I was wondering if anyone had any tips on places to look for freelance developers. See, I run a small web company (just me and my developer partner), and sometimes we get a lot of job offers in the pipeline and we like to have some freelancers in our rolodex in case we need to contract out work. Finding designers is fairly easy since I'm a designer and I'm in the community, but I'm not plugged into the dev community. I would like to know some good resources should a time come when I need to reach out. Any tips? p.s. When I say developer, I mean someone with PHP and MySQL server-side experience and XHTML, CSS, and Javascript client-side experience. Thanks.
nickadams|18 years ago
To address some things...
@edw519 - This isn't a start-up situation. As I said, this would be freelance, (i.e., we pay them). And this is for client work that comes along, not an internal project that would be relevant to an equity situation. I didn't think that hiring freelancers when work exceeded manpower was that ass backwards...
@lanej0 - My developer is to an extent, but I was also looking for more resources. Can't hurt to expand right? Also, on your other point, it's tough working with college students because of their schedules. But it is something we've explored.
@everyone - I want to stay away from elance and the like. I'm not looking for someone who can low-ball the best, I'm looking for someone who can do great work. Also, job boards aren't the best either. They are useful for AFTER you get the proposal. I'm looking for resources so that when client work comes in, I'll have some names on hand to contact to determine if I can take on the job. It's kind of a preemptive thing. Too many of these job boards focus on the specific job, not the talent pool.
@tmm - A good way to find designers is to check out design galleries and design communities. That way you will be able to judge the talent pretty easily by the work they've done. A simple email will get the ball rolling. Most designers say whether they are looking for freelance work right in their portfolio.
Thanks everyone for the responses!
edw519|18 years ago
izak30|18 years ago
lanej0|18 years ago
Very well then... Colleges and universities aren't bad. Most students will work for a reasonable rate, and most CS majors can handle a little PHP easily.
RyanG|18 years ago
sosuke|18 years ago
edw519|18 years ago
nickadams|18 years ago
cstejerean|18 years ago
wehriam|18 years ago
Zak|18 years ago
nreece|18 years ago
edw519|18 years ago
If 2 of you can't handle all of the early stage development work, then you need a third partner. Why would anyone any good work for you without getting equity?
Tichy|18 years ago
unknown|18 years ago
[deleted]
tmm1|18 years ago
rms|18 years ago
just what you're looking for
wenbert|18 years ago
semigeek|18 years ago
theremora|18 years ago
unknown|18 years ago
[deleted]
Kaizyn|18 years ago
wehriam|18 years ago