Gazhoo bills itself as the content marketplace. It is, in effect, a place where anyone can hock their intellectual goods in the form of documents.
So if you’ve got a ninth grade English Lit paper, on, oh say, Jean Rhys’ Wide Sargasso Sea, feel free to give it a price and sell that 93rd percentile gem. The going rate is entirely up to the author. A five page essay might fetch $20; alternately if you’ve a keen yen for attention or are just dying for feedback on your latest poetic feats, simply offer them up for free and wait for the reviews to come rolling in. Fortunately, each document can be previewed prior to purchase, so you can judge for yourself if it’s worth your money. Transactions are made via PayPal or credit card. Gazhoo also has a Facebook app (very useful, I imagine for the college crowd).
Gazhoo.com In Their Own Words
“Gazhoo.com (“Gazhoo”) is an innovative Content Marketplace that allows users to search, buy, and sell documents. The site will initially focus on Reports, Term Papers, Business Forms, Legal Forms, and Market Research Reports. All documents are User Generated Content and uploaded solely by users. Given it’s open marketplace nature, Gazhoo will intrinsically maintain quality content and low prices.”
Why Gazhoo.com It Might Be A Killer
Gazhoo is the perfect venue to find much needed inspiration, especially if you’re hours a way from that term paper deadline and haven’t written so much as a scratch. It’s an equally opportune way to make money from your old school papers or business write-ups.
Some Questions About Gazhoo.com
Isn’t Gazhoo aiding plagiarism? What about quality? Will people actually buy the papers after they’ve read them (some really aren’t worth even two cents)? 







