DirectoryContractor.com provides property listings about real estate contractor, home builder, inspection services and much more.

Posts Tagged ‘Home Builders’

Get Paid to Take Surveys Online and Become a Sub Contractor

Saturday, June 5th, 2010

Online paid surveys are becoming popular among stay at home mothers and fathers, self employed, students, and more. People are finding it remarkably easy to set up a computer in the office and start making money from home on your own time. Most of these people had no idea where to start or what type of jobs were available online, but they jumped in and found success. All of the confusion and doubt is what causes many people not to take the steps to making money online.

If you want to get paid to take surveys, you can take the help of several company websites that offer you payment in return of the service that you conduct for them. In this way, not only do you get to learn about new products and companies through the survey but at the same time you also get the opportunity to make money online. Now you can provide for your family while still having the time and freedom to spend time with them.

There are several market research companies that operate on the behalf of the small companies to find out the reactions of the general people about the particular products and services of a particular company. These companies through the survey get to know the reactions of the people. As a result, they spend huge portions of their advertising budget on paying for the surveys to be written. The big companies hire the market research company who in turn hires several individuals like you to carry out the surveys online. These individual writers are known as sub contractors. You are your own boss, you work on your own time and you choose your schedule. The freedom that online opportunities provide make it easy for anyone to make money from home.

However, before you start conducting the survey, you must know that you will no doubt get paid to take surveys but the rate will vary from within 2$ and 20$ on the basis of survey that you conduct and the company for which you conduct. The companies which offer more rates can always prove to be faked companies and therefore you should try to be careful from such false companies.

Risk Management – Sub-Contractors

Friday, April 9th, 2010

Risk assessment of sub-contractors becomes more essential, the more complex the item of supply and the fewer suppliers there are to choose from.

The amount and importance of risk management goes in this order, starting with the most difficult:

If the system requires a complicated piece of modified software based on an existing proprietary software, then due to copyright issues, only the original owner of the code can be approached to change it as required. This is a sole source supply involving software development, which is notoriously difficult, and needs to be micro-managed in order to succeed.

Equally, if a complicated bespoke software is needed, even given that there are a number of sub-contractors capable of doing the work, it is a very risky business and needs careful management.

Items of hardware which will be designed and manufactured specifically for this project or which require special manufacturing processes need a high degree of careful risk management.

Next down the chain in terms of risk are specialist items of proprietary hardware. Again, this is likely to be a sole-source item, which in itself carries risk.

Alternatively, the risk involved in buying standard commercial-off-the-shelf (COTS) items of either hardware or software where there are various similar products to choose from, is fairly low, but still exists and management will be required.

In a nutshell, the order of risk, starting with the highest is:

Sole source software development

Multiple source software development

Sole source complex COTS software requiring system integration

Sole source hardware development and manufacture

Multiple source hardware development and manufacture

COTS Software supply

COTS Hardware supply

Each of these scenarios carry different types and quantities of risks, making individual plans for their management absolutely essential.