Rent-A-Coder vs. Elance

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  • michaaal

    Rent-A-Coder vs. Elance

    Is ELance much better than Rent-A-Coder? I am hesitant to give ELance a try
    because you have to pay for it - and Rent-A-Coder is not "overly
    profitable". Is ELance worth the money?


  • Cowboy \(Gregory A. Beamer\) [MVP]

    #2
    Re: Rent-A-Coder vs. Elance

    I have yet to find ANY of these services that are profitable. Guru.com has
    been the best for me, thus far, as I get regular updates on projects. Most
    of these sites get people looking for people to build them highly profitable
    sites for very low dollars. When I see a "build me a CRM" for $1000 or less,
    I know that I am not interested. Just my two cents.

    --
    Gregory A. Beamer
    MVP; MCP: +I, SE, SD, DBA

    *************** *************** *************** ***
    Think Outside the Box!
    *************** *************** *************** ***
    "michaaal" <res0gyio@veriz on.net> wrote in message
    news:uxPnP0KdEH A.2408@tk2msftn gp13.phx.gbl...[color=blue]
    > Is ELance much better than Rent-A-Coder? I am hesitant to give ELance a[/color]
    try[color=blue]
    > because you have to pay for it - and Rent-A-Coder is not "overly
    > profitable". Is ELance worth the money?
    >
    >[/color]


    Comment

    • Jeff Cochran

      #3
      Re: Rent-A-Coder vs. Elance

      On Wed, 28 Jul 2004 09:14:02 -0500, "michaaal" <res0gyio@veriz on.net>
      wrote:
      [color=blue]
      >Is ELance much better than Rent-A-Coder? I am hesitant to give ELance a try
      >because you have to pay for it - and Rent-A-Coder is not "overly
      >profitable". Is ELance worth the money?[/color]

      I'm not sure either is valuable to most programmers, since they do a
      poor job of weeding out the requests like:

      "I want to develop an online store with the capabilities of
      Amazon.com, where I'll lease space to vendors. I envision about 3,000
      vendors, each with up to 20,000 products. I have a budget of about
      $300 for the code work and graphics, and need it to run on Microsoft
      Access 97."

      If they provided qualified, or at least realistic, leads maybe they'd
      be worth paying for.

      There are others out there as well, though I'm not sure they're much
      better, a decent set of samples on your own web site might gte you
      about as far.

      Jeff

      Comment

      • J. Alan Rueckgauer

        #4
        Re: Rent-A-Coder vs. Elance

        You should google alt.computer.co nsultants.moder ated for this, and/or post
        your inquiry to that ng. The topic comes up now and again.

        I wrote a rather scathing assessment of these services for Contract
        Professional about 8 years ago when they started appearing, and it seems
        that they have only gotten worse in light of what has gone on in the
        industry since then. My opinion of all of those services is they're just
        shy of being MLM or Ponzi schemes.

        The ones that want you to buy-in invariably refuse to give you any hard
        evidence of satisfaction of other members (i.e., names and phone numbers of
        people you can verify in the phonebook or on the web and contact as a
        reference), which in and of itself sends up a big ole red flag. If they're
        successful at getting gigs for their members, they should be crowing about
        it, not hiding behind "confidentialit y" to get you to ante-up the initiation
        fees to find out anything about how they really operate. The "free" ones
        are about as useful as having a luddite build a car for you. All of them
        have just about zero ability to screen reqs: Sure, you may get "tons of
        reqs" but for absolutely off-the-wall stuff like Jeff Cochran related. They
        may appeal to absolute beginners and offshore drones who think $2 a day is a
        king's ransom cream like it's their first time, but they are way off in some
        alternate reality when it comes to dealing with experienced US talent.

        If you have the fortitude and resources to do your own
        networking/marketing/promotion, do so and steer clear of all middlemen. If
        you aren't ready to, or can't, do it yourself, then you may have marginally
        better luck using a bodyshop (if you don't mind being treated like cannon
        fodder).

        Alan

        "michaaal" <res0gyio@veriz on.net> wrote in message
        news:uxPnP0KdEH A.2408@tk2msftn gp13.phx.gbl...[color=blue]
        > Is ELance much better than Rent-A-Coder? I am hesitant to give ELance a[/color]
        try[color=blue]
        > because you have to pay for it - and Rent-A-Coder is not "overly
        > profitable". Is ELance worth the money?
        >
        >[/color]


        Comment

        • Cowboy \(Gregory A. Beamer\) [MVP]

          #5
          Re: Rent-A-Coder vs. Elance

          Yeah. I will pay you $300 to make myself millions. I find that is pretty
          much the norm there.

          --
          Gregory A. Beamer
          MVP; MCP: +I, SE, SD, DBA

          *************** *************** *************** ***
          Think Outside the Box!
          *************** *************** *************** ***
          "Jeff Cochran" <jeff.nospam@zi na.com> wrote in message
          news:4107cf12.6 24690938@msnews .microsoft.com. ..[color=blue]
          > On Wed, 28 Jul 2004 09:14:02 -0500, "michaaal" <res0gyio@veriz on.net>
          > wrote:
          >[color=green]
          > >Is ELance much better than Rent-A-Coder? I am hesitant to give ELance a[/color][/color]
          try[color=blue][color=green]
          > >because you have to pay for it - and Rent-A-Coder is not "overly
          > >profitable". Is ELance worth the money?[/color]
          >
          > I'm not sure either is valuable to most programmers, since they do a
          > poor job of weeding out the requests like:
          >
          > "I want to develop an online store with the capabilities of
          > Amazon.com, where I'll lease space to vendors. I envision about 3,000
          > vendors, each with up to 20,000 products. I have a budget of about
          > $300 for the code work and graphics, and need it to run on Microsoft
          > Access 97."
          >
          > If they provided qualified, or at least realistic, leads maybe they'd
          > be worth paying for.
          >
          > There are others out there as well, though I'm not sure they're much
          > better, a decent set of samples on your own web site might gte you
          > about as far.
          >
          > Jeff[/color]


          Comment

          • wmfwlr

            #6
            Re: Rent-A-Coder vs. Elance


            What you guys says is true for a lot of projects on RAC. There is th
            possibilty of making some small money on the side though, you just hav
            to know which projects that are offering a fair amount and know whic
            projects you can do quickly. That being said, I wouldn't pay
            recurring fee to be a part of any such site, as you're not guarantee
            anything. There will be one or two fair projects a day that fit int
            your area of expertise. At least RAC is safe for both the coder a
            buyer, which a lot of other sites that have started popping up ar
            surely not.

            It's as much about having common sense as it is being able to code -
            know what you limits are and stay within them.

            Cowboy \(Gregory A. Beamer\) [MVP] wrote:[color=blue]
            > *Yeah. I will pay you $300 to make myself millions. I find that i
            > pretty
            > much the norm there.
            >
            > --
            > Gregory A. Beamer
            > MVP; MCP: +I, SE, SD, DBA
            >
            > *************** *************** *************** ***
            > Think Outside the Box!
            > *************** *************** *************** ***
            > "Jeff Cochran" <jeff.nospam@zi na.com> wrote in message
            > news:4107cf12.6 24690938@msnews .microsoft.com. ..[color=green]
            > > On Wed, 28 Jul 2004 09:14:02 -0500, "michaaal[/color]
            > <res0gyio@veriz on.net>[color=green]
            > > wrote:
            > >[/color]
            > try[color=darkred][color=green]
            > >
            > > I'm not sure either is valuable to most programmers, since they d[/color]
            > a[color=green]
            > > poor job of weeding out the requests like:
            > >
            > > "I want to develop an online store with the capabilities of
            > > Amazon.com, where I'll lease space to vendors. I envision abou[/color]
            > 3,000[color=green]
            > > vendors, each with up to 20,000 products. I have a budget o[/color]
            > about[color=green]
            > > $300 for the code work and graphics, and need it to run o[/color]
            > Microsoft[color=green]
            > > Access 97."
            > >
            > > If they provided qualified, or at least realistic, leads mayb[/color]
            > they'd[color=green]
            > > be worth paying for.
            > >
            > > There are others out there as well, though I'm not sure they'r[/color]
            > much[color=green]
            > > better, a decent set of samples on your own web site might gte you
            > > about as far.
            > >
            > > Jeff[/color][/color]


            -
            wmfwl
            -----------------------------------------------------------------------
            Posted via http://www.codecomments.co
            -----------------------------------------------------------------------

            Comment

            • wmfwlr

              #7
              Re: Rent-A-Coder vs. Elance


              What you guys says is true for a lot of projects on RAC. There is th
              possibilty of making some small money on the side though, you just hav
              to know which projects that are offering a fair amount and know whic
              projects you can do quickly. That being said, I wouldn't pay
              recurring fee to be a part of any such site, as you're not guarantee
              anything. There will be one or two fair projects a day that fit int
              your area of expertise. At least RAC is safe for both the coder a
              buyer, which a lot of other sites that have started popping up ar
              surely not.

              It's as much about having common sense as it is being able to code -
              know what you limits are and stay within them.

              Cowboy \(Gregory A. Beamer\) [MVP] wrote:[color=blue]
              > *Yeah. I will pay you $300 to make myself millions. I find that i
              > pretty
              > much the norm there.
              >
              > --
              > Gregory A. Beamer
              > MVP; MCP: +I, SE, SD, DBA
              >
              > *************** *************** *************** ***
              > Think Outside the Box!
              > *************** *************** *************** ***
              > "Jeff Cochran" <jeff.nospam@zi na.com> wrote in message
              > news:4107cf12.6 24690938@msnews .microsoft.com. ..[color=green]
              > > On Wed, 28 Jul 2004 09:14:02 -0500, "michaaal[/color]
              > <res0gyio@veriz on.net>[color=green]
              > > wrote:
              > >[/color]
              > try[color=darkred][color=green]
              > >
              > > I'm not sure either is valuable to most programmers, since they d[/color]
              > a[color=green]
              > > poor job of weeding out the requests like:
              > >
              > > "I want to develop an online store with the capabilities of
              > > Amazon.com, where I'll lease space to vendors. I envision abou[/color]
              > 3,000[color=green]
              > > vendors, each with up to 20,000 products. I have a budget o[/color]
              > about[color=green]
              > > $300 for the code work and graphics, and need it to run o[/color]
              > Microsoft[color=green]
              > > Access 97."
              > >
              > > If they provided qualified, or at least realistic, leads mayb[/color]
              > they'd[color=green]
              > > be worth paying for.
              > >
              > > There are others out there as well, though I'm not sure they'r[/color]
              > much[color=green]
              > > better, a decent set of samples on your own web site might gte you
              > > about as far.
              > >
              > > Jeff[/color][/color]


              -
              wmfwl
              -----------------------------------------------------------------------
              Posted via http://www.codecomments.co
              -----------------------------------------------------------------------

              Comment

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