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Flexible roles paying $75K–$100K on a Zero standing meetings, written-first culture schedule

📌 4 matching roles ✍️ Zero standing meetings, written-first culture

Flexible roles paying $75K–$100K on a Zero standing meetings, written-first culture schedule. Salary transparency in flexible work has improved a lot, but it's still uneven. This page collects roles in our index that match the Async-only, no required meetings schedule and that publish or imply compensation in the $75K–$100K band, so you can size up the market without having to read every listing.

Roles where nobody asks you to be online at a specific time. The current matching set is 298 roles, refreshed as the underlying job feeds update. Bands are inferred from the published salary string when available; for roles without a published number, we use category- and seniority-based estimates and clearly mark them as estimates in the listing detail.

What this band typically looks like. $75K–$100K is a meaningful range for parent- and caregiver-friendly work because it tends to bracket either part-time senior work, full-time mid-career work, or contract engagements with a small number of clients. The right comparison for any specific role is not the absolute number but the implied hourly rate. A $75K–$100K salary at thirty hours a week is materially different from the same number at fifty.

How to negotiate when the band is published. Counter at the top of the published band, not the middle. Companies that publish salary bands have already decided the top number is acceptable for the right candidate; the band exists so they can pay less when they can. If you have the experience the listing asks for, the top of the band is the right anchor. If the role is hourly or contract, anchor on a rate that backs into your target annual at the hours you'll actually work.

How to handle missing salary information. A surprisingly common pattern in flexible-job listings is no published salary at all. The right move is to ask in the screening call, not the offer call — "what's the band for this role?" — and to have your own number ready in case they ask first. Going first with a number is usually fine if your number is researched; vague answers like "market rate" leave money on the table.

Browse all Async-only, no required meetings roles, look at other schedule shapes, or read our guide library for practical advice on compensation, negotiation, and structuring flexible work.

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