I have a strong revulsion towards platforms that attempt to extract money from job seekers. It always feels just so unsavoury, so scammy.
Most employers would never dream of charging candidates to apply for jobs (it's downright illegal in many places).
Job boards don't charge candidates. The employers pay instead.
Sites like this seem... close to crossing that line.
> No more hassle in contacting unknown people asking for advice or referral.
Ask them directly whenever you need them.
To me, this is a bad dynamic. Paying to get access to people who might be able to offer advice.. sure, that's OK if it's done well.
But paying to get access to people who might refer me to the company for a job - I would question what any upstanding company would think if they knew that their employees were taking part in something like that.
My advice for Acoto would be to stay the heck away from any "pay for referral" business.
First, of all let me clear few things regarding what you said about us.
You could have understood it more correctly by asking but you decided to judge it. Nevermind let me clear those things as follows:
1. First of all, it is not a job portal and we are not asking money to provide jobs to people.
2. All the content made by professionals is free of cost.
3. Now let us come to the referral part where you misunderstood us as to what we meant to say. We never said you will be paying to get referrals from experts. The user is paying only for two things on our platform and that is: One on one consultation or interview preparation and rest everything is free. Now a user has a chance to get a referral from two places and that is if during interview preparation an expert feels he is up to the mark or if the user has score good amount of points on our platform we might refer him to our partner companies.
Should have at least checked the prototype gif before commenting what you interpreted.
Do let me know how can I change the text so that no one else misunderstands this again.
To copy & paste a previous comment I made about the concept of "constrained supply": When discussing "platform economics", economists often like to identify the "constrained supply" because that dictates where to prioritize efforts. In Uber, the constrained supply is the drivers, not the passengers. In dating apps, the constrained supply is women, not men. In a Q&A website, the constrained supply is the expert answerers and not the question askers. (This matches our intuition that generating new questions is "easy" and a larger population can ask them but answering questions is "hard" and therefore it's a smaller population that can do it.)
For Acoto, the constrained supply is the "expert mentor". So it's logical to want to know about the benefits for the mentors... but when I try click on the link to in the landing page:
>Want to register as an expert? There are numerous benefits of partnering with us. Click here"
It's just a sign up page asking for mobile phone and email address. No benefits specified. Being opaque about this is not a good look.
Hey! Thanks for asking. As we are in early-stage we are reaching out to experts directly and we are not expecting them to come to us directly through our website. Using this we do have many professionals from top firms.
As we continue further we will change the website and list down the benefits mentor will get in our platform. We added that link just to make sure if by any luck a mentor lands on our page he/she can contact us. It is mainly for users.
beachy|5 years ago
Most employers would never dream of charging candidates to apply for jobs (it's downright illegal in many places).
Job boards don't charge candidates. The employers pay instead.
Sites like this seem... close to crossing that line.
> No more hassle in contacting unknown people asking for advice or referral. Ask them directly whenever you need them.
To me, this is a bad dynamic. Paying to get access to people who might be able to offer advice.. sure, that's OK if it's done well.
But paying to get access to people who might refer me to the company for a job - I would question what any upstanding company would think if they knew that their employees were taking part in something like that.
My advice for Acoto would be to stay the heck away from any "pay for referral" business.
ironic_ali|5 years ago
Acoto|5 years ago
1. First of all, it is not a job portal and we are not asking money to provide jobs to people.
2. All the content made by professionals is free of cost.
3. Now let us come to the referral part where you misunderstood us as to what we meant to say. We never said you will be paying to get referrals from experts. The user is paying only for two things on our platform and that is: One on one consultation or interview preparation and rest everything is free. Now a user has a chance to get a referral from two places and that is if during interview preparation an expert feels he is up to the mark or if the user has score good amount of points on our platform we might refer him to our partner companies.
Should have at least checked the prototype gif before commenting what you interpreted.
Do let me know how can I change the text so that no one else misunderstands this again.
Have a good day!
jasode|5 years ago
For Acoto, the constrained supply is the "expert mentor". So it's logical to want to know about the benefits for the mentors... but when I try click on the link to in the landing page:
>Want to register as an expert? There are numerous benefits of partnering with us. Click here"
It's just a sign up page asking for mobile phone and email address. No benefits specified. Being opaque about this is not a good look.
Acoto|5 years ago
As we continue further we will change the website and list down the benefits mentor will get in our platform. We added that link just to make sure if by any luck a mentor lands on our page he/she can contact us. It is mainly for users.
Do let me know what you think now :)