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Free money-back guarantee on every project
A money-back guarantee is vital for your protection, safety
and peace of mind. Only
vWorker gives you
a free
money-back guarantee on every type of project.
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| Has a free money-back guarantee on every project? |
more...
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| Free money-back guarantee on
all fixed-price?
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more...
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more... *1
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more... *1
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more... *1
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more...
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vWorker.com gives you a
triple-point money-back guarantee tm*:
The worker will fully complete and deliver
100% of the contracted work and do it will be up to industry-expected
standards. They will also deliver it by the deadline and on budget. If they don't
you get your money back. And on projects more than
$150.00 USD there is a
fourth guarantee * point on communication: The
worker will
file weekly status reports or your money back.
Click here for more details on
vWorker.com guarantees.
Elance does not have a money-back guarantee. It instead offers a
more limited " Fixed Price Work Guarantee".
If you want your money back, Elance will "assist both parties in finding a resolution
to the dispute".
However, if "push comes to shove" and the other party doesn't voluntarily hand you
back your money, Elance will not intervene. Instead, you must go to arbitration to
retrieve your money, and
this process is not free (costs
$99 or $199).
Other sites that offer a money-back guarantee, do it for free.
You can compare this feature across sites here.
July 19th, 2010: Elance's CEO, Fabio Rosati, asked for
an opportunity to be quoted on this item. He said
that the Elance fee for arbitrations "is due to requirements that Elance must
adhere to by operating a State of California licensed escrow service
in which Elance cannot act as both Escrow Agent and Arbitrator."
*1: These sites'
mandatory pre-arbitration processes allow an abusive worker to stall the start of
arbitration (and prevent you from beginning the process required to
get your money back) for weeks.
You can compare this feature across sites here.
Guru provides a money-back guarantee on fixed-price (via
arbitration like all sites that offer such a guarantee).
However they charge you 5% of the project price (with a minimum of $25) to do this, which
may make it too expensive to exercise the money
back-guarantee on your project.
You can compare this feature across sites here.
Freelancer provides a money-back guarantee on fixed-price (via
arbitration like all sites that offer such a guarantee).
However they charge you 2% of the project price (with a minimum of $10) to do this, which
may make it too expensive to exercise the money
back-guarantee on your project. Additionally, Freelancer limits
arbitration to projects with milestone payments
of more than $30.
You can compare this feature across sites here.
Scriptlance
does not provide a money-back guarantee.
If there is a dispute, Scriptlance
says in their contract:
"We do not act as an arbitrator between parties, should a dispute arise, except in limited situations."
Other sites that offer a money-back guarantee do not have this limitation. You can compare this feature across sites here.
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| Free money-back guarantee on
all hourly?
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more...
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*3 |
*3 |
*3 |
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*3: No money-back guarantee. These sites implement hourly in a manner that
allows an abusive worker to bill you for hours not worked, because they
neglect to do one ore more of the following:
- Require the worker to validate their billed hours by punching in
and out of a real-time timecard system.
- Require the worker to demonstrate that they were at their
workstation by recording their web-cam during billed
hours.
- Require the worker to demonstrate that they were working
on your project by recording their computer desktop during billed hours.
You can compare this feature across sites
here.
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| Free money-back guarantee on
all crowdsourcing?
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details...
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$5 +
more...
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$39 +
more...
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Freelancer money-back guarantee costs $5. It
"excludes the US $5 contest fee and other purchased upgrades".
Click here for more
details.
Crowdspring does not refund a $39 listing fee as well as any add-on options
you chose.
Click here for more
details.
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| Free money-back guarantee on
all trialsourcing?
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details...
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vWorker.com lets you choose the best free money-back guarantee
payment model for your
project
. This allows you to choose between safety and affordability for every project
. No other competitor offers you this flexibility.
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View: key |
index |
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Outsourcing:
fixed-price
You pay the worker
once you receive the final project
(or on each milestone).
vWorker was the first site to offer this model with the safety features of
escrowing and arbitration.
Our protections are still the strongest, most thorough and timely.
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| Offers basic
fixed-price
? |
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| Free money-back guarantee on
all fixed-price?
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more...
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more... *1
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more... *1
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more... *1
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more...
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vWorker.com gives you a
triple-point money-back guarantee tm*:
The worker will fully complete and deliver
100% of the contracted work and do it will be up to industry-expected
standards. They will also deliver it by the deadline and on budget. If they don't
you get your money back. And on projects more than
$150.00 USD there is a
fourth guarantee * point on communication: The
worker will
file weekly status reports or your money back.
Click here for more details on
vWorker.com guarantees.
Elance does not have a money-back guarantee. It instead offers a
more limited " Fixed Price Work Guarantee".
If you want your money back, Elance will "assist both parties in finding a resolution
to the dispute".
However, if "push comes to shove" and the other party doesn't voluntarily hand you
back your money, Elance will not intervene. Instead, you must go to arbitration to
retrieve your money, and
this process is not free (costs
$99 or $199).
Other sites that offer a money-back guarantee, do it for free.
You can compare this feature across sites here.
July 19th, 2010: Elance's CEO, Fabio Rosati, asked for
an opportunity to be quoted on this item. He said
that the Elance fee for arbitrations "is due to requirements that Elance must
adhere to by operating a State of California licensed escrow service
in which Elance cannot act as both Escrow Agent and Arbitrator."
*1: These sites'
mandatory pre-arbitration processes allow an abusive worker to stall the start of
arbitration (and prevent you from beginning the process required to
get your money back) for weeks.
You can compare this feature across sites here.
Guru provides a money-back guarantee on fixed-price (via
arbitration like all sites that offer such a guarantee).
However they charge you 5% of the project price (with a minimum of $25) to do this, which
may make it too expensive to exercise the money
back-guarantee on your project.
You can compare this feature across sites here.
Freelancer provides a money-back guarantee on fixed-price (via
arbitration like all sites that offer such a guarantee).
However they charge you 2% of the project price (with a minimum of $10) to do this, which
may make it too expensive to exercise the money
back-guarantee on your project. Additionally, Freelancer limits
arbitration to projects with milestone payments
of more than $30.
You can compare this feature across sites here.
Scriptlance
does not provide a money-back guarantee.
If there is a dispute, Scriptlance
says in their contract:
"We do not act as an arbitrator between parties, should a dispute arise, except in limited situations."
Other sites that offer a money-back guarantee do not have this limitation. You can compare this feature across sites here.
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Free sign-up,
project
posting and worker selection? |
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more... |
more... |
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Elance charges a non-refundable $10 to set up your account.
(See the Elance FAQ and click on "How do I set up an Elance account?")
The majority of sites do not charge a sign-up fee.
Freelancer charges you:
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$5 to post a project.
If you select a worker
and pay their selection fee (detailed below), then
this is refunded to you. If you don't (for example: if you
couldn't find a good bidder), then it is not.
The majority of other sites do not charge a posting fee.
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3% of the project ($3 minimum) to
select a worker. (Note: if you pay extra to be a gold member, they will not recharge you in this manner.)
The majority of other sites do not charge a selection fee.
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Freelancer charges employers from
Australia an additional 10% GST tax.
The majority of other sites do not charge a GST fee.
Scriptlance charges you a $5 fee, when you
select a worker.
The majority of sites do not
charge this fee.
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Protects your money with escrowing?
more...
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more...
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Non-escrowing sites force you to choose between two potentially unpleasant
alternatives:
- Upfront deposit (the traditional method): Pay the worker in advance (either partially or fully)
to begin work. Unfortunately, this can result in the worker delivering substandard work to you
(or not work at all), and having no way to retrieve your money.
- Withhold funds from the worker until the end (or a milestone is completed). This
can result in the worker prioritizing your project lower (or abandoning it completely)
in favor of other projects where they
are guaranteed to be paid. It also tends to encourage a distrustful working relationship
which can
result in problems such as the worker refusing to do little ambiguous items that they
otherwise would have
been happy to do, if they knew they would be paid for them.
vWorker.com pioneered the concept of escrowing in the industry to solve these problems, when it was created
in 2001, and since then many sites also offer this critical feature.
When you escrow, you deposit funds into a separate account at the beginning of the project
and only authorize release to the worker when you receive the final deliverables (or milestone if you
prefer). This gives the worker confidence that you will pay them
while still allowing you to retain full control of the payment to them.
oDesk does not offer escrowing on fixed-price project
s, which forces you to choose between two potentially unpleasant alternatives.
Click here for
more information.
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| Arbitration:
more... |
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Arbitration enables you to receive a refund when a worker
doesn't do the work, and is the feature that makes escrowing effective and safe.
Different sites offer very different arbitration processes and speeds. Below is
a comparison of features across sites.
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Offers (at least) basic arbitration? |
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more...
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Scriptlance
does not provide a money-back guarantee.
If there is a dispute, Scriptlance
says in their contract:
"We do not act as an arbitrator between parties, should a dispute arise, except in limited situations."
Other sites that offer a money-back guarantee do not have this limitation.
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Offers it on all projects? |
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more...
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Elance offers arbitrations on all projects (regardless of size). However,
since it charges $99 or $199 for each arbitration,
in actual practice you may find it too expensive to invoke on smaller projects.
The majority of sites that offer a money-back guarantee, do so for free and do not have
this limitation on smaller projects.
Freelancer limits arbitration to project
s with milestone payments of more than $30. You can compare this feature across
sites here.
Scriptlance
does not provide a money-back guarantee.
If there is a dispute, Scriptlance
says in their contract:
"We do not act as an arbitrator between parties, should a dispute arise, except in limited situations."
Other sites that offer a money-back guarantee do not have this limitation.
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Offers it free of charge? |
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$99 or $199
more... |
5% ($25 minimum)
more...
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Elance charges $99 or $199 for each
arbitration, which
may make it too expensive to exercise the
money-back guarantee on your project.
The majority of sites that offer a money-back guarantee, do so for free.
Guru charges 5% if mediation/arbitration is required.
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Avoids "Pay Extra or Lose Your Guarantee" rules?
more... |
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$99 or $199
more... |
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5% of milestone ($5 minimum)
more... |
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Sites that charge you for arbitration often also have potentially expensive "Pay
Extra or Lose Your Guarantee" challenge rules. Such a rule says that the worker
can challenge you at any time with an arbitration. If they do, you *must* pay a
non-refundable fee for the arbitration, or lose your money (and your money back
guarantee). Sites that don't charge for arbitration, don't force potentially
expensive "Pay Extra or Lose Your Guarantee" rules on you.
On Elance, the worker can challenge you at any time with an arbitration. If they
do, you *must* pay the non-refundable arbitration fee (either
$66 or $133.33), or lose your money (and forfeit your money back
guarantee). Other sites don't charge for arbitration, and don't force
potentially expensive "Pay Extra or Lose Your Guarantee" rules on you.
On Freelancer, the worker can challenge you at any time with an arbitration. If
they do, you *must* pay the non-refundable arbitration fee ( 5% of the milestone amount
with a $5 minimum), or lose your money (and forfeit your money back
guarantee).(*Note 12/20/2010: This fee went up from a previous charge by Freelancer of 2%.)
Other sites don't charge for arbitration, and don't force
potentially expensive "Pay Extra or Lose Your Guarantee" rules on you.
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Prevents abusive workers
from stalling arbitration start? |
*5
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Worker
can stall up to 10 business days
more...
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Worker
can stall up to 10 business days
more... |
Worker
can stall up to 17+ days
more... |
more...
*5
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*5: These sites allow you to begin an arbitration immediately.
A worker
intent on abusing the system can stall the start of arbitration on Elance for 10
business days and during this period your money is not available to you. During
the first phase (dispute assistance), the worker
has up to 2 business days to respond, and can make this phase last up to 5
additional business days (7 business days total). After this, the arbitration
phase "begins", but does actually start because the worker
is given 3 business days to acknowledge the notice of arbitration, and then
another 3 business days if they did not acknowledge the first notice. Only at
this point is arbitration actually started. See the
Elance contract for more information.
A worker
intent on abusing the system can stall the start of arbitration on Guru for 20
business days and during this period your money is not available to you. Guru
allows them up to 10 days in mandatory mediation before the site will force them
into arbitration. See the
Guru contract for more information.
A worker
intent on abusing the system can stall the arbitration on Freelancer for 17+
days and during this period your money is not available to you. During this
time, the site moves them through 3 stages into the final arbitration stage.
Specifically: Freelancer requires you to submit to a mandatory round where the worker
makes up to 3 bids to get you to reduce the price of the contract in exchange
for stopping the process. In the next round, the worker
has up to 7 days to submit evidence, and 3 additional days to accept round #1 or
continue. After this, the workers
has up to 7 days to deposit the arbitration fee. See the
Freelancer.com contract for more information.
Scriptlance
does not provide a money-back guarantee.
If there is a dispute, Scriptlance
says in their contract:
"We do not act as an arbitrator between parties, should a dispute arise, except in limited situations."
Other sites that offer a money-back guarantee do not have this limitation.
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Takes how long to complete arbitrations (from dispute initiation to close)? |
45% under a day. 75% under a week.
details...
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*6 |
*6 |
*6 |
*6 |
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*6: This site does not publicize statistics on their maximum times to close
arbitrations.
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Posts detailed rules to the public on how arbitrators make their
decisions? |
12 pages
view...
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| Enables you to receive an on-time
delivery guarantee from the
worker
via a forfeitable deposit?
more...
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more...
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Some workers
are better at meeting deadlines than others, and when you have a critical and
time-sensitive project
you need a way to quickly differentiate between the two. The most effective way
to do this is to require the worker
to guarantee on-time delivery with a deposit (which they only get back if they
make the deadline). This significantly discourages less qualified workers
from bidding on your project
, and financially aligns the worker
you do select more closely with your own situation, resulting in a better
partnership.
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| Enables you to get an immediate refund
if worker
misses required status report?
more...
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more...
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Requiring a status report is a good way to make sure your
worker
is making good progress and hasn't neglected or abandoned your project
. Some sites have this feature built in, and allow you to get a refund
immediately if a report is missed. This provides a powerful incentive to the worker
to keep on top of your project
.
You can require a mandatory weekly status report on all project
s $150 or more.
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| Fees
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These fees are paid by the worker and not by you.
However, they may be passed on to you in the form of higher
prices.
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Project fees:
more...
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7.5% - 15.0%
details... |
8.75%
(6.75% if over $10,000)
details...
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10% (5% if worker pays for upgraded membership)
details... |
13% total (Employer 3%, Worker 10%).
Worker pays only 3% with upgraded membership.
details... |
5%
details... |
10%
details... |
15% - 45%
details... |
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The fees are calculated as a percentage of the project price.
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Subscription fees: |
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Optional $9.95/month - $39.95/month
more... |
Optional $9.95/month - $45.44/month
more... |
Optional $4.95/month - $49.95/month.
more...
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Workers on Elance cannot place more than 3 bids a month
unless they pay a subscription fee
($9.95/month for 20, $19.94/month for 40 or
$39.95/month for 60). This may reduce the number of bids you receive and the worker may pass these fees on to you in the form of a higher price. The majority of sites do not charge subscription fees.
Workers on Guru cannot place more than 10 bids a month
unless they pay a subscription fee
($9.95-$34.95/month for 100 bids for a person,
$12.94-$45.44/month for 100 bids for a company). This may reduce the number of bids you receive and the worker may pass these fees on to you in the form of a higher price. The majority of sites do not charge subscription fees.
Workers on Freelancer cannot place more than 10 bids a month
unless they pay a
subscription fee
to Freelancer. (At the $24.95/month rate, it also reduces their
commission fee from 10% to 5%). The worker may pass these fees on to you in the form of a higher price. The majority of sites do not charge subscription fees.
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Employer verification fees:
more...
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Free |
$5
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N/A
*10 |
N/A
*10 |
Free |
$10 |
N/A
*10 |
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Verifications are a safety feature that ensure the employer is the
legitimate owner of their credit card or PayPal account. They protect
the owner from someone else using their payment method without their
authorization and give the opposite party the assurance that the
employer can truly pay. They are mandatory on all sites that offer them.
Only vWorker and Scriptlance do not charge for this service.
This site does not offer the protection of a verification
feature.
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Additional Fees:
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N/A |
10% GST tax fee for Australians |
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Workers on Guru are charged
charged 2.5%
if the
employer uses
Pay Pal or charged up to 4%
if the employer
uses a credit card. The worker may pass these fees on to you in the form of a higher price. The majority of sites do not charge these fees.
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Cheapest over the long-term:
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View...
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View... |
View... |
View... |
View... |
View... |
View... |
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View: key |
index |
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Outsourcing:
hourly
You pay the worker
by the hour.
vWorker's features give you the most
protection, strongest supervision and cost you the
least.
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| Offers basic
hourly
? |
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| Free money-back guarantee on
all hourly?
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more...
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*3 |
*3 |
*3 |
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*3: No money-back guarantee. These sites implement hourly in a manner that
allows an abusive worker to bill you for hours not worked, because they
neglect to do one ore more of the following:
- Require the worker to validate their billed hours by punching in
and out of a real-time timecard system.
- Require the worker to demonstrate that they were at their
workstation by recording their web-cam during billed
hours.
- Require the worker to demonstrate that they were working
on your project by recording their computer desktop during billed hours.
You can compare this feature across sites
here.
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Free sign-up,
project
posting and worker selection? |
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|
more... |
more... |
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Elance charges a non-refundable $10 to set up your account.
(See the Elance FAQ and click on "How do I set up an Elance account?")
The majority of sites do not charge a sign-up fee.
Freelancer charges you:
-
$5 to post a project.
If you select a worker
and pay their selection fee (detailed below), then
this is refunded to you. If you don't (for example: if you
couldn't find a good bidder), then it is not.
The majority of other sites do not charge a posting fee.
-
3% of the project ($3 minimum) to
select a worker. (Note: if you pay extra to be a gold member, they will not recharge you in this manner.)
The majority of other sites do not charge a selection fee.
-
Freelancer charges employers from
Australia an additional 10% GST tax.
The majority of other sites do not charge a GST fee.
Scriptlance charges you a $5 fee, when you
select a worker.
The majority of sites do not
charge this fee.
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| Protects your money with escrowing?
more... |
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|
|
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|
Non-escrowing sites force you to choose between two potentially unpleasant
alternatives:
- Upfront deposit (the traditional method): Pay the worker in advance (either partially or fully)
to begin work. Unfortunately, this can result in the worker delivering substandard work to you
(or not work at all), and having no way to retrieve your money.
- Withhold funds from the worker until the end (or a milestone is completed). This
can result in the worker prioritizing your project lower (or abandoning it completely)
in favor of other projects where they
are guaranteed to be paid. It also tends to encourage a distrustful working relationship
which can
result in problems such as the worker refusing to do little ambiguous items that they
otherwise would have
been happy to do, if they knew they would be paid for them.
vWorker.com pioneered the concept of escrowing in the industry to solve these problems, when it was created
in 2001, and since then many sites also offer this critical feature.
When you escrow, you deposit funds into a separate account at the beginning of the project
and only authorize release to the worker when you receive the final deliverables (or milestone if you
prefer). This gives the worker confidence that you will pay them
while still allowing you to retain full control of the payment to them.
Elance does not offer escrowing on hourly project
s, which forces you to choose between two potentially unpleasant alternatives.
Click here for more
information.
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Requires your worker
to verify their billing by punching in and out to a real-time timecard? |
more... |
*8a |
*8 |
*8 |
*8 |
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*8a: The ability to verify this is
optional
on hourly projects on Elance, but available via WorkView.
*8: These sites do not require the worker
to punch-in and out in real-time, which allows an abusive worker
to log and bill you for time that they did not work.
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Lets you verify your worker
's activity by recording their desktop during billed hours? |
more... |
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N/A |
N/A |
N/A |
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more... |
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*9: These sites do not record the worker
's desktop during billed hours, so you cannot detect when a worker
is billing you for time when they are working on something else (or not working
at all).
Liveperson does not record the worker
's desktop, but requires them to be interact with you via a chat session during
billed hours, which indirectly allows you to monitor their activity.
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Let's you verify your worker
's presence and alertness (i.e. make sure they haven't fallen asleep) by
monitoring their webcam during billed hours?
|
more... |
*10a |
N/A |
N/A |
N/A |
|
more...
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*10a: Elance does not offer this ability. As a result your worker may bill you
for time they aren't present (i.e. using a keyclick program to 'pretend' to be
working) or are not alert (i.e. sleeping). Click here for
more details.
*10: These sites do not allow you to monitor your worker
's webcam during billed hours, so you can't tell if they've billed you for time
when they've left their workstation or fallen asleep.
Liveperson does not record the worker
's webcam, but requires them to be interact with you via a chat session during
billed hours, which indirectly allows you to monitor their activity.
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Maximum supervision of desktop?
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10-15 images / hour
more... |
6 images / hour
more... |
N/A |
N/A |
N/A |
6 images / hour
more... |
N/A |
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vWorker takes 10-15 images per hour (or once every
4-6 minutes) to let you watch the work as it evolves
and identify and weed-out workers who are too slow or
incompetent.
Some other sites only take 6 per hour (or once
every 10 minutes). That works okay when your worker is
doing well,
and doesn't require any close supervision. But if you
suspect they are working too slowly or incompetently, you
need more frequent images to be able to see what they
were doing. Otherwise you are forced to guess or ignore
the issue.
Elance takes images of the worker's desktop (and optional
webcam) 6 times per hour (or about once every 10 minutes).
This can be fine if the worker is doing a good job and you
don't need to watch their work closely. However, if you
suspect they are slow or incompetent, there is not
enough detail to determine what they were truly doing.
As a result, you must either guess or ignore the issue.
vWorker takes 10-15 images per hour (or once every
4-6 minutes). This lets you watch their work as it evolves,
and identify and weed-out workers who are too slow or
incompetent.
Odesk takes images of the worker's desktop (and optional
webcam) 6 times per hour (or about once every 10 minutes).
This can be fine if the worker is doing a good job and you
don't need to watch their work closely. However, if you
suspect they are slow or incompetent, there is not
enough detail to determine what they were truly doing.
As a result, you must either guess or ignore the issue.
vWorker takes 10-15 images per hour (or once every
4-6 minutes). This lets you watch their work as it evolves,
and identify and weed-out workers who are too slow or
incompetent.
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| Fees
|
|
These fees are paid by the worker and not by you.
However, they may be passed on to you in the form of higher
prices.
|
|
Project fees:
more...
|
6.5% - 9.0%
details... |
8.75%
(6.75% if over $10,000)
details...
|
10% (5% if worker pays for upgraded membership)
details... |
13% total (Employer 3%, Worker 10%).
Worker pays only 3% with upgraded membership.
details... |
5%
details... |
10%
details... |
15% - 45%
details... |
|
|
|
The fees are calculated as a percentage of the project price.
|
|
Subscription fees: |
|
Optional $9.95/month - $39.95/month
more... |
Optional $9.95/month - $45.44/month
more... |
Optional $4.95/month - $49.95/month.
more...
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Workers on Elance cannot place more than 3 bids a month
unless they pay a subscription fee
($9.95/month for 20, $19.94/month for 40 or
$39.95/month for 60). This may reduce the number of bids you receive and the worker may pass these fees on to you in the form of a higher price. The majority of sites do not charge subscription fees.
Workers on Guru cannot place more than 10 bids a month
unless they pay a subscription fee
($9.95-$34.95/month for 100 bids for a person,
$12.94-$45.44/month for 100 bids for a company). This may reduce the number of bids you receive and the worker may pass these fees on to you in the form of a higher price. The majority of sites do not charge subscription fees.
Workers on Freelancer cannot place more than 10 bids a month
unless they pay a
subscription fee
to Freelancer. (At the $24.95/month rate, it also reduces their
commission fee from 10% to 5%). The worker may pass these fees on to you in the form of a higher price. The majority of sites do not charge subscription fees.
|
|
Employer verification fees:
more...
|
Free |
$5
|
N/A
*10 |
N/A
*10 |
Free |
$10 |
N/A
*10 |
|
|
|
Verifications are a safety feature that ensure the employer is the
legitimate owner of their credit card or PayPal account. They protect
the owner from someone else using their payment method without their
authorization and give the opposite party the assurance that the
employer can truly pay. They are mandatory on all sites that offer them.
Only vWorker and Scriptlance do not charge for this service.
This site does not offer the protection of a verification
feature.
|
|
Additional Fees:
|
|
|
N/A |
10% GST tax fee for Australians |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Workers on Guru are charged
charged 2.5%
if the
employer uses
Pay Pal or charged up to 4%
if the employer
uses a credit card. The worker may pass these fees on to you in the form of a higher price. The majority of sites do not charge these fees.
|
|
Cheapest over the long-term:
|
View...
|
View... |
View... |
View... |
View... |
View... |
View... |
|
|
|
View: key |
index |
| |
|
On-the-job trial:
crowdsourcing and
trialsourcing

Instead of interviewing workers,
they compete for the job by doing all or part of
the work. You choose the best result.
vWorker is the only site that
lets you do this on every category and size of
project. It is also the only site that
prevent you from overpaying, with
PerfectPricingâ„¢.
|
|
| Offers basic
crowdsourcing? |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Free money-back guarantee on
all crowdsourcing?
|
details...
|
|
|
$5 +
more...
|
|
|
|
|
$39 +
more...
|
Freelancer money-back guarantee costs $5. It
"excludes the US $5 contest fee and other purchased upgrades".
Click here for more
details.
Crowdspring does not refund a $39 listing fee as well as any add-on options
you chose.
Click here for more
details.
|
| On-the-job trial on every category of project? |
details... |
|
|
*4 |
|
|
|
*4 |
*4b |
|
This site only allows on-the-job trials (via crowdsourcing)
in design
related categories (logos, website layout, t-shirt design, etc).
vWorker.com is the only site that allows you to
do it on every category of project.
This site only allows on-the-job trials (via crowdsourcing)
in design
related categories (logos, website layout, t-shirt design, etc)
and writing.
vWorker.com is the only site that allows you to
do it on every category of project.
|
| On-the-job trial affordable on larger jobs? |
details... |
|
|
*5 |
|
|
|
*5 |
*5 |
This site does not offer
trialsourcing (it has crowdsourcing only).
Crowdsourcing becomes extremely expensive
when the work takes more than a week for each
contestant to do.
vWorker.com is the only site that allows you to
do an on-the-job trial for larger jobs.
Click here for
more details.
|
| Market-based prize pricing? |
via Perfect Pricingâ„¢ |
|
|
*6 |
|
|
|
*6 |
*6 |
This site does not offer market-based pricing.
Instead,
it forces you to use their pre-determined price (for all
projects in your category). This is often too high.
It can also be too low, which results in not enough
participation and can result in a failed contest.
vWorker.com is the only site that has
PerfectPricingâ„¢.
Click here for
more details.
|
| Can set any prize amount? |
details... |
|
|
*7 |
|
|
|
*7 |
*7 |
This site has a "forced minimum". If your project
is simpler than the average project in its category,
then you will be required to pay too much.
vWorker.com is the only site that has
no forced minimums.
Click here for
more details.
|
| Offers basic
trialsourcing? |
details...
|
|
|
*8 |
|
|
|
*8 |
*8 |
This site does not have trialsourcing. As a result, it
does not allow you to do larger projects affordably.
vWorker.com is the only site that has
trialsourcing.
Click here for
more details.
|
| Free money-back guarantee on
all trialsourcing?
|
details...
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Fees: |
|
Posting fee: |
$0 |
|
|
$5 (refunded if you select a winner) |
|
|
|
$39
details... |
$39 - $199
more...
|
Crowdspring charges:
a non-refundable posting fee of $39 - $199, depending on the
category of the project:
- Economy: $39
- Standard: $129
- Pro: $199
Click here for
more details.
Other sites are less expensive (or do not charge
at all, in case of vWorker.
|
|
Workspace fee: |
$0 |
|
|
$19
more... |
|
|
|
$0 |
$0 |
Freelancer.com charges $19 for "DesignStudio",
which gives you the basics of crowdsourcing:
- Online Visual Workspace - view every design
submitted and rate, reject and comment on them
to give your Designer immediate feedback.
- Messaging system for fast communication.
- Contract management system - handover the copyright
to the design
Other sites do not charge for this.
|
|
Short deadline fee: |
$0 |
|
|
$20 - $40
more... |
|
|
|
$0 |
$0 |
Freelancer.com charges the following fee for shorter contests:
- $20: 3 days
- $30: 2 days
- $40: 1 day
Other sites do not charge for shorter contests.
|
|
Private contest fee: |
$0 |
|
|
$30
more... |
|
|
|
$0 |
$0 |
|
Freelancer.com charges $30 to make a contest private.
Other sites do not charge for this.
|
|
Contest fees: |
7.5% - 10% |
|
|
13% total (Employer 3%, worker 10%).
Worker pays only
3% with upgraded membership.
details... |
|
|
|
15%
details... |
$15%
details... |
|
|
|
View: key |
index |
| |
|
Customer Service
vWorker provides live phone
support seven days a week. Most other sites limit you to weekdays, or to email-only
support, which can cause you to wait longer than you'd like when you have an
immediate need (such as immediate approval of an emergency project
or an immediate refund).
|
|
| Offers you live support via email or chat? |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Offers you live support via phone? |
more... |
more...
|
more...
|
|
|
|
|
more...
|
|
|
vWorker hours:
Monday through Friday: 9am - 5pm.
Saturday, Sunday: 9am - 3pm
Elance hours:
Monday through Friday 8am to 5pm PST
Saturday, Sunday: 8am to 12pm PST
Guru hours:
Monday - Friday 9am to 6pm EDT
Saturday, Sunday: Not available
99 design phone hours:
(Website only indicates "design consultations" within
these hours, but we are assuming full support is
also available too).
Monday - Friday 8am - 5pm PST
Saturday, Sunday: Not available
|
| Offers you seven-day-a-week live phone support? |
more... |
more...
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
vWorker hours:
Monday through Friday: 9am - 5pm.
Saturday, Sunday: 9am - 3pm
Elance hours:
Monday through Friday 8am to 5pm PST
Saturday, Sunday: 8am to 12pm PST
|
|
View: key |
index |
| |
|
Company Success and Stability
vWorker is proud that our customers have made us a member of
the Inc 5000 and one of the fastest growing companies in the United States. Our
profitability means that we'll be around when you need us tomorrow.
|
|
| |
| Is currently profitable (net sales)? |
|
*15 |
|
*15
|
|
|
|
*15 |
*15 |
|
*15: These sites have chosen to not make this financial information public.
|
| Is ROI positive (profits exceed initial investment +
costs)? |
|
*16 |
|
*16 |
*16 |
|
*16 |
*16 |
*16 |
|
*16: These sites have chosen to not make this financial information public.
|
| Is a member of the Inc. 5000 (fastest growing companies
in the U.S.)? |
2007,
2008,
2009,
2010
more...
|
|
2007, 2008 |
|
|
2009 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
View: key |
index |
| |
|
Industry Specific Features
Working on a successful software project
is very different from working on a successful marketing or design project
. However, many sites treat all of them the same. On vWorker,
we've built custom industry features that make the process safer, more
efficient, and more affordable for your specific project
.
|
|
| |
| Software Programming |
|
Has a requirements wizard?
more... |
4-15 pages
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Creating a detailed project
posting is the most important thing you can do to make your project
successful. However, it's also time consuming and difficult, and requires so
many details that even the most experienced employers
often forget to include all of them. Unfortunately, omissions often end up
costing you unnecessary time, money, effort and/or aggravation.
A requirements wizard interviews solves this problem by asking you simple
questions which explore areas that you probably haven't thought about before. It
then creates a detailed specification for you that the worker
can use.
As an example, let's say you want an internet site created. The wizard
will explain that there are many different browsers and browser versions out
there, and that websites rarely work on all of them unless the worker
specifically codes it to do so. Cost is important to you, and you realize that
you can't afford to support all of them. To solve your problem, the wizard
explains the market share of the different browsers and you realize that you can
still cover 95% of the market by only supporting 4 browser types/versions. This
enables you to save a substantial amount of money in development and also avoid
potential miscommunication with your worker
later over the scope of the
project
.
|
|
Offers source-code protection?
more... |
more... |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Many employers
do not realize that many countries that are good to outsource to (such as India,
Pakistan and Romania), do not have strong intellectual property laws. In such
countries,
workers
can (and unfortunately do) steal source code from employers
and do not have to worry about being prosecuted for it.
To protect yourself from this, it's important to choose a site that allows you
to safe-guard your source code from theft.
vWorker allows you to require all workers
who bid on your project
to be Chaperon enabled. Chaperon makes it virtually impossible for a worker
to copy or pirate your source code by protecting it from creation and transport
to storage and retrieval. Click here for more
information on Chaperon.
|
| |
| Marketing: Search Engine Optimization (SEO) / Pay per click (PPC) |
|
Has a project
posting wizard?
more... |
8-10 pages |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Creating a detailed project
posting is the most important thing you can do to make your project
successful. However, it's also time consuming and difficult, and requires so
many details that even the most experienced employers
often forget to include all of them. Unfortunately, omissions often end up
costing you unnecessary time, money, effort and/or aggravation.
A requirements wizard interviews solves this problem by asking you simple
questions which explore areas that you probably haven't thought about before. It
then creates a detailed specification for you that the worker
can use.
As an example, let's say you want a worker
to make your site rank higher in the search engines. The wizard explains the
market share of the different engines so that you can pick the ones that are
most cost effective for you, and also walks you through the different onsite
optimizations and offsite work that might be helpful to you.
|
|
View: key |
index |
| |
|
Affiliate Program
An affiliate program pays you cash for
users you refer to the site.
Life-time residual affiliate programs pay the
most money over the long term, because
they pay you
income for the entire customer-lifetime, rather
than just a one-time referral fee.
vWorker.com's life-time residual payouts are
one of the reasons it pays the most of any
program in the industry.
|
|
| |
| Gives you cash back via an affiliate program?
more...
|
more...
|
more...
|
|
more...
|
more...
|
more... |
more... |
more... |
|
|
An affiliate program pays you for referring users to the site.
This is often a great way to get cash back on projects where
you referred the
worker, and get paid for other situations as well.
vWorker's affiliate program pays you
20% of all the revenues
generated from employers that you refer, and
5% of all the revenues
generated from workers you refer. This payout occurs each and every time the
customer does business.
The revenue is cumulative, so if you refer both on a project,
you receive a combined total
of 25%.
Super-affiliates (affiliates who have made more than $1,000.00),
are paid more: 25% for
employers, 7% for
workers and 32% for both.
Ultra-affiliates (affiliates who have made more than $10,000.00),
are paid even more: 30% for
employers, 10% for
workers and 40% for both.
Click here for
full details.
Elance's affiliate program pays you:
- Employers you refer:
- New employers (not registered on the site before):
- $1 for posting a project (free to employer)
- $50 for posting a project and also doing one of the below:
- Purchasing a premium job posting
($10 cost to employer)
- Verifying their credit card (within 45 days
of your referral)
- Existing employers (already registered on the site before:)
-
$5 if they post a new project within
1 day of your referral.
- Maximum earnings for the above items are capped at $51 per referral.
- Workers you refer:
- $1 for each new worker who signs up for a free
membership.
- $5 for each new worker who purchases a membership
(from $9.95-$39.95/month).
Note: Elance does not pay for
"any transactions that arise in connection with a pre-existing relationship between a Client and a Contractor;"
, so you are not paid for your own clients (even when new to Elance) that you
refer to the site.
Click here for
full details on the affliate program and here
for a summary.
Freelancer's affiliate program pays you 90% of all project fees
that users you refer generate for
Freelancer (during their first 3 months on the site). Note: this
payout drops to 20% if you referred them through the
'invite friends'
option, rather than affiliate links.
These project fees are:
-
Employers: 3% of the project
(or 0% for gold members)
-
Workers: 10% of the project
(or 3% for gold members)
Click here for
an overview (that excludes some important
details such as the 3 month limitation) or
here for
the Freelancer contract that includes
all the details (scroll down to the 'affiliate program'
section).
Scriptlance's affiliate program pays you for referring:
- New employers:
- 40% of the 5% project fee charged to the worker + $2-$2.40.
- $10 extra if the employer pays $19 for a featured project.
- $5 extra if the employer purchases a $10/month certified membership.
- New workers:
- 10% of the 5% project fee charged to the worker + $0.50-$0.60.
- $2.50 extra if the employer pays $19 for a featured project
(although the 5% project fee drops to 2.5%).
- $12.50 extra if the worker purchases a $25/month certified membership
(and also pays a one-time $10 research fee).
Click here for
full details.
Odesk's affiliate program pays you for:
- Employers you refer:
- $50 for each new employer who signs up and
verifies a credit card
- Workers you refer:
- $0.50 for each new worker who signs up and
applies for job.
Click here for full details on the
affiliate program and the
referral program.
Live Person's affiliate program pays you for:
- Employers you refer:
- $25 - $100 for each new employer who signs up and
engages in a live session (depending on
category of work and # of clients you send per month)
Click here for
full details.
99 Designs' affiliate program pays you for:
- $25 for employers you refer who signup, post a contest
and pay the posting fee.
- 25% if person purchases a pre-made logo (with
high percentages for volume).
Click here for
full details.
|
| Pays you a residual (more than
once for the same referral)?
more...
|
more...
|
|
|
more...
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Affiliate programs with residuals, pay you more than
once for the same referral. Programs that don't, pay
you only one time and generally pay less over
the long term.
Pays you repeatedly for all new
business generated by all
referrals (employer and worker).
Pays you repeatedly for all new
business generated by all
referrals (employer and worker), as long as it occurs
in their first 3 months on the site.
Pays you repeatedly for all new
business generated by all
referrals (employer and worker).
Pays you a one-time $50 bonus if the employer or worker
does over $1,000 in business.
|
| Pays you life-time residuals?
more...
|
|
|
|
more...
|
|
|
|
|
|
Affiliate programs with a life-time residual pay you each
and every time that customer creates new business for the
site...for the entire life-time of that customer.
This results in an ever increasing
income flow (even if you only refer the same amount of users
each month).
Programs without this require you to constantly
refer the same number of users each month, to simply maintain
last month's
income flow.
The difference can be very large.
Life-time residual affiliate programs are like investing
in a bank: after a one time effort, your money grows without any work
on your part and eventually you can retire and not work at all.
Non life-time residual programs are like getting paid to perform a task.
You must continue to work each month as hard as you did last, or your
income goes down.
More information on the power of residual income can be found
in many places on the internet, including this site and many others.
Elance does not pay repeat business residuals for workers. For employers,
it does pay, but at a reduced rate.
Freelancer's stops paying residuals after 3 months.
Their
general overview page does not describe this
limitation, but it is explained in the
detailed contract (scroll down to the 'affiliate program'
section and go to '5.4 Payout Period').
oDesk pays only a one-time residual.
|
| Pays you life-time residuals for both employers and workers?
|
|
|
|
more...
|
|
|
|
|
|
Freelancer's stops paying residuals after 3 months.
Their
general overview page does not describe this
limitation, but it is explained in the
detailed contract (scroll down to the 'affiliate program'
section and go to '5.4 Payout Period').
|
Pays you how much? (Based on
real-life data)
|
|
Some sites post hypothetical earnings for their affiliate programs
based on
hypothetical (and sometimes overly-optimistic and unlikely) sales figures.
In contrast, all of the
amounts on this page are based on actual vWorker.com
historical data from May 2001 - January 2011. To keep them realistic,
employer examples are based on the average employer posting average sized projects at
the average frequency and rate. Worker examples are based on the average
worker winning the average sized projects at the average frequency.
These averages are:
- Employers:
-
First 3 month's activity average:
$245.82
over 2
projects.
-
Yearly activity averages:
| 1 | $583.36 |
4 |
| 2 | $872.14 |
6 |
| 3 | $953.17 |
7 |
| 4 | $1,030.85 |
8 |
| 5 | $1,093.64 |
8 |
| 6 | $1,014.76 |
8 |
| 7 | $936.25 |
7 |
- Workers:
-
First 3 month's activity average:
$300.02
over 4
projects.
-
Yearly activity averages:
| 1 | $747.64 |
8 |
| 2 | $1,485.86 |
10 |
| 3 | $1,840.33 |
11 |
| 4 | $2,011.20 |
10 |
| 5 | $2,259.23 |
10 |
| 6 | $2,298.96 |
9 |
| 7 | $2,409.08 |
9 |
*Affiliate programs with life-time residuals
(vWorker.com, eLance and Scriptlance) can
actually pay even more than 7 years, because there is no
limitation on how much is earned. This would increase the
amounts calculated for those programs.
However, for space reasons, the calculations are limited to
7 years.
|
| |
Total $ for referring an avg. active employer (over 7 years)more...
|
$194.53,
$243.16,
$291.79
*22 |
$51.00
|
N/A
|
$6.64
|
$146.48
|
$50.00
|
$25 - $100
|
$25.00
|
N/A
|
|
|
|
This total is how much you earn as an affiliate
over 7 years,
for
referring an average active employer. Some sites post hypothetical earnings for their affiliate programs based on
hypothetical (and often overly-generous and unlikely) sales figures.
In contrast, all of the
amounts on this page are kept realistic by using actual vWorker.com historical data
from May 2001 - January 2011. Click here to
see these averages.
Year by year breakdown:
|
|
Year 1:
$583.36 on 4
projects.
|
$17.50
$21.88
$26.25
more...
|
$51.00
more...
|
N/A
|
$6.64
more...
|
$14.07
more...
|
$50.00
more... |
$25 - $100
more...
|
$25.00
more... |
N/A
|
Assumes:
-
$245.82
over 2
projects in first 3 months. Data based on vWorker.com historical
data.
- The employer did not purchase a gold membership. If they
did, then then the fee from the employer is less
(0% instead of 3%)
- The user was referred through an affiliate link.
If they were instead referred through the "invite friends" option,
the amount is less (20% instead of 90%).
Click here for
how the Freelancer figures are calculated.
Assumes:
- The employer posted a normal project and not a featured project
(for when they pay $19 extra).
If they posted a featured project, the amount is increased by $12.50,
but also dropped (since the 5% fee is dropped 50% to 2.5%).
The net final result is an increase to $24.08
- The employer did not purchase a special $10/month membership,
and the worker did not purchase a certified $25/month membership.
If they did, then one time extra fees of $5 and $12.50 are earned.
Click here for
how the Scriptlance figures are calculated.
|
|
Year 2:
$872.14 on
6
projects.
|
$26.16,
$32.71,
$39.25
|
$.00
|
N/A
|
$.00
|
$19.84
|
$.00 |
$0
|
$.00
|
N/A
|
|
Year 3:
$953.17 on
7
projects.
|
$28.60,
$35.74,
$42.89
|
$.00
|
N/A
|
$.00
|
$21.46
|
$.00 |
$0
|
$.00
|
N/A
|
|
Year 4:
$1,030.85 on
8
projects.
|
$30.93,
$38.66,
$46.39
|
$.00
|
N/A
|
$.00
|
$23.02
|
$.00 |
$0
|
$.00
|
N/A
|
|
Year 5:
$1,093.64 on
8
projects.
|
$32.81,
$41.01,
$49.21
|
$.00
|
N/A
|
$.00
|
$24.27
|
$.00 |
$0
|
$.00
|
N/A
|
|
Year 6:
$1,014.76 on
8
projects.
|
$30.44,
$38.05,
$45.66
|
$.00
|
N/A
|
$.00
|
$22.70
|
$.00 |
$0
|
$.00
|
N/A
|
|
Year 7:
$936.25 on
7
projects.
|
$28.09,
$35.11,
$42.13
|
$.00
|
N/A
|
$.00
|
$21.13
|
$.00 |
$0
|
$.00
|
N/A
|
|
--------
|
-------- |
-------- |
-------- |
-------- |
-------- |
-------- |
-------- |
-------- |
-------- |
|
Total:
|
$194.53,
$243.16,
$291.79
|
$51.00
|
N/A
|
$6.64
|
$146.48
|
$50.00
|
$25 - $100
|
$25.00
|
N/A
|
| |
| |
Total $ for referring an avg. active worker (over 7 years)more...
|
$97.89,
$137.05,
$195.78
*22 |
$5.00
|
N/A
|
$27.00
|
$69.46
|
$.50
|
$0
|
$.00
|
N/A
|
|
|
|
This total is how much you earn as an affiliate
over 7 years,
for
referring an average active worker. Some sites post hypothetical earnings for their affiliate programs based on
hypothetical (and often overly-generous and unlikely) sales figures.
In contrast, all of the
amounts on this page are kept realistic by using actual vWorker.com historical data
from May 2001 - January 2011. Click here to
see these averages.
Year by year breakdown:
|
|
Year 1:
$747.64 on 8
projects.
|
$5.61
$7.85
$11.21
more...
|
$5.00
more...
|
N/A
|
$27.00
more...
|
$4.34
more...
|
$.50
more... |
$0
more...
|
$.00
more... |
N/A
|
Assumes the worker purchased an Elance membership (at $9.95-$39.95/month).
If they only signed up for a free membership, the amount is less
($1 for that portion of earnings instead of $5).
Click here for
how the Elance figures are calculated.
Assumes:
- The employer posted a normal project and not a featured project
(for when they pay $19 extra).
If they posted a featured project, the amount is increased by $12.50,
but also dropped (since the 5% fee is dropped 50% to 2.5%).
The net final result is an increase to $24.08
- The employer did not purchase a special $10/month membership,
and the worker did not purchase a certified $25/month membership.
If they did, then one time extra fees of $5 and $12.50 are earned.
Click here for
how the Scriptlance figures are calculated.
|
|
Year 2:
$1,485.86 on
10
projects.
|
$11.14,
$15.60,
$22.29
|
$.00
|
N/A
|
$.00
|
$8.03
|
$.00 |
$0
|
$.00
|
N/A
|
|
Year 3:
$1,840.33 on
11
projects.
|
$13.80,
$19.32,
$27.60
|
$.00
|
N/A
|
$.00
|
$9.80
|
$.00 |
$0
|
$.00
|
N/A
|
|
Year 4:
$2,011.20 on
10
projects.
|
$15.08,
$21.12,
$30.17
|
$.00
|
N/A
|
$.00
|
$10.66
|
$.00 |
$0
|
$.00
|
N/A
|
|
Year 5:
$2,259.23 on
10
projects.
|
$16.94,
$23.72,
$33.89
|
$.00
|
N/A
|
$.00
|
$11.90
|
$.00 |
$0
|
$.00
|
N/A
|
|
Year 6:
$2,298.96 on
9
projects.
|
$17.24,
$24.14,
$34.48
|
$.00
|
N/A
|
$.00
|
$12.09
|
$.00 |
$0
|
$.00
|
N/A
|
|
Year 7:
$2,409.08 on
9
projects.
|
$18.07,
$25.30,
$36.14
|
$.00
|
N/A
|
$.00
|
$12.65
|
$.00 |
$0
|
$.00
|
N/A
|
|
--------
|
-------- |
-------- |
-------- |
-------- |
-------- |
-------- |
-------- |
-------- |
-------- |
|
Total:
|
$97.89,
$137.05,
$195.78
|
$5.00
|
N/A
|
$27.00
|
$69.46
|
$.50
|
$0
|
$.00
|
N/A
|
| |
Does not compete against it's own affiliates with
heavy search engine advertising?
more...
|
|
more...
|
|
more...
|
more...
|
more... |
more... |
more... |
|
|
Many companies that run affiliate program claim they are interested
in their affiliates becoming successes. Then they also spend
hundreds of thousands (or millions) of dollars a year on search engines ads
on the same keywords that their affiliates would be (or already are)
advertising on.
While this gives the company the most short-term profit, it also
destroys the
long-term relationships with their affiliates.
Those companies that avoid this practice give their affiliates room to grow.
This nurture the long-term health of their affiliates and
aligns the company and the affiliate's interests more closely.
Spending information take from SpyFu.com.
SpyFu constantly scans Google for ads, and records the company that
placed them. The following data was obtained on 7/1/2011:
-
Spending hundreds of thousands (or millions) per year:
- Elance (up to $6,540/day)
- Guru (up to $2,890/day)
- Odesk (up to $10,200/day)
- Freelancer (up to $1,070/day)
- Live Person (up to $11,660/day)
- 99 Designs (up to $18,100/day)
-
Spending little or nothing per year:
- vWorker (up to $66/day)
- Scriptlance (up to $49.28/day)
|
|
View: key |
index |
| |
|
Other
Other miscellaneous features that differentiate the sites.
|
|
| |
| Allows workers
free bidding on all projects?
more...
|
|
Only 10/month
more... |
Only 10/month
more... |
Only 10/month
more... |
|
Only 2/week
more... |
|
|
|
|
In an open marketplace, the more bidders you have, the better price you can
negotiate. However, some sites generate additional revenue by charging workers
for different bidding privileges (or limit bidding based on other factors). This
can reduce the number of bidders on your project
and raise your costs. If the worker
is charged a fee, they may also feel the need to recoup it in the price of their
bid, which also increases your costs.
Workers
on Elance cannot place more than 10 bids a month unless they pay a
subscription fee
($10/month for 25, $20/month for 40 or $40/month for 60). This generates
additional revenue for Elance and reduces the number of bidders on your project
which can raise your costs. Additionally, the worker
may feel they need to recoup this fee by including it in the price of their bid,
which also increases your costs.
Workers
on Guru cannot place more than 10 bids a month unless they pay a
subscription fee
($29.95-$99.95/quarter for 100 bids for a person, $38.94-$129.94/quarter for 100
bids for a company). This generates additional revenue for Guru and reduces the
number of bidders on your project
which can raise your costs. Additionally, the worker
may feel they need to recoup this fee by including it in the price of their bid,
which also increases your costs.
Workers
on Freelancer cannot place
more than 10 bids a month unless they pay a
subscription fee
to Freelancer (which also reduces their commission fee from 10% to 3%). This
generates additional revenue for Freelancer and reduces the number of bidders on
your project
which can raise your costs. Additionally, the worker
may feel they need to recoup this fee by including it in the price of their bid,
which also increases your costs.
Workers
on oDesk cannot place
more than 2 bids a week
unless they take certain oDesk tests, or receive feedback on a certain number of project
s.
|
| Certifications |
|
Allows you to limit bidding to certified workers
?
more... |
*21 |
*21 |
*21 |
|
|
*21 |
|
|
|
|
When selecting from many potential workers
it can be difficult to determine which truly have the specialized knowledge that
your project
requires.
Some sites allow the workers
to prove their knowledge by becoming pre-certified by an appropriate testing
agency. These sites also allow you to limit bidding on your project
exclusively to workers
who are certified in the area(s) you require.
*21: These sites allow you to require all workers
who bid on your job to have been certified in one or more of the hundreds of
tests created by
ExpertRating.
|
|
Makes certifications completely free to workers
?
more... |
|
|
$4.95/exam and every retake
details...
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Sites that generate additional revenue by charging workers
for some aspect of certification, limit the actual number of workers
that you can select from.
Elance charges workers
a monthly subscription fee of $9.95/month - $39.95/month to show test results
on their profiles, which limits the actual number of workers
you can select from. Other sites do not charge for any aspect of the
certification process.
|
| Ratings |
|
Protects accuracy with a
double-blind rating system?
more... |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
When you are reviewing prospective workers
, it's important that the previous employers
who used them felt safe to rate them accurately. Unfortunately, on sites without
a blind-rating system, an abusive poor-performing worker
can intimidate employers
into giving them better ratings than they deserve. On these sites, an abusive
work can see the (deserved) poor rating they've received, and can retaliate by
giving the employer
an undeserved poor rating in return. After this happens one or two times,
employers
on these sites can quickly realize that the only way to preserve their own
ratings is to rate everyone highly. This can severely compromise the accuracy
and usefulness of the ratings system.
However, a double-blind ratings system hides your rating from the worker
until they've placed theirs. That way, you can rate the worker
accurately and be completely safe from retaliation.
|
|
Shows all negative ratings/comments given to workers
? |
|
|
more... |
|
|
more... |
|
|
|
Guru allows workers
to hide negative ratings and comments and replace them with "No feedback
published" (see
the Guru help page
and click on "How do I block feedback?"). As a result you may never discover
some or all of the poor performance of a
worker
you are evaluating, nor can you ever know if information has been blocked or
not. Other sites give you as much information as possible so you can make the
most educated decision, and do not have this limitation.
Odesk allows workers
to choose which employer comments appear on the profile and to hide negative comments
(see
the Odesk help page). As a result you may never discover
the exact reasons for a particular rating, nor can you ever know if information has been hidden
from you or
not. Other sites give you as much information as possible so you can make the
most educated decision, and do not have this limitation.
|
| Communication |
|
Instant messaging (from every page
on site)?
more... |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Instant
messaging (IM) lets you communicate back and forth in real-time
with the other party. It allows a much faster "back and forth" communication
than posting a normal message on the private message, which can make it
great for interviewing (or being interviewed), working out questions/issues
and asking for (or giving) quick
status updates. Unlike a chat room, IM doesn't require both parties to
formally coordinate a time to meet, and allows for impromptu conversation
which is more rapid, natural and effective.
|
| Misc |
|
Discount for paying via wire / snail-mail check?
more... |
2.5%
more... |
|
1 - 2 %
more... |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
If funds are paid via a method which is cheaper to process,
the the fee is discounted.
|
vWorker gives you a 2.5% discount immediately, and calls the
discount a "preferred payment discount".
Click here for
more information.
Guru.com gives you
1-2% back
for use on your next project, and calls the program "loyalty dollars".
Loyalty dollars expire, if left unused for two years.
|
|
Discount is immediate?
*22 |
*22 |
|
*22 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
View: key |
index |