I haven’t worked with that specific company before, but there are a lot of mixed incentives in the tutor market.
If we can believe Glassdoor, they offer around $20/hour. (I suspect the 2 reported at $30/hour are either grad students or some other specialization). Here are some employee reviews, but I expect two of the five-stars are faked.
Judging by the reviews and my own experience in the past, I think you can expect to get around five hours a week of tutoring this way. That doesn’t include time spent preparing for topics and other overhead. I imagine the only way the company maintains quality control is by reducing hours on tutors after one or two bad reviews, or after a single refund request. Office politics wrt the director-tutor relationship are probably going to be brutal, and there’s not going to be any reward or incentive for doing an above-average job. It seems reasonable to assume turnover is high.
Since you’re looking for online tutoring, I assume it’s not possible to tutor in person in your local area?
That is correct. While I am looking into possibly offering Common Core math tutoring in the local area (there is an intense dislike of Common Core among parents here and I feel a tutoring service specifically for it may relieve some burdens and be worth the expense to these families), for the moment I am looking entirely online.
Thank you for the links. The information really does not surprise me. I have an expectation of $15/hour unless I prove to be extremely effective as a tutor. The overhead is the central unknown to me as it’s something I won’t have clear numbers on until I actively deal with such an issue. Using friends of mine who currently tutor (one through Varsity) as examples, I’m not too worried about the overhead.
I haven’t worked with that specific company before, but there are a lot of mixed incentives in the tutor market.
If we can believe Glassdoor, they offer around $20/hour. (I suspect the 2 reported at $30/hour are either grad students or some other specialization). Here are some employee reviews, but I expect two of the five-stars are faked.
Judging by the reviews and my own experience in the past, I think you can expect to get around five hours a week of tutoring this way. That doesn’t include time spent preparing for topics and other overhead. I imagine the only way the company maintains quality control is by reducing hours on tutors after one or two bad reviews, or after a single refund request. Office politics wrt the director-tutor relationship are probably going to be brutal, and there’s not going to be any reward or incentive for doing an above-average job. It seems reasonable to assume turnover is high.
Since you’re looking for online tutoring, I assume it’s not possible to tutor in person in your local area?
That is correct. While I am looking into possibly offering Common Core math tutoring in the local area (there is an intense dislike of Common Core among parents here and I feel a tutoring service specifically for it may relieve some burdens and be worth the expense to these families), for the moment I am looking entirely online.
Thank you for the links. The information really does not surprise me. I have an expectation of $15/hour unless I prove to be extremely effective as a tutor. The overhead is the central unknown to me as it’s something I won’t have clear numbers on until I actively deal with such an issue. Using friends of mine who currently tutor (one through Varsity) as examples, I’m not too worried about the overhead.