May

19

Freelance Design Job Sites - Toe to Toe

By jimdiggitydog

Find Work on Guru and ElanceI have had subscriptions to many (if not all) of the freelance job-finding websites. They all have good points, and I think the amount of work you actually glean from them has a lot to do with how much time and effort you put into the searches, the portfolios and the profiles.

Recently, I sat down and really considered the pros and cons of two of the heavy hitters - Guru.com and Elance.com. I’m only going to comment on the paid portion of the sites, since I think if you’re going to explore, you should go for a more premium package and be serious. You gotta spend money to make money, right?

First up, Elance:

  • $9.95 per month, includes 20 “connects” which are essentially bids. You can purchase more for around .50¢ each. Some jobs actually cost more “connects,” and you can have your bid appear higher in lists by spending more connects.
  • Reasonably slick interface.
  • Skill tests - lets employers see that you’re actually skilled in what you say you’re skilled in. You get 10 free with a paid membership, and you can buy more.
  • Not a huge number of projects for non-web designers. Only 426 as of this posting
  • Stiff competition - 14k plus design candidates for such a limited number of jobs.
  • Decent bid levels - most logo jobs are going for “less than $500,” which is generally higher than Guru’s bid levels. Just using this as an example. All the jobs are reasonably close.
  • Kind of sucky portfolio. Clunky and kind of awkward to upload large numbers of files.
  • Most professionals seem to charge a decent rate - not too many $5 an hours designers. That helps prop up the rates - which is good for everyone.
  • Fairly robust mediation.
  • Good escrow and payment systems.
  • 6.75-8.75% for transaction processing.
  • Decent communications systems for client/freelancer relations.
Next - Guru:
  • $25 per month, payable quarterly for 100 bids per month. You can buy more (called “bid pax”) for .50¢ each, and they roll over, so you never lose them.
  • Good interface
  • Good project notification and search
  • Large number of projects, including a fair amount of straight illustration (which I dig.) 600+ in Design/Multimedia right now, plus a ton of others in other fields.
  • Fairly bad bid levels. I’ve found that you face a lot of those $25 bids for a brochure. But - people also are realizing that you get what you pay for.
  • Stiff competition - 15k plus providers in design alone. Many of them are inactive or really, really bad, though. Plus, with many more jobs posted than on Elance, you get to bid on a lot more, so the percentages really are in your favor with Guru.
  • Fairly robust mediation.
  • Good escrow and payment systems.
  • 6.75-8.75% for transaction processing.
  • Very nice communications systems.
  • Decent portfolio system.
  • Easy-to-use escrow and payment systems. Direct deposit and PayPal are very fast. Never used the check system, but looks pretty easy.
So - who would I recommend? I like Guru. I think the pros outweigh the cons. I’ve gotten a lot of great business through Guru, and I have a lot of long-term clients that I met through Guru.
A lot of this recommendation is based on my familiarity with Guru, and the fact that I’ve used them a lot longer than I have Elance. I think that Elance could be just as good - I’ve just not gotten quite the response, and I haven’t gotten the level of user experience that I have with Guru.
Really, though - for the price of one small job, you can subscribe to both and see for yourself.

 

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