EVOLVE Business and Professional Magazine February 2020 | Page 16

CENTRAL FLORIDA EMBRACES THE ‘GIG ECONOMY’ by Kimberly Jace T here’s a new category of worker in Central Florida—and you’ve already met them. The woman who designed your business logo, the man who sold you that handmade sweater, and the Lyft driver who got you safely to your destination are not working jobs in the same way our parents and grandparents did. They are gig workers: self-employed, independent contractors and sole proprietors who earn money outside the structure of the full- time-jobs-with-benefits that once represented the American economy. “Since the recession and its very slow recovery, people have had to wear many hats,” said Lou Paris, director of the Prince Entrepreneurship Program at Stetson University in Deland. Lou Paris But what is a gig, anyway? The gig economy is loosely defined, but gigs usually have two things in common: The work is temporary, short-term, and project-based, rather than paying a salary The employees find the work through non-traditional means. While some gig workers perform freelance services for established businesses—for example, a secretarial job through a temporary employment agency—others use web platforms such as Fiverr and phone apps like Uber to find their clients. Craigslist online ads or Facebook postings also are a vital means | 10 | EVOLVE BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL MAGAZINE