by Glenn Meyer
(San Francisco, CA, USA)
The money is definitely not the primary motivator. It’s not great, especially given where I live. But the tasks are interesting, and the variety is cool, and makes it worth accepting less money than I might make otherwise.
I’ve never tried to stay in touch with a human requester because a HIT was lucrative, but at least two websites so far have had provided the option to ‘upgrade’ from HITs to logging in directly to get work. I’m not sure how Amazon feels about that, but I’ve taken them up on it.
I did consider contacting the requester of one HIT, who incidentally appeared to be someone I’d get along with and lived in my area, but ultimately decided it would be a bit too weird. In general, the most lucrative HITs – not counting the endemic scams that one guy seems to post over and over at the top of the range – tend to be one-offs.
For example, one offered $3 to post 5 designs to Zazzle. I already had CafePress designs I’d been meaning to put on Zazzle anyway, so that was probably 15 minutes of work. Lucrative is pretty relative; the highest rate I can typically get is about $6/hr.
Mostly I do surveys, which tend to pay $3-6/hr if I do them quickly. That’s basically discounting overhead, though – I try to do one right after another, but often it takes too long to find another HIT that isn’t a scam, or already taken, or something I’m not qualified to do. I actually don’t know much about regular outsourcing.
Mostly I use Mechanical Turk because it’s kind of entertaining and I can do it from my bedroom. I’m not sure how outsourcing compares, but I’d be interested in doing similarly easy tasks for low but reasonable pay, if I could keep doing them at home whenever I feel like it. I wouldn’t really know how to start doing something like that.
Comments for Amazon Turk is a Mixture of Money and Entertainment
Jul 16, 2012 | So this low pay is OK for you even if you are living in the US? It’s nice to read that the work on the Turk is actually worth it – if it’s fun enough to do.How some requesters allowed to “Upgrade” from a HIT to regular work is probably against the TOS of amazon’s service. But I don’t think they did a bad thing. They should just not get caught. The guys from Amazon can get pretty fast with banning an account… “Regular” outsourcing often means that you need to work at specific times – although you can work from home. If you cannot cope with availabilites and deadlines, then indeed Mechanical Turk is better suited for your working style. Good luck! |
Jul 07, 2014 | Jackpot It’s just like you’re doing it out of boredom or just as a pastime?Actually, in other countries, most tasks are paid less than a dollar. Getting HITs that’s more than a dollar is like hitting a jackpot. In my own experience, I’ve never tried being paid more than a dollar—probably because I didn’t take much time with MTurk. 🙂 |