Dribbble

Job Seeker: Wherever you’re at in your career as a designer, you need to have a profile set up on Dribbble, which continually amazes us with the quality and variety of killer projects that get shared and the community of supportive creatives.

Designhill

Job Seeker: This freelance website offers a transparent price upfront so clients can anticipate how much the finished design can cost. It’s a pretty useful feature as there is so many design work with different prices.

Journalism Jobs

Job Seeker: If you have Dan Rather dreams, don’t let them die! Check out this job board that curates journalism jobs from around the web – along with other typical writing and editing gigs thrown in.

ZipRecruiter

Job Seeker: Chances are, you’ve already heard of ZipRecruiter because of how many companies use their jobs platform to hire full-time talent, but did you know they also regularly post a large number of high-quality freelance jobs with opportunities to do part-time sales for top companies

SolidGigs

Job Seeker: The team at Solid Gigs combs through dozens of freelance job boards and sends you the very best 2% of freelance gigs from around the web every single week—removing the time-consuming work of filtering through dozens of freelance job boards and vetting the opportunities yourself.

TaskRabbit

Job Seeker: Not all freelancing jobs are digital. TaskRabbit is a freelance website that focuses on house work. Be it furniture assembling, moving and packing, plumbing, or anything else – you can find it on TaskRabbit.

Hireable

Job Seeker: Hireable gives you an opportunity to get a freelance job outside America or Europe with equal opportunity. It has a straightforward user interface and provides exactly what you expect from a freelance website: you get job alerts, recommendations, and see your saved jobs as well as the jobs you applied for.

Mandy

Job Seeker: Mandy is dedicated solely to the film and TV production work, for better or worse. The upside is that you don’t have to sort through irrelevant jobs, the downside is you’re competing with a lot of other people like you.

Behance

Job Seeker: When you fill in your Behance profile with great examples of your work, your work is put in front of an audience of like-minded creatives. And if your work earns the coveted spot of featured project, you'll get even more positive exposure. Who knows who might see it and might want to hire you. Behance also functions as a social media network to connect with other designers.

PubLoft

Job Seeker: PubLoft is a great place to find solid (well-paid) freelance jobs for reliable clients without actually ever needing to interact with the clients yourself. Their promise is to help freelancers never have to find, sell, or manage another customer again. With rates starting at $150 per post, you can work on your craft and PubLoft will handle the client management side of things. And on top of that, they’ll also help you become a better writer along the way.

Freelance Writing Gigs

Job Seeker: The name isn’t winning any creative awards, but it gets the point across. This site is basically a well-curated job board that’s updated Monday to Friday with the hottest new clients willing to pay you actual money to write things. Sounds too good to be true, right?

Media Bistro

Job Seeker: Media Bistro has a nice little variety of categories, which includes writing and editing. Their curated list features everything from book editing to PR content, so you’re sure to find a few things that fit your niche.

Blogging Pro

Job Seeker: Despite the name, you can find everything from tasks like helping people start blogging to editing to general copywriting jobs here—they aggregate all the best writing jobs they can find to make them easy to find and search through on their site.