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Jobs for Moonlighting Geeks?

BreadWinner asks: "My wife and I are adopting a baby in 2003 and it's very expensive. I work for a non-profit that can't pay me what I feel I'm worth. However, I really like my job, my boss, the time off, and my co-workers. So I'm considering moonlighting. I've done private contracting, but I don't think I can do my private clients justice when I'm working full-time. So what kind of job can I find that: I can leave at the job; maximize my $/hour? Anybody done commission-based electronics sales? I'm not an uber-geek, but I'm interested in whatever you folks at Slashdot can suggest."

4 of 109 comments (clear)

  1. Consulting but different by Paladin128 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    You could do consulting, but not for development. You could do something that takes lots of time, but not lots of hours, such as HCI (Human-computer Interaction) analasys. Consult for owners of websites and/or small application developers to perform various levels of HCI evaluation, such as analysis and testing. Some clients may want just a detail of obvious (to an HCI designer) problem areas, others will want results obtainable by user testing, and some of them will want designs.

    The first suggestion, simple evaluations, can take you only a few hours at a time to do, and then another couple hours writing a report of suggestions to the client. User testing can be a bit more hairy, but the rule of thumb is for each round of user testing, you'll find all the snags with 4 test subjects, and tests should be 30 minutes or less per subject. Then you use about the same amount of time analyzing the results as the above option. The design-work can take many, many hours of designing, prototyping, and testing, but not every client wants immediate results. Some actually feel better if it takes you a couple months; they feel as if you'd been spending all that time musing over it and tweaking it.

    --
    Lex orandi, lex credendi.
  2. Re:Best Buy? by digitalmuse · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Darkness Productions spoke the following out of his ass...
    "Best Buy might be an option. The money isn't the best (about $7 to start), but they get 90% of the stuff in the store at 5% over cost. Which means a cheap plasma TV..."

    If you read the actual question he was asking, he's looking opportunities that will allow him to bring in extra income, not ways of spending an additional low-wage paycheck on material goods that he doesn't necessarily need. Someone who's thinking ahead and planning on how he can leverage his knowledge and skill set into a better life for his expanding family (and kudos to him for deciding to adopt instead of 'DIYing his own.') has better things to spend his money on that expensive trend-whore gadgets.

    And yes, I posted this as a response, instead of just slapping you with (-1 offtopic).

    --
    "If I wanted your input on my pet project, I'd stick my hand up your ass and use you like a sock-puppet." - Muse
  3. Teaching by 4/3PI*R^3 · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Find a local technical school (i.e. DeVry) and offer your services. Most are in need of instructors. You can usually teach 1 or 2 courses in an area you are familiar with and make $2-$4K per term for only 8-10 hours per week of work.

    This not only benefits your wallet, but it also improves your professional skills (which is a great bonus if your employer gives you flack about moonlighting).

  4. PC Guru by doofusclam · · Score: 4, Interesting

    You could advertise your pc tinkering/fixing skills in the local newspaper. Plenty of people buy computers and do not have a clue - the going rate in the UK is 10-15UKP an hour or part of, approx 15-22 USD. Some of it's going to be routine and mundane ("I can't find my Bonzi Buddy...") but you get to meet loads of people and cut loose from the house for an hour at a time and i'd suspect most customers would come back again if you were good - i've never met anybody yet who only had an hours worth of questions about their computer...

    And as we're coming up to Christmas, just think of all those computers that have been bought as presents and therefore the amount of stumped newbies on the 25th. You might be busy...

    By the way, good luck with the new addition to the family, too!

    seany

    I was considering this for a while, the only problem being