兼职遛狗赚钱软件骗局app有哪些?


在新冠疫情侵袭纽约市之前,作为宠物保姆和兼职健身教练的珍·泽恩每周会工作七天,在纽约市的切尔西区遛狗、照看宠物。2012年,泽恩开始了自己的宠物保姆工作,2016年搬到纽约后,她还是做着这项工作,而且生意好到她都不需要有自己的固定住所,因为上一家的工作刚做完,紧接着就要到下一家去照看宠物。
在谈及4年前搬到纽约来时,泽恩说:“我当时的目标就是不付房租,代人照看房子。我真没想到这门生意能做成。”
但随着疫情的爆发,她和自己在健身房的同事也都丢掉了工作。在纽约,虽然宠物照看和遛狗是不可或缺的服务,但这方面的工作也受到了很大冲击,不过泽恩在疫情期间依然有工作可做,某种意义上说,她挺享受现在的工作状态。
近期,《财富》采访了泽恩,了解疫情对其收入和未来看法的影响,以及她现在的工作状态。
为简明起见,以下对话有所删改。
《财富》:新冠疫情爆发前,你的工作是怎样的状态?
泽恩:疫情爆发前,我每周会工作七天。可以说只要想工作就会一直有活干。要是想休息的话还得提前计划才行。一般情况下,我大概有10到15个工作预约。有些遛狗师只在假期工作,有些只在工作日工作。也有一周都在工作的。我就每天都遛狗,周一到周五的工作占到了总工作量的60%,另外40%是在假期。
我喜欢假期,因为重大假日一般是一年当中工作最多的时候。比如阵亡将士纪念日、独立日、圣诞节和感恩节一般都是一年中最忙的时候。对于那些在工作日从事遛狗工作的人来说,这份工作的作息更接近于常规工作。对我而言,无论是工作日还是假期的工作我都很喜欢。
疫情什么时候开始影响到了你的工作?
大约在2月中下旬,因为很多企业都让员工在家工作了,导致我们在周中的工作量开始减少。当时,我的客户差不多每周都会少一个。他们会跟我说:“啊,因为我现在在家工作,所以不用麻烦你过来帮忙了。”之后随着纽约及全球各地纷纷推出居家令,所有假期的工作预约也都取消了。
这种情况很吓人对吧,毕竟你也没有固定的住处?你有可以去的地方吗?
幸好我有个相处非常融洽的男友,最近我一直住在他那。我也曾想过如果没跟他交往会发生什么情况。纽约部分宠物保姆现在的工作只是帮助那些离开纽约的人看顾他们的猫。我想可能那些养狗的人大多在出城时把狗也带走了。但还有很多猫需要有人照看。我觉得要是我真没地方去,或许会有某位老主顾愿意让我住在他们家吧,希望如此。或者我也可以回俄亥俄,跟家人住在一起,或者住在其他什么地方。
针对疫情你采取了哪些防护措施?
主要就是按照大楼管理方的建议做些最基本的防护。一些客户还是会当面把狗狗交给我,只是我会佩戴口罩。然后就是洗手洗得更勤了。遛狗时我一直用的是自己的绳套,所以我也没戴手套。
我是这么考虑的,如果狗狗会感染病毒,那我的客户肯定也已经感染了,那么狗狗身上也会沾上病毒。当然这都是假设的,我觉得其实不太可能发生。不过也肯定会有遛狗师害怕碰到这种情况。比如有些人在把狗带到家中时会给狗洗澡,还会采取其它一些防护措施。我觉得我可能对这件事没那么紧张。
纽约发布的居家令对你的业务有什么影响?还能遛狗么?
对于遛狗师这个行业是否属于必要行业,一开始其实说的并不是很清楚。现在,它已被正式纳入必要行业名单。因为我们有些客户是依然坚守在岗位上的医务工作者。我有个客户是债券行业的,她现在比疫情前还忙,因而想要有人来帮她遛遛狗,好让她能完成自己的工作。所以我们这个行业一直都很重要。最近,我认识的一些遛狗师停工了,也许是因为他们与高风险人群生活在一起,也许是因为害怕,亦或是因为要乘坐地铁通勤。我可以步行到我服务的区域,所以我永远都不会停工,但有些人是已经停工了。
居家令生效的前两周,大家因为不知道会发生什么情况,所以多少有些不敢出门。而我还是会每天出门,居家令已经推出两个月了,也没怎么在街上碰到咳嗽的人,大家也都戴着口罩,所以我现在还挺放心的。我觉得跟他人保持六英尺的距离也并不是一件难事。商店和各座大楼也都采取了一定的防护举措,比如:不用跟门卫说话,电梯也有载客限制,诸如此类。这段时间我就是这么过的,所以感觉还行。
你的工作量下降了多少?
和往常相比下降了大概75%到80%,甚至85%。我尽量每天接两单工作,有时候多些,有时候少些。
我的大多数老客户要么现在不在纽约,要么处于居家办公的状态,所以我还没见到过他们。我还通过Wag(一款遛狗应用程序——译者注)按需提供遛狗服务,这部分客户我也不认识。他们大多都是宅在家里,而我不会乱问些七七八八的问题。
那些不在纽约或者居家办公的客户会继续给你付钱么?
他们想付钱,但我没要。
对于业务下滑你有多担心?现在的收入只有正常状态的20%到25%,这份工作还能干下去么?
现在的收入对我来说是够的,因为我很节俭。生意好的时候,我存的钱也比较多,再就是目前也不用交房租。这也是我没有申请经济援助的原因之一,因为收入足以支撑我的开支。只要不动我的存款就行,这就是我现在想要维持的水平。所以对我来说,只要能达到这一水平,我都不会有什么问题。
但我相信很多人,尤其是那些兼职担任遛狗师的艺术家或者学生,他们中可能有些人不会回纽约了。
大约18个月前,我为纽约的宠物保姆和遛狗师创建了一个Facebook小组。看起来那些业内的老人还都在工作。大多数人的工作量都下降了70%到80%。我觉得现在最难熬的实际上是那些刚入行的新人,他们基本上失去了所有的客户和收入来源。
新冠疫情期间,纽约的狗文化有什么变化吗?
变化还是有一些的。纽约人爱狗,也许每个人都爱狗。经常有人会过来逗逗你牵着的狗,跟狗狗玩玩,也不会问东问西。我还记得3月初有一次,一位女士摸了摸我牵着的狗,她的表情好像在说:“啊,别担心,我刚洗的手。”我觉得要是有人想逗狗玩,如果拒绝的话反而挺奇怪的。不过,现在人们不像以前那么喜欢逗狗了,但是如果你是牵着两条狗出去遛,每条狗都用3英尺的绳套牵着,那就正好是6英尺了。
爱狗人士还是会和狗一起玩。在麦迪逊广场公园附近,虽然狗狗公园关闭了,但是人们会把狗牵到草坪上,那里有一小片区域现在成了小型狗狗公园。所以人们还是可以和狗一起玩,只不过可能不像以前那么频繁了。
现在,你跟养狗人士聊天的话题有什么变化么?
我觉得现在除了疫情好像也没什么可聊的。别的事大家好像也不太上心,在纽约尤其如此。疫情影响着生活的方方面面,甚至连星巴克开不开门都得看疫情发展情况。太不一样了。
即使是和我男朋友,我们聊的也都是疫情的事。这个话题现在真的是已经聊烂了。
这段时间你在遛狗时碰到过什么奇怪的事么?
我是亚裔,对亚裔来说这段时间挺煎熬的。我有个华裔女性朋友,她比我还惨。她最后离开了纽约,离开前她是在SoHo区服务,她说自己在那里每天都会收到差评。我只从几个脑子不好的客户那里收到过差评,这种情况挺少见。现在,天黑以后我也不出门了。以前晚上人多,还挺安全,但现在不一样了。不过现在人们也开始慢慢走出家门。封城的头4个礼拜街上几乎空无一人,现在出来的人渐渐多了起来,商家也陆续开门营业了。
这次疫情对你个人有什么影响?
老实说,我是个很内向的人,对工作的热情也一般。只是因为喜欢才做了遛狗师。撇开新冠疫情不谈的话,空空荡荡的街道和不用排队的感觉也不错。我挺享受这段空档期,不过我也希望生活能早日回复正常。街角的小意大利餐厅刚刚开门,所以我们就想,“现在是上午10:30。我们应该点个披萨庆祝一下。”
你认为新冠疫情会彻底改变遛狗师和宠物保姆行业么?还是会回到疫情前的状态?
这个问题问得好。从纽约遛狗师的角度来说,我觉得有很多客户其实可以在家工作,他们日常工作比较灵活,如果想离开纽约也完全可以。所以就行业的变化而言,还是要看有多少客户不再需要宠物照看服务,也要看封城期间宠物收养者的情况,以及有多少潜在遛狗师会就此离开这座城市。我觉得市场会出现一次重新洗牌,但最后所有的问题都会解决。我听说2008年(经济危机)后也发生了很大变化,不过可能也没这次的变化这么大。但我觉得对于享受奢侈服务的人来说,2008年发生了很多变化。我觉得高收入群体最后还是会回来,对他们而言,雇人帮自己遛狗仍然是划算的。
至于那些在疫情期间收养了宠物的人士,暂时还没看到他们有什么照看宠物的需求。通常来说,很多人喜欢在12月份抱养小狗。所以一般在1月和2月会有一波“小狗潮”。现在的好处在于,狗狗都被主人带着出来了,如果我愿意的话,完全可以在保持社交距离的同时跟他们聊聊,看看他们在疫情过后会有什么需求。(财富中文网)
译者:梁宇
审校:夏林
Before COVID-19 upended New York City, Jen Tserng, a pet-sitter and part-time fitness instructor, worked seven days a week, walking dogs and caring for pets in New York City’s Chelsea
neighborhood. Her pet-sitting business, which she’s been building since 2012—and since 2016 in New York—is so reliable that she doesn’t even have an apartment: she simply moves
house-sitting gig to house-sitting gig.
“My goal was to just not pay rent and house-sit," says Tserng about coming to the city four years ago. “I didn’t really think it would work out, but it has.”
When the pandemic struck, she and her fitness colleagues were out of jobs. Her pet-sitting and dog-walking business, which is considered an essential service in New York, has taken a
significant hit too, though Tserng has continued to work through the pandemic and in some ways, even enjoy it.
Fortune spoke with Tserng for a new series, The Coronavirus Economy, about how the pandemic has affected her income, her thoughts on the future, and how she has been handling work.
This interview has been lightly edited for brevity and clarity.
Fortune: What was your job like before COVID-19?
Tserng: Pre-pandemic, I was working seven days a week. I pretty much had work whenever I wanted it. I’d have to actively schedule time off if I wanted it. A typical day, I would
probably have about 10 to 15 appointments. Some dog walkers only do the vacation stuff like cats and then some people only do the Monday through Friday. Some of us do all of it. My
workload was probably about 60% Monday through Friday, daily walks, and then about 40% vacation visits.
What I like about the vacation stuff is that your major holidays are going to be pretty much the busiest time of year. So Memorial Day, Fourth of July, Christmas, Thanksgiving—those are
going to be the busiest times of the year. If people do more of them Monday through Friday, dog-walking grind, that’s going to be more consistent and similar to a regular work schedule.
So I like both the consistency and the variability in doing both of those.
When did the virus start affecting things for you?
COVID first started to impact the business around mid or late February because more companies were sending clients home to work, and they didn’t need as much of the Monday through
Friday stuff. I would lose maybe one client a week. They’d say, “Oh, I’m working from home now so you don’t need to come.” And then, of course, once New York’s stay-at-home order and
the worldwide orders started happening, all the vacation visits were canceled.
That must have been scary since you don’t have a permanent home. Did you have a place to go?
Thankfully, I have a boyfriend, and he’s been very accommodating as far as staying with him. I have thought about what would have happened if I hadn’t been dating him. Some of the work
that we pet-sitters in New York have right now is watching cats in particular for people who’ve fled the city. I think a lot of the dog people who left the city took their dogs with
them. But there’s a few cats around that still need care. And I feel like if I didn’t have some place to go, then probably one of my regular clients hopefully would let me stay at their
place. Or I could have gone home to stay with my family in Ohio or something like that.
Are there precautions you’re taking because of the virus?
I’ve been mostly going off what the buildings are recommending, which honestly hasn’t been a lot. I still do face-to-face handoffs with some clients, I just wear a mask. And I wash my
hands more frequently. I don’t use gloves. I have always used my own leashes.
For me, I’m thinking if a dog were to have the virus on it that would mean my client was sick and they were shedding COVID onto the coat of the dog. I just think that whole chain of
events, while hypothetically possible, is unlikely. There are definitely dog walkers who are afraid of that. For example, people who take dogs into their homes, some of them are giving
the dogs baths and taking other precautions. I think I’m a little more laid-back about it.
When New York issued its stay-at-home order, what did that mean for your business? Was dog walking allowed?
There was a little bit of confusion as to whether we were essential workers. Now, dog walkers are officially included in the list of essential workers. Some of us have clients who work
in health care who are still working. I have a client that I picked up who works in bonds, so she’s actually busier than she was pre-COVID, and she likes to have someone come and take
the dogs out so she can finish her work. So we have always been essential. I know a lot of dog walkers who have decided to close down anyway, maybe because they live with someone who is
high-risk or they’re scared or they commute on the subway. I can walk to my service area so I never shut down, but some people have.
The first two weeks after the order went into effect, because people didn’t really know what to expect, it was a little unnerving being out there. I’ve been going out every day, so I
feel more comfortable with it now that it’s been two months in and realizing that people in the streets are not really coughing and are wearing masks. I think it’s relatively easy to
stay six feet from other people. All the stores and buildings have certain things in place: I don’t really have to talk to the doorman, they have elevator capacity rules, things like
that. So I feel okay about it now that I’ve been doing it for a while.
How much was your business down?
I would say I was down to about 20% to 25% of my normal volume, maybe even like 15%. I’m trying to do an average of two visits a day, sometimes more, sometimes less.
Most of my daily clients either left the city or they’re working from home so I haven’t seen them. I also work through Wag, which is on-demand walking, so I don’t know those clients
well. A lot of them are home, and I don’t ask.
Your clients who left the city or are working from home—did they continue to pay you?
They offered, but I didn’t accept.
How worrisome is the drop in business for you? With 20% to 25% of your normal revenue, will your business be able to survive?
For me, that’s enough to pay my bills because I’m very frugal. When business was good, I had a relatively high savings rate. Of course not paying rent helps with that. That’s part of
the reason why I haven’t applied for assistance, because I have been making enough to cover my expenses. As long as I’m not dipping into my savings, that’s the level that I’m trying to
stay at right now. So for me, I’ll have no problems reopening whenever we get to that.
But I believe that a lot of people, especially if they were working in the arts or if they’re students and they walk dogs part-time, I imagine some of those people won’t be coming back
to the city.
I started a Facebook group for New York pet-sitters and dog walkers about 18 months ago. It seems like the people who are more established, they’re still working. Most of us have gone
down to about 20% to 30% of bookings. I think it’s the people who weren’t established, who basically lost all their clients and all their sources of income, who are struggling more.
Has the city’s dog culture changed in this time of the coronavirus?
It is a little different. New Yorkers love dogs, maybe everyone just loves dogs. A lot of times you just get people just coming up to the dog and petting them and not asking or anything
like that. I remember specifically, it must have been in early March, one woman reached out to pet the dog, and she’s like, “Oh, don’t worry, I just washed my hands.” I thought it was
really strange to say. Like, I just don’t want you to touch the dog in general. Now people are not as likely to do that, but also if you have two dogs on a leash, and three feet of
leash on each side, that’s six feet.
Are conversations with dog people different now?
I feel like you can only talk about the coronavirus. There’s not really anything else that is relevant, especially when we live in the city. And pretty much everything that we do is
based on that, even if it’s something like, “Is Starbucks open today?” This is so different.
Even with my boyfriend, we talk about the coronavirus every day. You’d think we’d be sick of it by now.
The people who want to be sociable with dogs, they’re still making it happen. Around Madison Square Park, now that they have closed the dog parks, people are taking the dogs into the
lawn areas, and they’re just having their own little dog parks there. So people are still socializing their dogs, maybe not as much as before, but they’re still doing it.
Have you had any strange dog-walking encounters during this time?
I’m Asian, so it’s not a great time to be Asian. I haven’t experienced that as much as one of my girlfriends who is also Chinese. She ended up leaving the city, but she said daily in
her service area of SoHo she was getting comments. I’ve only gotten comments from a couple crazy people. It’s not by any means a regular occurrence. I also am not out after dark,
because I feel that safety in numbers is no longer there. But people are starting to come out again. The first four weeks after everything closed, it was a little empty around, but
people are starting to come back out; businesses are starting to open back up.
How’s the pandemic been for you personally?
I’m actually very introverted, and I don’t necessarily like working. I’ll do it because I like what I do. So I actually kind of enjoyed having these pretty empty streets, not having to
wait in lines, I mean, global pandemic aside. So I’ve kind of enjoyed the breather, but I am looking forward to life getting back. Little Italy on the corner just opened up, so we were
like, “It’s 10:30 a.m. I think we need to have pizza to celebrate.”
Do you think this will change the dog-walking and pet-sitting businesses for good, or will it go back to what it was before the pandemic?
That’s a really great question. I feel like as dog walkers in this city, a lot of our clients have the ability to work from home, they have a lot of flexibility with their schedules,
and they have the opportunity to not be in the city if they don’t want to be. So I think things will eventually shake out between the clients who no longer need care and also the people
who have adopted an animal during lockdown and then potential dog walkers leaving the city. I think there’ll be some reshuffling of the service areas, but I think it’ll all work out. I
hear that after 2008, things were a lot different, probably not this different. But I feel like a lot of things changed in 2008 as far as people using a luxury service. I think the
higher earners will come back, and it’s still going to be worth it for them to pay someone to walk their dogs.
I haven’t seen any requests yet from people who adopted pets during the pandemic. Generally, December is a popular time to get a puppy. So we had a little bit of a puppy boom in January
and February. The nice thing about it now is if I wanted to network, those dog owners are out with their dogs, so you can kind of have a socially distanced conversation with them and
see what their needs might be after this.
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之前,鹿鹿跟大家分享了很多房产购置、投资的知识,但是很多宝宝表示:“对于目前的自己门槛太高,我的问题是还没存到买房的首付!”
所以,最近几期本鹿都致力于教大家开发副业兼职、挖掘新财路、迅速存出首付钱。
毕竟,你每天上班996的血汗都是为了老板的财富添砖加瓦,而副业兼职虽然也苦也累,却是直接为自己加鸡腿,一不小心还能翻身做主人。
那么,今天本鹿还是跟大家分享几个门槛低、操作不复杂,但是干得好收入颇丰的小兼职/副业。
01
兼职向导
上期文章收到一个鹿粉留言说:“人在上海,对城市很熟悉、交通路线、哪里好吃好玩都很清楚,可以做什么兼职?”
结果巧了,另一个鹿粉梅子小姐姐就来爆料:自己旅行途中遇到的兼职向导。实在是非常适合这种“擅长吃喝玩乐坐公交”的猪猪胖友们。
比如:梅子小姐姐遇到的是夜游团的导游,导游每天白天上班,夜间带团,带团保底300元每次,条件是必须要自己的车、熟悉哪里好吃、好看、好玩。
除此之外,还有旅拍团,跟拍团小姐姐自己有摄影工作室,空闲时来接团,和夜游团区别就是:她带单反不用带车,交通只有打车。她说应聘这个兼职需要考试,和公司的人出行跟拍,照片过关就算应聘成功。
其实,如果你的野心再大一点的话(或者几个朋友一起合伙)就可以组成这样一个提供“小众旅游服务”的公司了,他们提供的服务包括:
1. 路线策划、吃喝玩乐向导服务。
2. 小团vip服务,一般是2-6人为一团,服务更周到。
3. 车辆一般是小轿车或者商务车,乘坐更舒服。
4. 带团的人,即是导游、也是司机,还能帮忙摄影(帮忙拍照这事真的很吸引人)。
这种服务真的是充分满足了“自理能力差还很想自由行”的猪猪旅游者的需求。
服务周到、时间灵活、吃喝玩乐都能尽量满足游客的需求,实在hin有市场。这种团不仅国内游可行,国外游也很流行。
举个例子:
我朋友lily,单身女子,想去法国游玩,不想参加常规旅行社,又希望有人带着玩。
后来她在旅游论坛上刷到了这样的小众旅行团,一团总共6个人。导游是一个法国留学生,暑期没事就自己出来带团。吃喝玩乐、衣食住行、景点路线都是他根据自己的经验总结出来的,物美价廉。他既当司机也当导游还是摄影师(居然还帮P图)。
一路下来,游玩的景点又好玩又小众,即有跟团的方便又有自由行的灵活, lily觉得特别满意,又给他介绍了不少客户。
那么问题来了,如何找到这种团或者发布这种团的信息出去呢?
其实很简单,淘宝、马蜂窝、各种旅游论坛刷一刷广告就有客户上门了。
当然,如果你不想自己带团,但是又有这种知识储备的话,其实还有更简单的方式,就是出卖旅游路线策划,挂在淘宝上,一份9.9元,也能卖出不少份。
02
剥虾师
半小时内剥完3斤小龙虾,每天兼职最低4小时,可获150到200元的日薪。——面对即将来临的“嗑”小龙虾旺季,一则“剥虾师”的招聘启事引发关注。
我是在新华网看到这个兼职的报道,还觉得搞笑,可是真的有人招聘吗?结果,手贱一搜,还真的有人招聘!!!而且是河马鲜生!
目前,剥虾师的招聘启事已经摆在了武汉盒马首义路门店的显眼位置。招牌启事上显示,4月20日起至9月底,每周六、周日兼职,排班每月不低于8天。此外,长沙地区、北京十里堡店都在招募哟!
所以,大家有时候不要觉得这些职业奇葩,感兴趣的话,搜索一下,投投简历,毛遂自荐,真的就开发出一条新财路。
03
遛狗师
大家都知道,出于身体和心理健康,每只狗狗每天都应该有一定量的运动和社交活动——也就是每天都要带狗子出去溜溜。
可是城市的快节奏总是有些让人难以招架,白天要上一整天的班,中午的时间根本不够到家,有时候还要加班到深夜...一边是担心、一边却还要敲打键盘,狗狗是不是饿了,狗狗肯定憋不住要拉在家里。
于是一些工作特别忙的主人会选择每天把狗狗交给职业遛狗人照顾几个小时!
这种兼职在国外非常的流行,很多青少年的暑期和课余兼职就是从帮人遛狗开始的。
现在在中国,尤其是大城市,需求越来越大,但是从事的人却不多(有兴趣的鹿粉要抓住机会呀)。
此外呢,还有更高阶的“职业遛狗师”,除了带狗子出去玩儿,还同时帮助它们“社会化训练”,遛狗按小时收费价格在80到100多元不等。
所谓社会化训练,就是让狗狗培养更适应人类社会的生活习惯。
比如:看到车辆不去追逐,碰到陌生人不会乱吠,碰到小朋友不会扑到他们身上去,这需要训犬师专业的训练,这个过程最好是在狗狗幼年期完成,并且是个循序渐进的过程。
举个例子:
鹿鹿家最近就养了一只拉布拉多,还是只小小狗,就非常的好吃懒做。前几天,把它送到附近的“职业遛狗师”那里进行社会化训练。收费是真的不低!
04
陪跑师
担心不掌握正确的跑步姿势伤了膝盖?或者没人监督、打气,自己跑着跑着就去了烧烤摊?陪伴或训练跑步爱好者跑步的陪跑师也是新兴职业之一。
看到这个兼职,请不要觉得又是无稽之谈。鹿鹿身边起码有2个朋友请过陪跑师。
比如:朋友Cathy,现在是个马拉松爱好者,最近打算是国外跑马拉松。
Cathy刚开始跑步只是处于锻炼身体的需要,因为担心跑步姿势不正确伤了膝盖,所以请了个陪跑师(类似健身教练)。后来,越跑越上瘾,开始挑战马拉松,跑马拉松之前也会预约陪跑师指导陪练一段时间。
陪跑师的收费在每小时几十元到数百元,不仅可以日常陪伴普通的跑步,也可跟跑马拉松。对于长跑新人来说,陪跑师可以说是全程护航了。
05
情感治愈师
安慰失恋的朋友,攒人品的同时还能赚笔钱——情感治愈师,月薪从4000元到6000元不等,看来挺诱人。
不过,治愈师给恋爱、婚姻、家庭情感出问题的人群提供心理辅导,看似人人能干,专业化的要求可不低:要具备基本的心理咨询的技术和理论,丰富的心理学知识,并且熟悉社会学、伦理学、教育学等方面的知识。
06
这些兼职哪里找?
最后肯定会有很多胖友们这些兼职哪里找!主要有下面几种途径:
1.百度/google: 搜索一下,你可以找到很多相关的招聘信息,再从这些信息需要突破点。我以前寻找翻译兼职也就是这么找到的。
2. 求职/兼职网站:现在,很多求职网站都有兼职板块了,比如51job、智联、hiall 等。一品威客、猪八戒网等则是比较专业的兼职网站了。
3. 互联网生活服务app: 比如uu跑腿、58同城、大众点评等等。
4. 专业论坛:比如旅游相关的可能发布在旅游类的论坛、社区。
俗话说得好“师傅领进门,修行在个人”。本鹿只能告诉大家有哪些兼职,你可以如何寻找,剩下的需要靠你自己去争取、去实践,至于做不做,具体怎么做都只能靠你自己呢!
再叮嘱一句:做兼职的时候,一定要小心,防止上当哦!
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