u/LandPsychological347

▲ 27 r/hiring

[HIRING] Part‑Time Social Media & Content Assistant – Fully Remote – $20–25/hour

We’re a small e‑commerce brand in the lifestyle niche looking for a part‑time Social Media & Content Assistant to help us create and schedule posts, engage with our community, and keep our content consistent across platforms.

What you’ll do

  • Plan and schedule posts using our content calendar.
  • Write short captions and basic copy aligned with our brand voice.
  • Collect and organize user‑generated content (UGC) and product photos.
  • Reply to comments and DMs with clear, friendly communication.
  • Report basic metrics (reach, saves, clicks, etc.) each week.

Who we’re looking for

  • 1+ year of experience managing social media (client, personal brand, or your own projects).
  • Strong written English and ability to adapt tone.
  • Comfortable with tools
  • Reliable, organized, and able to work independently.
  • Available 10–15 hours/week, spread across weekdays.

Nice to have

  • Experience with e‑commerce or DTC brands.
  • Familiarity with basic analytics
  • Basic photo or video editing skills.

Compensation & details

  • Rate: $20–25/hour USD depending on experience.
  • 10–15 hours/week to start, with potential to increase.
  • Fully remote; we prefer candidates who can overlap at least 3 hours/day with CET (Amsterdam) working hours.
reddit.com
u/LandPsychological347 — 4 days ago

We are hiring motivated people to join our remote team!

Write a comment = we reach you

Job Details:

  • Work from home (no need to go to office)
  • Make calls using our provided services/tools
  • Simple customer support / sales calls
  • Fully legal & trusted company
  • Easy to learn – proper training will be provided

Perfect for:

  • Students
  • Housewives / Househusbands
  • Anyone who stays at home and wants extra income
  • People looking for a simple, flexible job

Benefits:

  • Weekly Payment (every week)
  • Work in your own time (flexible hours)
  • Work from anywhere with good internet

If you have a laptop/computer + stable internet connection and good communication skills, this is a great opportunity for you.

Interested? Send me a message with:

  • Your Name
  • Age
  • City/Country
  • Experience (if any)

Serious candidates only

reddit.com
u/LandPsychological347 — 7 days ago
▲ 3 r/Career

Just started my first “real” job what should I actually do (and avoid) in these first weeks?

Hey everyone,

I’m at the very start of my career and I’ve just joined a new company. It’s my first “real” job, and I’m realizing nobody really teaches you how to behave at work beyond “be on time and be polite.” That feels… a bit too vague.

I don’t want to come off as annoying, lazy, or arrogant, but I also don’t want to sit in silence and miss chances to learn or connect with people. So I’m trying to figure out what the unspoken rules are when you’re new.

Here’s what I think I should be doing so far:

  • Trying to learn people’s names and what they do instead of hiding at my desk.
  • Asking questions when I’m stuck, but not asking the exact same thing twice.
  • Taking notes so I’m not constantly pinging my manager for the same info.
  • Paying attention to how people actually work (when they take breaks, how they talk to each other, etc.) and adjusting instead of insisting on “how we did it at school.”

What I’m unsure about:

  • How many questions is “too many” before people start getting annoyed.
  • Whether it’s okay to leave on time or if I should stay longer in the beginning.
  • How friendly is too friendly with coworkers when you’re brand new.
  • If it’s better to speak up with ideas early or keep my head down and just execute.

So for those of you who’ve been in the workforce for a while:

  • What are some things you wish you’d done in your first weeks at a new company?
  • What are some things you wish you absolutely hadn’t done?
  • Any small habits that helped you build a good reputation early on?

Stories are very welcome – “I did X in my first month, and it really helped” or “I did Y and it backfired badly” is exactly what I’m looking for.

Thanks in advance to anyone who takes the time to share. I feel like this is the stuff that can quietly make or break your start, and nobody really talks about it.

reddit.com
u/LandPsychological347 — 7 days ago

Hi everyone,

I’m based in the Netherlands and I keep seeing posts from people in Europe/UK, often under 25, who say they’ve applied to lots of jobs and still have nothing.

For those of you who’ve been in that situation: did any kind of simple online work help you as a first step?

I’m thinking about things like basic data entry, simple web research, or light admin work, but it’s hard to know what’s real and what’s a waste of time or a scam.

If you’ve tried this kind of work while job‑hunting in Europe/UK:

  • What type of tasks actually brought in some money or experience?
  • How did you check that the opportunity was legitimate?
  • Are there any types of “online job” you would avoid completely?

I think a lot of young jobseekers here could benefit from concrete examples, so any honest experiences or tips would really help.

reddit.com
u/LandPsychological347 — 8 days ago