Where have you had success hiring freelancers? I’ve hired on upwork, freelancer, fiver and found the experience lacking. Why aren’t there decent portfolios to look at? Lots of time wasted qualifying/disqualify candidates/companies. Lots of auto reply spam. This has to be a market opportunity for someone. I’ve used Indeed for local hires, but haven’t used stackover jobs yet. I’m looking for short term flex hours mid level mobile development in react native and xamarin and am exhausted by these platforms.
These platforms commoditise development work. So, you get what you pay for.<p>I'd look for places where React Native and Xamarin developers meet. There almost certainly are Slack communities for these technologies.<p>Such communities often have a dedicated #jobs channel. Seeing who is most active and who seems to be most knowledgeable about the specific areas of expertise you require can also be very helpful.
Experienced freelancers won’t work for the rates you’re willing to pay judging by the platforms you’re looking at and are likely booked up far in advance. There isn’t really a market opportunity because good people who have work don’t want a third party platform inserted into their business leeching money.
Upwork is great, I found a lot of good Eastern European developers. I set the rates to at least 75 USD/hour however (which is a lot by Eastern European standards, and so it's very worth it to them), and I ask questions through the project proposal and the chat as to whether they know exactly how to solve my problem or not. This process weeds out most of the unqualified candidates. Perhaps you are not vetting thoroughly enough or not paying enough to be worth their time.
Have you tried Google or asking people you know for recommendations? Most of my clients find me via my personal website that way.<p>I wouldn't add myself to any of the sites you mentioned. I don't want to be listed somewhere as an interchangeable commodity, don't want an intermediary getting in the way of payment and communications, and don't want to be somewhere that attracts clients looking for the cheapest option. I can't believe some of these platforms allow screen capture software that let clients spy on the contractor either.
Try joining some slacks and discord’s for programming some have hire me threads. Also try Reddit and of course HN who wants to be hired. All these places tend to have portfolios posted.<p>There is an opportunity but as soon as you make the next upwork ... well you’ve made the next upwork! Make the next medium same thing. The gets shit as gets popular cycle repeats again and again.
I wrote a free book about this (no email wall, it's a Google Doc): www.productizeteam.co<p>My process:<p>1. OnlineJobs.ph/Dribbble/JobRack.eu/Local hiring website (exammple: Ejobs.ro)<p>2. Post a clear job ad with requirements/commitments/application form<p>3. Video call with the selected applicants<p>4. (Optional) Paid test task<p>5. Hired - Sign independent contractor agreement
Reading the question I don’t see any obvious attractions for good freelancers. Short term flex hours and competing with Fiver and Upwork on price is not how a freelancer maintains a sustainable business.
Also every month there is a thread where you tell people on HN that you are looking for freelancers or alternatively contact the right people yourself.<p>See -> <a href="https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=24342497" rel="nofollow">https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=24342497</a>
Upwork has worked well for me. You really have to invite promising candidates individually instead of opening the floodgates, and even then the hitrate is low. I typically give a small assignment to around 5 selected freelancers. I've found some amazing people this way, and are still working with them on an on-going basis.
> Why aren’t there decent portfolios to look at?<p>It's a chicken and egg problem. Most clients want to see previous work, but don't want their project to eventually become part of that previous work. The issue is compounded by the fact that most commercial software isn't flashy and easy to demonstrate to the casual observer like, say, a Dribbble account is for designers.<p>If experience with my own clients has taught me anything, it's that the best way to find good people is to just talk to them. Start incrementally - first a talk, then give them a few days worth or work, then a week, then more. Evaluate them at each step - starting with how they communicate and how professional they are and then the quality of their deliverables. I've noticed a pretty strong correlation between bad communicators and poor quality of work, thought YMMV.<p>> Lots of time wasted qualifying/disqualify candidates/companies.<p>Let me put it this way - there are two kinds of freelancers out there:<p>1. Those that invest in their visibility and charge for it.
2. Those that don't.<p>They might be equally good developers, but you're going to be paying a premium for the first one since he has intentionally made himself easier to find.