The AI Works community logo The Blockchain Works community logo The Functional Works community logo The Golang Works community logo The Java Works community logo The JavaScript Works community logo The Python Works community logo The Remote Works community logo The WorksHub company logo

We use cookies and other tracking technologies to improve your browsing experience on our site, analyze site traffic, and understand where our audience is coming from. To find out more, please read our privacy policy.

By choosing 'I Accept', you consent to our use of cookies and other tracking technologies.

We use cookies and other tracking technologies to improve your browsing experience on our site, analyze site traffic, and understand where our audience is coming from. To find out more, please read our privacy policy.

By choosing 'I Accept', you consent to our use of cookies and other tracking technologies. Less

We use cookies and other tracking technologies... More

Login or register
to publish this job!

Login or register
to save this job!

Login or register
to save interesting jobs!

Login or register
to get access to all your job applications!

Login or register to start contributing with an article!

Login or register
to see more jobs from this company!

Login or register
to boost this post!

Show some love to the author of this blog by giving their post some rocket fuel 🚀.

Login or register to search for your ideal job!

Login or register to start working on this issue!

Login or register
to save articles!

Login to see the application

Engineers who find a new job through Golang Works average a 15% increase in salary 🚀

You will be redirected back to this page right after signin

Use Open Source to hire or get hired

WorksHub helps you source and hire the best tech talent. Sign up now to advertise your roles, showcase your product, and access targeted developer communities

CANDIDATES

How it works

1

Explore issues using tech you are interested in or want to learn.

2

Express your interest in a task or get started straight away.

3

Solve the issue in your own time and submit your code.

4

Improve your profile and get real production experience.

1
2
3
4
88%

of companies encourage OSS contributions

Get real production experience

76%

of companies engage with OSS communities

88%

of companies encourage OSS contributions

76%

of companies engage with OSS communities

Get real production experience

THE POTENTIAL

Why open source software is the future of hiring

58% of companies have hired software engineers based on their open-source software contributions.

64% of developers are open to solving a company’s open-source issues as part of the technical hiring process.

Most companies in the world use open-source software, yet very few of them actively use OSS as a hiring strategy.

FAQs

What else would you like to know?

If you can’t find what you’re looking for here, just drop us an email

I want to work on an issue but someone else has already started?
We do not limit the number of people that can start work on an issue. You can see the number of contributors from the Issue page and the Issue listing page. If you are concerned that your work might not get seen you can always comment on the issue and ask how the other contributors are getting on.
How do I get paid for my work?
Only issues that indicate a value will result in you being paid for your work. The repo maintainer is solely responsible for the approval of your work and the pay out will be issued following approval. The company responsible for the issue retains the access to money and upon completion will transfer the money through Paypal or their payment provider of choice. In the future we hope to implement a solution in which the money is held in escrow with payments being released when work is merged.
How do I get started?
To complete an issue it’s easy, just find an issue that you find interesting and hit start work. Then follow these steps: Fork the repo, clone the project and you should then find setup instructions in README. Take your time to complete the issue and once it’s ready submit your PR on GitHub and don't forget to link the issue to it. Relax and wait for the maintainer to review your PR. As soon as you start work on an issue the maintainer will be alerted via the WorksHub platform.
Why should I contribute?
Around 80% of the world’s companies run on some open source software. The future of our platform is to use this code as a way to test, engage and build engineering teams. In the meantime, if you want to provide value to your experience (beyond resume buzz words) or learn a new tech using production code then our issues are made for you. We ask all company maintainers to write a repo README that makes it as easy as possible for new developers to set up and contribute.

If you can’t find what you’re looking for here, just drop us an email

How do I get started?
To complete an issue it’s easy, just find an issue that you find interesting and hit start work. Then follow these steps: Fork the repo, clone the project and you should then find setup instructions in README. Take your time to complete the issue and once it’s ready submit your PR on GitHub and don't forget to link the issue to it. Relax and wait for the maintainer to review your PR. As soon as you start work on an issue the maintainer will be alerted via the WorksHub platform.
I want to work on an issue but someone else has already started?
We do not limit the number of people that can start work on an issue. You can see the number of contributors from the Issue page and the Issue listing page. If you are concerned that your work might not get seen you can always comment on the issue and ask how the other contributors are getting on.
Why should I contribute?
Around 80% of the world’s companies run on some open source software. The future of our platform is to use this code as a way to test, engage and build engineering teams. In the meantime, if you want to provide value to your experience (beyond resume buzz words) or learn a new tech using production code then our issues are made for you. We ask all company maintainers to write a repo README that makes it as easy as possible for new developers to set up and contribute.
How do I get paid for my work?
Only issues that indicate a value will result in you being paid for your work. The repo maintainer is solely responsible for the approval of your work and the pay out will be issued following approval. The company responsible for the issue retains the access to money and upon completion will transfer the money through Paypal or their payment provider of choice. In the future we hope to implement a solution in which the money is held in escrow with payments being released when work is merged.