Looks to have crashed.<p><a href="http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:http://www.siliconprairienews.com/2011/04/jeff-morris-id-pay-zaarly-to-hire-me-for-a-two-month-contract" rel="nofollow">http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:http://...</a><p>"If my pay-to-be-hired contract seems like a bargain, that is fine with me. I am a single 26-year-old male, I live a very lean lifestyle, and I can afford to place a bet on the most intriguing startup concept I have ever heard."<p>- Opening paragraph of my cover letter to Zaarly<p>I had offered two months rent in my San Francisco studio apartment – a bet on my short-term performance and Zaarly’s long-term potential. If I earned full-time employment, I would earn that money back within a few months and I would be joining one of the most promising startups in the world.<p>I submitted my "pay-for-employment" offer at 1:30 a.m. on March 21, and when I woke up, I had an interview offer in my inbox. I accepted a position on the Zaarly marketing team at 3:45 p.m. that same day, under the condition that I move from San Francisco to Kansas City, Mo. within 12 hours. I have never lived outside California or visited Kansas City, but I took the job. And Zaarly didn’t even accept my money –– they offered to pay me instead!<p>By the time I returned home, it was already 11:00 p.m. I reserved a taxi for 3:45 a.m. and packed my entire life into a 27-inch suitcase in just thirty minutes. My older brother, Matt, drank a beer with me and watched me throw clothes into a suitcase. I remember Matt asking why I needed to leave San Francisco for this startup. San Francisco literally has thousands of startups.<p>Zaarly was different from every other startup in the world, I explained. We would advance human behavior and create new communities based upon a simple question, "What would you pay for right now?" We would build an entirely new economy for services and goods.<p>I have been obsessed with peer-to-peer, collaborative consumption my entire life, so this was an easy pitch. I am one of eight children, and growing up we always negotiated for something inside my house. But I could tell Matt wasn’t entirely convinced.<p>I played Zaarly’s Startup Weekend LA pitch on YouTube, the most irreverent and inspiring startup moment that I have ever seen. Bo Fishback (CEO), Erik Koester (COO), and Ian Hunter (CTO) shared their vision for a new buyer-powered marketplace, and it felt more like a Judd Apatow movie than a sales pitch.<p>As the pitch ended, I smiled at Matt. He was sold.<p>I landed in Kansas City the next morning without a car or a hotel. I took a cab straight to Zaarly HQ, arriving with my suitcase and a computer. The only person at the office was Adam Coomes, who I had spoken to during my interview.<p>When I asked where I should put my suitcase, I knew Adam thought I was a little crazy, but that’s why I landed the job. I left my suitcase in the front lobby and pulled out my laptop, ready to work.<p>In our first meeting, my co-workers and I spoke about our career paths and our reasons for joining Zaarly. I realized that my "sacrifice" to be here was not that special. Sure, I abandoned my Mission District apartment in 12 hours for a city I have never visited. But unlike many of my co-workers, I do not have a wife to love, a mortgage to pay or a dog to walk. Besides my supportive family, I have no physical attachments to any location – so this journey was easy to make.<p>I finally realized I was actually in Kansas City the morning after I moved into an apartment with Sara Davidson, who quit her PR career at Bailey Lauerman to join Zaarly. During our first morning at the apartment, I was shaving my beard before work.<p>Sara walked into the bathroom, paid no attention to me, and just started brushing her teeth. I stared at her in our bathroom mirror with half a beard on my face. I kept staring as she brushed her teeth and rinsed out her mouth.<p>"I didn’t know we would be sharing the bathroom mirror every morning," I said with a smile.<p>"We are family now. Get over it," Sara said.<p>That’s when I realized Zaarly really will change human behavior –– it has already changed mine. I now share a bathroom mirror with a female co-worker before work.<p>I have a new family in a city full of strangers. I’d pay for that.