Hello there, and welcome to the 19th edition of Base Directory's newsletter.
Every weekday, I'll send you a concise email highlighting everything you need to know about an onchain product built on Base, including my thoughts on it and how you can get started using it.
Today's spotlight is on Bountycaster, a product that allows you to list bounties, jobs, or services and match with appropriate talent or companies.
How Bountycaster Works:
Bountycaster is one of those products with a clear value-add, everyone using it has a need for it and it's dead simple to use. If you're on Farcaster, you likely already have a sense of how Bountycaster works as it is a native Farcaster product.
It allows people to post bounties for various tasks such as having someone review an application you're working on, recommend restaurants, create a dashboard for you etc.
With Bountycaster, you can create bounties, set a payment amount, specify terms and conditions, and collect submissions.
Companies looking to hire talent can list their job descriptions, remuneration and application details on Bountycaster.
As an individual, you can list your services on Bountycaster for anyone interested such as offering cooking lessons, testing products and providing UX feedback etc.
Bountycaster supports USDC & ETH for payments, as well as a number of other tokens on Base like DEGEN, Higher, and Moxie. You can filter listings based on category, recency, and status (whether open or closed).
Currently, to mitigate spam, Bountycaster only allows verified or early users of Farcaster to post jobs, services, or bounties.
If you're looking for your next gig in crypto or seeking talent for your project or company, checking out Bountycaster is definitely a great place to start.
You can keep up with updates from the Bountycaster team via the X (fka Twitter) profile below and check out the product here.
To explore other products on Base, visit www.basedirectory.xyz.
Thanks for reading through! See you tomorrow.