Jobazaar is a new take on combining tagging with auction-style job sites. The premise for the site is that an employer makes a post offering up a job, prospect employees join and post their bid onto the job. This is all virtually identical to a number of other job-bid websites – a popular one being Rent-A-Coder. I’m going to review, first, the concept of job bidding and then the value added by this web site.
Job Bidding Personally, I really dislike job bidding. It may seem like a ‘great way’ to find work, considering that there are so many jobs listed (on popular job sites), but the truth is that in order to actually win a job you have to drop your total bid to a demeaning level. I find that for jobs that I would normally contract out to about $25/hour end up being close to minimum wage, instead – which is highly impractical. Personally, I feel that blind ‘auctions’ really are a better way to acheive a better result – since no one can know what the lowest bid is, no one can undercut it.
Jobazaar Differences The main difference between Jobazaar and any other job-bidding web site lies in the fact that it uses tags as a categorization system, and I’m not entirely sure if it works as intended. Application developers seem to be missing the fact that tagging does not make for a good 3rd party categorization system. It’s good for finding your own items because you’re the one writing the tags. You may say ‘web’ and ‘perl’, I may cay ‘cgi’ and ‘lamp’. The advantage to having a strict categorization, like what Rent-A-Coder has, is that you know exactly where the jobs are that you want (for example ‘Perl > CGI > Databases’).
The two aspect of Jobazaar that I like is the fact that you can track job postings in your newsreader, using rss, and that they have a public blog available, soliciting feedback. Both of these are incredibly useful – and a smart decision.
In a nutshell, I don’t think that Jobazaar adds that much value to the typical job-bid model, available elsewhere on the Internet, to warrant its existence. Unless it begins to gather a serious userbase (which it doesn’t have, at this time), it may be too late for it to work at all.
Julian (July 7, 2005 at 4:33 am)
You’ve missed the fact that we have a cool rating & feedback system which allows the offerer to pick the applicant who probably will do the best job, not cheapest.
Because no one has yet given feedback on other users, there is no rating visible.
Additionally, feeds offer a value that no other “job-bid model” has: You can include the user feeds on your website to offer your jobs on your website, but with the powerful Jobazaar system in the background.
John Resig (July 7, 2005 at 7:43 am)
Julian You’re right, I did miss the rating system – it sounds like the end result would become similar to karma system – if someone does enough jobs, well enough, their rating would be high. It’s unfortunate that the userbase is small right now, I hope it really increases in size in order to make this useful.
I agree that the feeds are incredibly handy, as I mentioned in my review. If you’re looking to allow businesses to join this site, you may want to have a more powerful API setup, instead of just an RSS feed. I’d imagine that a corporation would want to break up their jobs by department, or task, and provide all sorts of contextual information along side it.
If you’re looking to really entice businesses and developers to come and join the site, I’d recommend linking your service in with others. For example, taking job postings from your web site and posting it on other job-bid web sites too. Once you do this, you can monitor the bids that come in and reintroduce them back into your system. This may seem kind of extreme, but getting your site off the ground may require some ‘drastic’ measures, in order to get it noticed.
Stu (February 13, 2007 at 6:25 am)
Oh man, you where so right with that. Look at it now.