at £58,000 - which is considerably higher than the average salary in this part of the UK.
However, given in practice it's essentially contract work it's about 30% less than average contracting rates.
If they manage to get paid work equivalent to working full time though, they'll be earning a fair whack more than me, so good on them.
Whether it seems reasonable or trustable probably depends an awful lot on where you are based.
What do you think is a fair market rate? Are there sites that offer higher rates than this for the contractors for short term gigs? It kind of interests me there if there are opportunities for doing short half day scope projects.
I dunno, my first programming job was for a consultancy that billed me out at $125/hour to do small jobs. Somewhere in the $80-$150 range? Maybe more, since their examples highlight jobs that take as little as half an hour.
I think you're assuming that the people completing the tasks are receiving the full $50/hour, which would mean no managers, no salespeople, no accounts receivable staff, and no office.
I'd imagine for say, the dog app you had some exploratory code, otherwise if that went wrong 1/2 hour seems like it could go over if there is any issue?
I'm curious if there is a market, as it seems nice to not have to bother about sorting out requirements files, dealing with deployment, etc etc ... you get to write pure code.. do people buy it ?
If anyone knows a service like this for getting custom Dockerfiles, please share. I run multiple containers on my home network and often have minor complaints about the Dockerfiles without the time to fix them up e.g. "it should have a bootstrap.sh that supports these additional 5 variables"
Services like these seem to only be able to handle small standalone scripts, rather than work in integrated codebases, which require time and dedication to the projects. How is there a market for this, when most developers capable of understanding what programs can do are also capable of writing prototype implementations of them?
The programmers might just want to save time to work on more important stuff. There are also technically-able people who can't program but might need a script to perform some mundane task (like their dog image example).
For the long tasks, like the example for a Pinterest clone, you could have a tool/walkthrough/FAQ about how to break up large tasks in to manageable tasks? Or perhaps the first task would be to create a development plan for the smaller tasks?
EDIT: This was not meant to be a criticism of whoever built this, but a bit of marketing advice.
As someone who might use a service like this, I would pause before using short-term contract programmers that cost $50 an hour. Consultancies bill out fresh grads at rates considerably higher than that, and if there's any slack time at all between tasks then the elves are being billed out at less than $50/hour. That rate seems more suspiciously cheap than like a good deal.