Please don't say random things, especially if you don't have $10,000 to spend right now. The whole idea of this question is to try to potentially discover value and to price out those that want "Snapchat for dogs for $500".
Edit 1: Requests like "Lifetime Access for" also don't qualify as viable responses....for obvious reasons.
Maybe get tested for kissing bug disease (assuming you are American). It can significantly impact the joints and is seldom tested for.
If you have it, I take PayPal.;)
I would pay $10,000 for an API that gives me real-time Asian news (Korean, Japanese, Chinese) content that matches a keyword.
I would pay $10,000 for an API that classifies an article into a topic such as politics, tech, etc.
I would pay $10,000 for an API that shows me the annual/monthly trends for FB likes, Twitter followers, Instagram followers, and App Store downloads for public companies that are in the equity market so I can analyze these companies and buy/sell prior to earnings.
I would pay $10,000 for an API that gives me a stream of Instagram updates that have a certain keyword.
I would pay $10,000 for an API that gives me the social metrics, given an Instagram handle.
And yes, I work in the social marketing industry :)
Thanks.
10k for a LI api to a company page? I don't get it.
Just giving my domain-specific 2 cents.
That's fairly doable at decent accuracy with using current NLP techniques. At that budget I guess you can find a smart freelance dev to do the job (wink ;)
It could be a service that goes the extra mile in terms of discovery to find someone compatible in terms of values, interests and hobbies, etc.
I'd gladly pay $10,000 for someone who could just handle sales and customer service for a project that pays $20,000 or more.
A huge part of the role is just deciding requirements. Whether this thing is possible, how much it costs, keeping the client from sneaking in something impossible, and lowering the costs to us when we can't deliver something that is too expensive to build.
The person has to be good at not overpromising things. Or managing client expectations.
Many clients prefer waterfall because it's easy to estimate project costs but it tends to be extremely costly to both parties. So someone who can educate the client in how to work from an agile perspective, suited to their budget restrictions.
There's the legal landmine to maneuver. What happens when things go wrong.
There are also many unethical people, especially in large companies, who are experts at pushing people into those landmines. They ask for impossible things then refuse to pay when those conditions are not met.
So the ideal person or service needs to be good at reading clients and avoiding these kinds of contracts.
Sponsors looking to raise equity to purchase a property pay a fee to list their projects on the site, CS does some amount of due diligence on both sponsor and project, and when you invest you're buying an equity stake in the entity that will actually purchase the property.
If you want "safeguards for bad times" you'll have to do your due diligence and dial your risk tolerances appropriately.
I'd pay $10,000 for a self driving car, because I have crappy eyesight and can't actually drive a car.
- A mentor: I guess what Mark Hanna was to Jordan Belfort - I'm an undergraduate and just starting out my career, it would be cool to have a good, close friend who has experience, has a large network, etc, and would be willing to show me the ropes
- A financial advisor: A bit similar to the latter, a good friend who shares knowledge with me about finance, is open to endless questions, helps me with my finances (investing, etc)
Can you explain a bit more....do you have a way of gathering those leads now? A way that can potentially be automated?
Don't confuse it with Google page links to each other. It's not about SEO. It's about having an ability to visualize relationships between entities.
(A)->(B)->(C)
|
v
(D)->(E)
None of D3.js can do it properly