When an 8-Hour Day Earns You $4.38

There are plenty of paying gigs to be found in online marketplaces, where employers hire freelancers to complete quick mini-tasks like transcribing interviews, verifying info listed on websites, and committing quasi-plagiarism. The only problem with this system—well, the only problem besides the plagiarism—is that even the most diligent and productive workers shouldn’t expect to earn anything close to minimum wage.

A BusinessWeek writer tells of her day’s experiment as a “micro worker,” during which she nets a total of $4.38, or a whopping 63¢ an hour. BW writer Rachael King signed up with Amazon Mechanical Turk, where employers post pay-per-piece HITs (Human Intelligence Tasks) that anyone with an Internet connection can take on. I took a look at the site this morning, and more than 110,000 HITs were listed.

King pulls in 50¢ during her first hour’s work, verifying museum contact info and operation hours, and moves on to consider more lucrative writing gigs. “More lucrative” being a very relative phrase:

A post for a 400-word article about “why you should use video in your company” catches my eye. The requester wants an informative and original article. The potential wage is $2.00—one of the highest-paying writing jobs I’ve found. What’s worse, I’m not eligible to apply for this job until I have proven my ability on other tasks.

That assignment breaks down to a rate of a half-penny per word—roughly 200 times less than the going rate professional writers could have expected to make a decade ago.

Another gig required a rewrite (or somewhat plagiarized version) of a NY Times story on the president’s state of the union address. That one paid 77¢.

In related news, CNNMoney reported that the vast majority of newly created jobs aren’t ones that pay particularly well:

[National Employment Law Project policy co-director Annette] Bernhardt’s analysis of the first seven months of 2010 found that 76% of jobs created were in low- to mid-wage industries — those earning between $8.92 to $15 an hour, well below the national average hourly wage of $22.60.

I suppose “low-wage” is another relative term.

MORE:
7 Highly Unusual Ways to Find a Job

Related Topics: Amazon, BusinessWeek, freelance, Mechanical Turk, recession porn, Careers & Workplace
  • Latest on Moneyland

    The Growing Debate Over Prepaid Debit Cards

    At an event in Durham, N.C. on Wednesday, Consumer Financial Protection Bureau director Richard Cordray announced that the agency is “decid[ing] how we should go about regulating prepaid cards to better protect consumers and to provide clear rules for prepaid providers.”

    The rapidly growing prepaid market is attracting both banks and non-banks, and more Americans, especially those classified as “unbanked” or “underbanked” are using these cards as de facto checking accounts. 

    America's Uneven Economic Recovery: The 10 Best and 10 Worst CitiesDaily Finance

    YOSHIKAZU TSUNO / AFP / Getty Images

    Toyota Prius: Niche Car No More

    Drivers around the globe purchased nearly a quarter million Toyota Priuses in the first quarter of 2012. That makes the Prius the world’s third best-selling car—and it firmly establishes the fact that this hybrid is not a fluke or a passing trend.

  • shebamarx

    Totally agree. Writing has been totally devalued and the internet has a lot to do with it. Another reason: Academics who will write for free, needing the publishing credit. I used to advertise on my blog site and then even Google took that away from me. unemployedmarx.blogspot.com

blog comments powered by Disqus