Home From College matches students to freelance gigs that build their resume – and gives companies access to talent that doesn't exist on any job board.
ENTRY ANGLES
Repositioning gig marketplace to focus on career-building rather than income replacement · Structured virtual internships paired with gig work for students
VERTICALS
CAPABILITIES
Understanding student conversion psychology across different value propositions (income vs. career vs. recognition), Ability to source and curate higher-quality gigs that genuinely build resume credentials
Home From College matches students with freelance gigs at companies, threading the needle between campus life and real professional work.
Students register and build a profile that doubles as a portable resume: downloadable, printable, and shareable with employers outside the platform. The dashboard shows how many times a profile has been viewed, giving students a read on their own visibility.
To find work, students apply to listings posted by companies. The range of gigs is wide – managing a brand's social media account, graphic design, testing new products aimed at a student audience, or even becoming a brand ambassador on campus.
The nature and pay of work vary significantly: $750/month for a brand ambassador role, $100 for photographing an event, $15/hour for social media management, $15 for product feedback on a single jewelry item, $60 for creating a post, or $500 for participating in an ad campaign.
Students use the service for free; companies pay to post listings. A plan with one listing per month costs $99; up to three listings per month is $199. Companies looking for higher-volume engagement can reach out for custom pricing.
Payments flow through the Home From College platform. The startup takes a 20% commission on each transaction.
The marketplace has over 100,000 registered students, and companies including Yahoo and Beyond Meat have used it to find talent.
Home From College has now raised $5.4M from GV (Google Ventures), adding to the $1.5M raised at the seed stage.
The idea behind this marketplace is genuinely sound.
Students who freelance during school aren't just earning money – they're building real skills in their future field instead of working shifts that have nothing to do with their career. Companies, meanwhile, get a pipeline into the next generation of talent: a chance to test candidates on real projects and gradually pull the strongest performers toward full-time roles after graduation.
But this category has a checkered history. A [related review](/review/frilans-kak-obuchenie) from 2020 covered Uplancer, a similar marketplace that ultimately shut down.
Pangea, another student marketplace [covered previously](/review/frilans-luchshe-stazhirovok) in 2021, pivoted – it now markets itself as a platform connecting companies with part-time marketers from the US and 155 other countries, no longer centering the student angle.
On the other hand, Virtual Internships – [reviewed in 2021](/review/uchit-ili-trudoustraivat) at the time of its $2.5M raise – connects students with virtual internships at companies worldwide and went on to raise $14.3M in 2022. CareerFairy, [also covered in 2021](/review/kazhdomu-studentu-po-rabote-mechty), built a virtual career fair model where companies host video streams for students showcasing their culture and openings – and pulled in €3.5M in 2023.
The student–work matching market is clearly large and active. Which makes it interesting that Google Ventures chose to bet on a startup whose closest analogs have either failed or pivoted.
The lesson here isn't that the business model is flawed – it's that the same model can fail in one founder's hands and succeed in another's. GV is placing its bet on the team, betting that they'll either find a way to make this model work or have the conviction to pivot toward something better in the same market.
Let's try to diagnose why this model has been hard to scale – because that's where the opportunity to fix it probably lives.
The hypothesis: this model gets caught in the middle.
If a student genuinely needs steady income to cover living expenses, the reliable path is a predictable, recurring part-time job – a café near campus will always be more dependable than hunting for one-off gigs on a marketplace like Home From College.
If a student is focused on career development, there are more direct routes: structured virtual internships or career fairs that put them in front of real hiring managers.
And if a student is chasing ambition or recognition, the typical gigs on offer – social media management or giving product feedback on a shampoo – probably don't scratch that itch.
That said, this is a hypothesis, not a verdict. And hypotheses need testing.
What's clear is that the underlying market is enormous. As of 2022, there were roughly 19 million students enrolled in US colleges and universities. They all want something – income, career traction, recognition, or some combination.
That's an audience worth pursuing. The remaining question is which offer, in which format, at which price point, actually converts them. Twenty million potential users in one country alone is a strong reason to keep asking those questions.