
7 gigs worth picking up this week — income data, no hype
Issue 2: seven fresh student-friendly gigs — proofreading, transcription, financial PowerPoint work, Prolific surveys, Wyzant tutoring, Gumroad digital templates, and Outlier AI expert review — each with verified income ranges from Upwork and primary sources, entry requirements, and step-by-step starting guides. Finance students get specific callouts throughout. Scam section covers fake platform impersonation and gamified task scams, the two most active patterns in 2026.

Last week we covered bookkeeping, AI data labeling, and a few others. This issue goes a different direction: proofreading, transcription, financial PowerPoint work, Prolific surveys, Wyzant tutoring, Gumroad digital templates, and Outlier AI expert review. Each has a finance-student angle called out where it applies. Scam section covers the two patterns showing up most in 2026.
At a glance
| Gig | Platform | Realistic rate | Entry bar |
|---|---|---|---|
| Proofreading | Upwork, Fiverr | $18–$35/hr | Attention to detail, no degree |
| Transcription | GoTranscript, Rev, Upwork | $12–$22/hr | Accurate typing, headphones |
| Financial PowerPoint | Upwork | $31–$60/hr | Finance coursework + PowerPoint |
| Academic research participation | Prolific | ~$12–$18/hr equiv. | None — just sign up |
| Finance tutoring | Wyzant | $20–$80/hr (you set rate) | Subject knowledge |
| Digital template sales | Gumroad, Etsy | Variable, passive | Excel or Canva skills |
| AI expert review (finance/business) | Outlier.ai | $21–$50/hr | Domain knowledge + writing |

1. Proofreading
What it is: Catching grammar, punctuation, spelling, and formatting errors before content goes live — the final check before a client publishes.
Who it suits: Anyone detail-oriented. No degree required. Works well for English-major students but is genuinely open to anyone who reads carefully. Finance students who write a lot of reports already have this skill; legal and business document proofreading pays toward the higher end.
What it pays: Upwork lists freelance proofreaders at $18–$35/hr depending on niche and experience. 2 The global proofreading and editing services market is projected to reach $2.2 billion by 2035, and AI-generated content has added a new workstream — brands need humans to catch hallucinated facts and tone problems that grammar checkers miss. 2
Finance student angle: Legal and financial document proofreading pays noticeably better than blog posts. If you've worked through contracts, SEC filings, or financial reports in class, positioning yourself in that niche from the start means you're competing against fewer people.
How to get started:
- Create a free Upwork or Fiverr account. Upload 2–3 sample edits (annotate a real document from a PDF or public press release to show your eye).
- Search "proofreading" and filter by entry-level. Apply to 5–10 jobs per day with a short, specific pitch. Mention your niche (business/legal/academic).
- Accept your first 1–2 jobs at a modest rate to build reviews, then raise your rate after 5 positive reviews.
- Once you have 10+ reviews, consider specializing in AI content editing — it pays at the higher end and demand is growing.
2. Transcription
What it is: Converting audio or video files into accurate text. Clients include podcasters, researchers, journalists, law firms, and medical providers.
Who it suits: Fast, accurate typists who can follow spoken English at different accents and speeds. No transcription certificate required. Students can do this in blocks of 30–90 minutes between classes.
What it pays: Upwork rates run $12–$22/hr. 1 Platforms like GoTranscript and Rev pay per audio minute rather than per hour — effective rates vary depending on how fast you work and audio quality. Reddit feedback on GoTranscript and Rev is mixed: users note that low-quality audio files significantly reduce effective hourly earnings, and work availability is inconsistent on the smaller platforms. 3 Upwork jobs tend to be more stable and slightly better-paying once you have reviews.
Finance student angle: Legal and financial transcription (earnings calls, depositions, board meetings) pays a premium because the terminology is specialized. Listing familiarity with financial vocabulary in your profile is a real differentiator.
How to get started:
- Test your speed at a free typing test site — aim for 70+ WPM before applying.
- Apply to GoTranscript (gotranscript.com/transcription-jobs) — they have an open application process with a short audio test.
- In parallel, open an Upwork account and search "transcription entry level." Upwork jobs take longer to land initially but pay more consistently.
- Invest in decent headphones — audio quality matters more than any software.
3. Financial PowerPoint and presentation design
What it is: Building investor decks, financial summary slides, and business presentation templates for clients — mostly small business owners and startups who need clean, clear slides but don't have the time or design background.
Who it suits: Finance and business students who know how to structure a financial narrative. You don't need to be a designer — clean, clear, and correctly formatted is what clients actually want.
What it pays: Upwork lists PowerPoint experts at $31–$60/hr. 1 Clients who want finance-specific work (pitch decks with financial projections, investor-facing dashboards) consistently pay toward the top of that range.
Finance student angle: This is one of the highest-leverage gigs for finance students. You already know what a three-statement model summary looks like, what goes on an investor deck, and how to display cash flow data clearly. Most clients don't need spectacular design — they need someone who understands the numbers and can place them correctly. That's you.
How to get started:
- Make two sample decks: one business pitch (5–7 slides) and one simple financial dashboard. These become your portfolio.
- Search Upwork for "PowerPoint financial" or "investor deck." Many clients post fixed-price projects ($50–$200) that are good first gigs.
- On your profile, call out your finance background specifically — "finance student with coursework in financial modeling" is more convincing than generic "business student."
- As you accumulate reviews, you can pivot toward recurring clients who need quarterly earnings presentations or financial reporting decks.
4. Academic research participation on Prolific
What it is: Getting paid to complete studies run by university researchers — surveys, decision-making tasks, short cognitive exercises. You sign up, complete pre-screening questions, and get invited to studies that match your profile.
Who it suits: Any student with 30–60 spare minutes. Higher earnings go to participants who fill out their screening profile fully, since researchers filter for specific demographics (age, country, education, subject of study — being a finance student makes you eligible for economics and financial behavior studies).
What it pays: Prolific's stated minimum is $8/hr; their recommended rate for researchers to offer is $12/hr. 4 In practice, studies worth taking average closer to $12–$18/hr equivalent depending on complexity, based on community-reported study data. Payment is in dollars, pounds, or euros via PayPal.
Finance student angle: Economics, behavioral finance, and investment decision studies on Prolific specifically filter for business/finance students or people with quantitative backgrounds — you'll get more study invites than a general arts student.
How to get started:
- Sign up at prolific.com — it's free and takes about 5 minutes.
- Complete your profile screener carefully and fully. The more attributes you fill in (occupation, education, income, health, politics), the more invites you receive.
- Check the app during evening hours (UK/US study launches tend to happen late afternoon EST) — high-paying studies fill in minutes.
- Withdraw your earnings via PayPal once you've accumulated £5 (roughly $6.50).
5. Finance tutoring on Wyzant
What it is: One-on-one online tutoring in accounting, economics, finance, and math for high school students, undergrads, and adult learners.
Who it suits: Students who have completed at least intermediate coursework in their subject and can explain it clearly. You don't need to be top of your class — you need to be one or two steps ahead of the student you're teaching.
What it pays: The national average for a Wyzant tutor is $26.85/hr, but Wyzant lets you set your own rate and keeps 25% of what clients pay. 5 Finance and accounting tutors with reviews often set rates of $40–$80/hr on the platform. Tutors with strong credentials (CFA candidate, specific exam experience) can go higher.
Finance student angle: Accounting, corporate finance, and financial statements are subjects students consistently need help with — your coursework is directly marketable. CFA or CPA prep tutoring, if you're pursuing either path, commands a premium.
How to get started:
- Sign up as a tutor at wyzant.com. The application asks for your education and subject areas.
- Set an initial rate around $30–$40/hr to attract your first bookings and reviews. Raise it after 10 sessions.
- List specific subjects you can teach — "Financial Accounting," "Corporate Finance," "Intro Economics" will get more targeted client matches than just "Finance."
- Ask every satisfied student for a review. Your hourly rate ceiling rises substantially with reviews.
6. Digital templates on Gumroad or Etsy
What it is: Creating reusable digital files — Excel budget templates, financial planning spreadsheets, Notion finance dashboards, Canva resume templates — and selling them as one-time downloads with no ongoing work per sale.
Who it suits: Students who have already built spreadsheets or templates for their own use. If you've made a personal budgeting model, a side-hustle income tracker, or a financial statement template for a class project, you already have a product.
What it pays: Highly variable. A niche template (e.g. a student budget spreadsheet, a freelancer invoice tracker, a dividend yield calculator) priced at $5–$25 generates passive income every time someone downloads it. Sellers on Gumroad and Etsy report significant income variation — most stores earn a modest supplement ($50–$300/month), while a small number of optimized stores with SEO reach $1,000+/month. 6 The upside is that the work is front-loaded: build once, sell repeatedly.
Finance student angle: Finance-specific templates have less competition than generic planners. A three-statement financial model template, a personal cash flow tracker, or a stock portfolio tracker appeals directly to finance students and early-career professionals — a well-defined audience who will search for it.
How to get started:
- Build your template in Excel, Google Sheets, or Canva. Make it clean, labeled, and easy for someone else to use.
- Create a free seller account at gumroad.com or Etsy.
- Write a product description that explains what it does, who it's for, and what problem it solves. Add a short preview image or screenshot.
- Set your price, publish, and share the link in relevant Reddit communities (r/personalfinance, r/financestudents, r/frugal) or on social media. Organic SEO on Etsy takes a few weeks to build.
7. AI expert review on Outlier.ai
What it is: Evaluating and improving AI-generated responses in your domain — fact-checking AI answers to finance questions, rating model outputs for accuracy, rewriting poor responses. Outlier (now part of Scale AI) recruits domain experts for this work.
Who it suits: Students with solid subject knowledge in finance, accounting, economics, or business — roles that require domain expertise to evaluate responses correctly. Not a generic data entry job.
What it pays: Outlier advertises rates of $35–$50/hr, and domain experts with strong credentials tend to land toward the upper end. However, Business Insider reporting on real contractor experiences found that a rate-reduction mechanism kicks in after a set time on each task — in practice, many workers report effective rates closer to $21–$35/hr once this is factored in. 7 Projects also vary in availability; some months bring consistent work, others are slow.

Finance student angle: Finance, economics, and business domain tasks specifically recruit people with your background. Outlier explicitly lists business and finance knowledge as qualifying criteria for certain project tracks.
How to get started:
- Apply at outlier.ai. The process includes an assessment; some applicants also get recruited via LinkedIn when they list relevant coursework.
- Complete onboarding tasks carefully — your initial quality score affects which projects you're offered.
- Treat the stated rate as a ceiling, not a guarantee. Track your actual earnings per hour on the first few tasks to understand your real rate before committing significant time.
- Diversify: use Outlier as one income stream alongside a platform like Upwork or Prolific, not as your only gig.
Scam filter: two patterns to watch for this week
FlexJobs' 2026 job scam report flags several new and continuing threat patterns specifically targeting students. 8
FlexJobs 2026 job scam taxonomy — the gamified task scam and platform impersonation are among the fastest-growing 8
Fake platform impersonation (Upwork, LinkedIn, Scale AI) is now one of the most active vectors. Scammers email or DM students claiming to be from a known freelance platform, offering high-pay tasks. The tell: the email domain is off (e.g.
upwork-support.net rather than @upwork.com), the "job" requires no application or assessment, and pay is unusually high for entry-level work. Legitimate platforms don't send unsolicited direct hire offers via DM. A LinkedIn post specifically warned about fake "Mercor" job offers advertising $50–$65/hr assessments — you pay nothing but give away personal data and time with no actual job behind it. 9Gamified task scams are a newer format that specifically targets students looking for micro-task work. You're added to a Telegram or WhatsApp group, assigned "tasks" (rating apps, liking posts, completing short surveys) and paid small amounts upfront to build trust. The scam escalates: tasks require you to deposit your own money to "unlock" the next tier of higher-paying tasks. The deposit is never returned. Red flags: no identifiable company, payment requires crypto or gift cards, group chat pressure, and the promise of escalating pay tied to deposits. No legitimate microtask platform requires workers to deposit funds.
Quick checklist before accepting any remote job:
- The company is verifiable on LinkedIn, Glassdoor, or a real corporate website
- You were not contacted out of nowhere with a job offer you didn't apply for
- Payment is to you, not from you
- No request for your bank details, crypto wallet, or gift card numbers before you've done any work
- There is a formal contract or project agreement
If something fails any of these: walk away.
参考来源
- 1Upwork Hourly Rates: Average Rates by Skill and Experience in 2026
- 211 Proofreading Side Hustle Ideas for 2026 — Upwork
- 3Has anyone here made steady income with transcription work? — Reddit
- 4Prolific's payment principles
- 5Online Tutoring Jobs for College Students — Scholarships360
- 610 Digital Products You Can Sell on Gumroad in 2025 — Medium
- 7How 5 People Found AI Training Jobs — and How Much Money They Make — Business Insider
- 830 Job Scams & How to Protect Yourself in 2026 — FlexJobs
- 9Warning: Avoid Mercor and other fake job scams on LinkedIn
围绕这条内容继续补充观点或上下文。