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Author Topic: How much could a Bounty Manager ask for with no prior experience?  (Read 186 times)
stronghandsdeeppockets (OP)
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April 21, 2018, 02:28:51 PM
 #1

Will soon finish everything regarding my future bounty campaign management service. Thus, I am would like to know how much a Bounty Manager would be paid with no any real experience (besides being a translator but who really cares about that). I would also like to know what are the factors that affect the pay (no. of participants, length of the campaign etc?)

Please keep this topic only focused on the question itself. I have yet to post a topic in the service thread and I do not need the usual "you are not trusted, maybe choose something else" bullshit. Thank you in advance.
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April 21, 2018, 03:00:00 PM
 #2

Thus, I am would like to know how much a Bounty Manager would be paid with no any real experience (besides being a translator but who really cares about that).
Everything starts from nothing, newbie --> higher level so it all depends to your offer on how much you are willing to accept by managing campaigns.

I would also like to know what are the factors that affect the pay (no. of participants, length of the campaign etc?)
If you are talking commissions, you can also take note that there are campaigns that has least budget so that's the biggest factor that can affect the pay.

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April 21, 2018, 03:22:56 PM
 #3

I would also like to know what are the factors that affect the pay (no. of participants, length of the campaign etc?)
If you are talking commissions, you can also take note that there are campaigns that has least budget so that's the biggest factor that can affect the pay.
Understand, that is probably the only reason a dev wouldn't choose a manager who is already well-established in the community.

By "factors that affect pay" I mostly refer to how negotiations are conducted regarding the pay of the manager. Do managers charge for a certain number of participants? Does the pay significantly change depending on the length of the campaign? Are there any other factors that I have not thought about yet? (besides the dev's bugdet mentioned above) 
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April 21, 2018, 03:34:47 PM
 #4

Do managers charge for a certain number of participants?
Again base on the budget and on your talks and contracts. There are managers who are being paid base on how many participants they are managing and there managers who are paid fixed with more or less participants.

Does the pay significantly change depending on the length of the campaign?
Well if you want to demand to the owner, you can but I don't think it changes. If you are paid with $$ in value so when price fluctuates there can be a significant change on your fee.
E.g
You are paid $100 weekly with bitcoin.
$100 / $8,821 (value of bitcoin) =  0.0113BTC
0.0113BTC can change if the price goes up or lower.

Are there any other factors that I have not thought about yet? (besides the dev's bugdet mentioned above) 
I can't tell you since I'm not a campaign manager myself, let's wait for someone to tell if you did missed something.

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April 21, 2018, 10:49:54 PM
 #5

Are there any other factors that I have not thought about yet? (besides the dev's bugdet mentioned above) 
I can't tell you since I'm not a campaign manager myself, let's wait for someone to tell if you did missed something.
This is what im waiting for someone to answer which do have experience on managing campaigns but i do believe rates and agreements would really depend between the manager and the company itself.Yet you are just starting out then you would normally offer lower rates than into those experienced and reputable ones. As far as i know they do make specific allocation budget for a number of participants either they would make it on fixed or basis manner.

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stronghandsdeeppockets (OP)
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April 21, 2018, 11:10:09 PM
 #6

Are there any other factors that I have not thought about yet? (besides the dev's bugdet mentioned above) 
I can't tell you since I'm not a campaign manager myself, let's wait for someone to tell if you did missed something.
This is what im waiting for someone to answer which do have experience on managing campaigns but i do believe rates and agreements would really depend between the manager and the company itself.Yet you are just starting out then you would normally offer lower rates than into those experienced and reputable ones. As far as i know they do make specific allocation budget for a number of participants either they would make it on fixed or basis manner.
Yeah I've been also thinking they negotiate based on how many participants they are going to manage, it seems like one of the most logical ways to do it. I mostly need this information in order to get a grasp of what the focus of of pay negotiation would be, but also not to get ripped off and get paid like shit for a lot of work.

This question does not need an urgent answer anyway, I am still battling Telegram and Twitter APIs...Sucks not to be very competent in programming
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April 22, 2018, 07:51:16 AM
 #7

Mostly depends on the client on how much they are willing to pay, some clients don't have any problem paying $50 per day, $300 per week or whatever the rate is, and some clients can't even pay $20-$30 per day. Rates below this in my opinion is never worth the effort you are giving for the company. Thousands of participants is kinda lot to handle so managers should be paid fairly
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April 23, 2018, 02:33:25 PM
 #8

Are there any other factors that I have not thought about yet? (besides the dev's bugdet mentioned above) 
I can't tell you since I'm not a campaign manager myself, let's wait for someone to tell if you did missed something.
This is what im waiting for someone to answer which do have experience on managing campaigns but i do believe rates and agreements would really depend between the manager and the company itself.Yet you are just starting out then you would normally offer lower rates than into those experienced and reputable ones. As far as i know they do make specific allocation budget for a number of participants either they would make it on fixed or basis manner.
When someone starts with his own career expect that you won't be offered high but that's fine, it's a stepping stone for someone that wants to become a campaign manager. Even in real world, in industry, if you apply for a job and you don't have experience what can you expect? It's an advantage for the company to hire those no experience people to do the harder job so that they can pay lower.

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April 26, 2018, 11:31:21 PM
 #9

To be very frank, nobody will hire an inexperienced person as their bounty manager. So to establish your name in this industry, try to manage first 2 campaigns for almost free . After that start asking payment in their tokens. When you have the list of atleast 5 or 6 successful bounty campaigns in your portfolio, start asking for btc or eth.
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April 27, 2018, 12:38:12 AM
 #10

To be very frank, nobody will hire an inexperienced person as their bounty manager.
Wrong. Just surf the forum and look on how many scammy campaigns are there that hired a campaign manager without experience on how to manage a campaign.

There are ICOs who can't avail the rate of those trusted campaign managers and it's out of their budget so they are hiring a campaign manager that doesn't know how to do his job.

So to establish your name in this industry, try to manage first 2 campaigns for almost free . After that start asking payment in their tokens. When you have the list of atleast 5 or 6 successful bounty campaigns in your portfolio, start asking for btc or eth.
Great start but the risk of taking a bad name and reputation of hiring someone for free is also a big gamble to the companies.

If I'm about to start a campaign, I would hire people that has experience.

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April 29, 2018, 10:59:15 AM
 #11

This is what know about the payment structure. The pay you are to receive as bounty manager depends on the budget of the project. Some have a special allocation for bounty managers which may be negotiable and others pay you a percentage of the amount allocated for the bounty campaign. Mostly the project owners decide how much they are willing to pay the manager so if the manager is satisfied  with it, he accepts the offer.

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April 29, 2018, 01:09:20 PM
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To be very frank, nobody will hire an inexperienced person as their bounty manager. So to establish your name in this industry, try to manage first 2 campaigns for almost free . After that start asking payment in their tokens. When you have the list of atleast 5 or 6 successful bounty campaigns in your portfolio, start asking for btc or eth.
No way am I working for free for a couple of projects, fuck that. I agree that people might be rather hesitant to pay somebody inexperienced, but my bet is on a couple of things I will showcase in my service announcement thread. I already have a template bounty thread, a template spreadsheet and a really well-defined set of rules.

While I was researching how other bounty managers started their service, I found absolutely horrible services, with shitty designs and bad English, getting 2-3 projects in the matter of days after their entrance on the market. If those people could do it, I will easily outperform them.

I have yet to kick off my service, just polishing the last rough edges. It's been 3 interesting weeks, I'm dying to see what's ahead.
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May 09, 2018, 09:03:07 PM
 #13

maybe for the bounty manager who just started negligible can not negotiate, not like the senior. and for payment if many interested if I think. it will, make the circle doubled. and reach hardcap, and many more reasons
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