Simple Side Gigs To Start Online With No Experience

Published by Liza J. Lee — 08-10-2018 05:08:26 PM


User Experience Gigs – Sign Up for User Testing Jobs No Experience Needed

With a documented 95% accuracy rate, Faith Popcorn (original futurist) long ago predicted the demand for fresh foods, Cocooning for Millenials and the need for Freelancers in the gig economy to “cobble together a living”, such as temping, home services, art products to direct sales and more.

Remote contract work is on the rise. A study by Intuit predicted that by 2020, 40% of all American workers would be independent contractors. According to staffing company Randstad, if you add up all contingent workers, freelancers, independent contractors and consultants, this is about 20 to 30% in Canada.

Freelancers in the gig economy will need to “cobble together a living” from temping, content, UX and more. This blog post will focus on remote User Experience (UX) gigs. UX encompasses all aspects of the end-user’s interaction with the company, its services, and its products.  For a high-quality UX in a company’s offerings, there must be a seamless merging of  engineering, marketing, graphical and industrial design, and interface design. With websites, companies may hire user testers to ensure good user experience. There are user testing companies hiring for remote gigs.

Learn more about UX side gigs 


About Liza J. Lee

avatar

My content writing and copywriting experience includes +50 small businesses, corporations and events since 2001. For the first 10 years of my marketing career, I focused on corporate jobs and contracts in marketing and content. In 2013, I started to work with small businesses, which included financial services, legal marketing and fintech software. In the last few years, I’ve specialized in technology writing for various companies. I’ve written everything from web, print, radio, TV, magazines, webcasts, user guides, blogs, emails, social media, e-commerce, case studies, whitepapers, sales sheets, press releases and more. This blog is research for Side Hustle Van Meetup – to help each person take ideas and opportunities and turn them into income generating vehicles to supplement their day time income. The research focuses on lists of websites, magazines and job boards for side hustles for writers. This resource helps new and experienced freelance writers find their next side gig, outside of regular employment. When I first started as a writer in 2001, I wrote for several print and online magazines which paid from $50 to $100. That experience, along with my former claims insurance tenure helped me land my first copywriting job. It’s still possible to earn an average of $100 per article, even if you’re a new writer. If you see yourself as an achiever and are hungry to make an extra $100-200 by next month, we welcome you.