Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mystery Sopping is fun.
I"m a mystery shopper. It IS fun. But it's not a career. You basically make some pocket change.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are no online jobs that you can do from home while you actually care for your child.
There are no jobs at all (other than nanny share) that you can do from home while you actually care for your child.
+1. The only caveat that I can think of is if it is a job that can be done when your spouse comes home. Then you can effectively "sign out" as a parent and go to a different room and do your online job until late at night.
I have no idea if such a job exists, though.
And, really, just because your 5 month old may right now be napping a lot and content to sit still and play with a toy, trust me, it will only remain like this for another month or two, tops. Then you will be chasing the crawling baby everywhere. And when baby reaches 1? Forget about it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you have a background in writing and editing, you should also think about indexing. Creating indexes for books and journals can be lucrative.
How do you find out about these opportunities?
I index part-time and have more work than I can handle. Sometimes I subcontract it out to other indexers. I charge $4-$5 per page for a scholarly book, less for children's non-fiction, and can index about 75-100 pages a day. I have three jobs due within the next two weeks and then three "possibles" penciled in for later in August. I took the UC-Berkeley online class (~$600) and joined the Yahoo group for indexers to keep abreast of things. The indexing software costs about $600. I love it--I get to read all kinds of interesting books and get paid for it. I work for two publishing houses and have contacts at various other presses. They contact me when a job is available, and I've been working steadily since I started (2010). It helps to have a niche--like technology, business, social sciences, literary studies, women's studies, cookbooks/crafts, whatever.
Can you expand on this a little bit? How many hours do you put in, and how much do you make? How do you find jobs?
Thanks!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you have a background in writing and editing, you should also think about indexing. Creating indexes for books and journals can be lucrative.
How do you find out about these opportunities?
I index part-time and have more work than I can handle. Sometimes I subcontract it out to other indexers. I charge $4-$5 per page for a scholarly book, less for children's non-fiction, and can index about 75-100 pages a day. I have three jobs due within the next two weeks and then three "possibles" penciled in for later in August. I took the UC-Berkeley online class (~$600) and joined the Yahoo group for indexers to keep abreast of things. The indexing software costs about $600. I love it--I get to read all kinds of interesting books and get paid for it. I work for two publishing houses and have contacts at various other presses. They contact me when a job is available, and I've been working steadily since I started (2010). It helps to have a niche--like technology, business, social sciences, literary studies, women's studies, cookbooks/crafts, whatever.
Anonymous wrote:I thought computers did the indexing now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you have a background in writing and editing, you should also think about indexing. Creating indexes for books and journals can be lucrative.
How do you find out about these opportunities?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mystery Sopping is fun.
I"m a mystery shopper. It IS fun. But it's not a career. You basically make some pocket change.
I started it just to get out the house now I make over $400/week and don't even need childcare.
Anonymous wrote:If you have a background in writing and editing, you should also think about indexing. Creating indexes for books and journals can be lucrative.