Building a team: outsource or hire in-house?

Building a team: outsource or hire in-house?

Script

New member
ok so trying to grow my affiliate team and honestly stuck on outsourcing vs hiring in-house. tested outsourcing some content creation, paid like $500 for 10 articles and got around 3% conversion on a niche offer. then hired a VA for $700 a month and got better results - like 7% conversion - but it took way longer to train them up. anyone here have experience scaling with either? like does outsourcing actually save money long term or is it just more headaches? would love to hear real numbers or stories to help decide. feel like i'm missing a trick lol
 
Last month i tried outsourcing some article writing too, but the quality was hit or miss, and it took me ages to sort out which writers were worth it. Do you think the higher upfront cost of hiring in-house pays off more longterm or is it just the headache of managing people
 
Honestly I think outsourcing rarely saves money long term, it's just more hassle chasing writers and quality. The VA route seems more stable but takes time to train, so ngl it's a trade-off. kinda feels like you just gotta test and see what sticks.
 
Careful with assuming outsourcing is cheaper long term. I once paid a freelancer $300 for content, got quick hits but then had to rework everything. VA cost more upfront but stayed consistent. results depend on your niche and patience.
 
just my 2 cents, i think outsourcing can seem cheaper at first but the headaches and rework add up quick. my experience with VAs is they take longer to train but end up being way more reliable and consistent in the long run. depends on how much time you wanna invest upfront vs later down the line.
 
Yup, I do. outsourcing can be a total pain but if you find good reliable writers it can save cash and time long term. the key is strict vetting and steady communication.
 
just my 2 cents, I've seen outsourcing work well when you find reliable writers but it's a constant game of vetting and re-rolling. I tried the cheaper route and ended up wasting more time fixing content than saving cash. VAs took longer to train but in the long run, the consistency and trust paid off.
 
anyone here have experience scaling with either? yeah, i have. outsourcing can cut costs but it's a gamble. for example, a client i worked with spent around 3k a month on content outsourcing and got about 4-5% cpa, but it was a lot of rework. in-house hires, like VAs, might cost more upfront but tend to have better quality and consistency once trained.
 
Vetting is fine but I bet I could find a VA or writer who actually performs with less back and forth if I pay a little more from the start, might save me time and cf.
 
Thanks for the input, guys. Yeah I get that quality can be a pain with outsourcing and that training VAs takes time but might be more stable long term. Still not sure if the extra upfront cost is worth it or if I should just keep testing. YMMV but I think there's no perfect answer, lol.
 
If you're just starting, outsourcing might be cheaper and faster to test ideas, but in-house gives more control long-term. ymmv but I'd say pick based on your growth stage and budget. Beware of quality control and communication issues with outsources tho.
 
Been doing this 3 years and I gotta say I've seen some real messes with outsourcing when communication is bad and quality slips, but sometimes it's just faster to get stuff done without hiring full-time. How do you guys usually handle the quality control part when you outsource?
 
Did this for a while and honestly, I'd say around 60% of my issues come from outsourcing gone wrong communication gaps, missed quality, all that. But it's also way faster to get a project off the ground with freelancers or agencies. In-house feels more stable but takes way more time and cash to set up right. ymmv but it's all about balancing speed, control, and budget.
 
Honestly, I once tried to outgrow my budget by outsourcing and ended up with a total mess, all because I didn't match the team size with my actual needs. rn, I think balancing growth stage and budget is key but never underestimate the power of a tight, in-house crew for quality.
 
Careful with thinking outsourcing is always the faster route, tho. Do you consider how quality control and communication might eat up your time in the long run? Do you really need to outsource or could a leaner in-house team do the job better?
 
Back
Top