Attention, parents! Do you have a child between the ages of 3 and 8? Can your child speak?
(If your child is anything like mine, your child speaks a lot.)
If so, here’s an opportunity for you. It’s from a rapidly growing international company that you’ve probably never heard of.
Appen, a language technology firm that works with tech giants like Apple, Facebook and Google, is looking for American kids to do paid voiceover work. You can apply here.
Kids chosen for the gig will do voiceover recordings of 100 to 500 short phrases. They must be U.S. residents and native speakers of American-style English.
(You know, American English as opposed to British English. It’s the difference between saying “apartment” or “flat.” “French fries” or “chips.” “Line” or “queue.”)
The Australia-based company will pay participants $10AUD to $50AUD, depending on the total number of recordings they do. Based on the current exchange rate, that’s between $7.50 and $37.50 in American dollars.
Appen is looking for 1,000 kids in the 3-5 age group, and 500 kids in the 6-8 age group. You must have a PayPal or Skrill account to be compensated. (Skrill is like a British version of PayPal.)
Once a parent signs their child up, they’ll receive an email with instructions. The voiceover work can be done in a quiet room at home — all in one sitting, or over several shorter periods over three weeks.
Appen prefers that it be done on an Android phone or tablet, or a laptop.
What’s This For, Exactly?
You might wonder what your child’s beautiful, crystal-clear voiceovers will be used for, and that’s a good question!
You see, Appen works on speech recognition systems for high-tech products like Apple’s virtual assistant Siri, or Amazon’s virtual assistant Alexa.
These voice-based assistants must be able to answer your questions or obey your commands. (Think: “Siri, call Mom.”) To do that, they must be able to understand tone, regional accents and local idioms.
That’s where Appen comes in.
Founded by an Australian linguist, the company sells voice data that helps computers learn to interpret speech.
As the Australian Financial Review newspaper explains, “The need for this data has exploded thanks to the creation of products such as Amazon Echo, Microsoft’s Cortana and Samsung’s new voice assistant Bixby.”
To do its job, Appen compiles a massive amount of voice data from a network of hundreds of thousands of freelancers.
Now that network of freelancers could include your kids — if you apply here.
Disclosure: This post contains affiliate links. May we all be a bit richer today.
Mike Brassfield (mike@thepennyhoarder.com) is a senior writer at The Penny Hoarder. His kids are chatty.
This was originally published on The Penny Hoarder, one of the largest personal finance websites. We help millions of readers worldwide earn and save money by sharing unique job opportunities, personal stories, freebies and more. In 2016, Inc. 500 ranked The Penny Hoarder as the No. 1 fastest-growing private media company in the U.S.
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