Can anyone list the jobs they've done?
What was the job?
How long did it last?
How many hours/day or week?
How much did it pay?
These would really help us understand flexjobs...
I was the original poster who mentioned FlexJobs on the other thread.
I was hired/accepted as a freelance editor of academic texts/theses 2 years ago, and my engagement with that work has been ongoing since then. (The company that hired me requires an MS or PhD degree of its editors.) I typically work around 20-30 hours per week editing, and usually earn $3-$5k/month. The rate of pay is determined by the document's word count, so my hourly rate is determined by how fast I work. I started at $9 per 1,000 words, and have been given three $1/1,000-words raises over the past 2 years, so that I now earn $12/1,000 words. Typically, I can edit between 3,000 to 4,000 words per hour, and sometimes 5,000 if conditions are ideal. The most lucrative document paid me $120 for 45 minutes of work, but that was a rare exception.
The company I work for is great -- I have very friendly interactions with the managers, and they pass along all praise from satisfied clients. If I need to take time off of editing when life gets busy, they are agreeable. If disputes with dissatisfied clients happen to arise, the managers handle those (rare) situations well (that is, they don't penalize the editors as some other companies do). Deadlines are reasonable, and bonuses are offered for jobs with tight deadlines. We are assigned documents (based on our areas of expertise) that we can accept or decline, and the company also maintains a portal where they post jobs that any editor has the option to grab.
YMMV; another editing company that posted jobs on the FlexJobs site is, according to my research, a really bad outfit -- demanding that their editors accept assigned jobs even if the editor previously stated that he or she wouldn't be available during a certain period, retracting pay from editors if the client complained, requiring editors to perform free redo editing if the client has multiple drafts of the same document, passing along 20% discounts given to clients for large jobs as 20% pay cuts to the editors of those documents, etc. Definitely search around the web for reviews of any company that you are considering working for; I have found Glassdoor to be a very useful site.