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Read this, just for a bit of inspiration
I make about $3,500 a month on the internet. Not quite enough for me and my family
to live on, but a nice addition to my income just the same. It's
pretty easy, and pretty quick, to get a SMALL income stream started. It
takes time and effort to build it up. Might as well get started today.
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Take stock of what you have to offer
If you are a
writer, programmer, designer, or photographer, there are oodles of
opportunities for you. If you have a speciality of any sort --
carpentry, raising kids, planning vacations or weddings, playing Guitar Hero 3 -- you can get paid for your expertise.
Even if you think all you can offer is time, there are plenty of opportunities for you as well.
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Scan the available steps
I've listed a lot of
options in the steps that follow, all of them legitimate. Pick the one
that seems the best fit for you and your skills, and start exploring.
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Freelance Work
If you have a skill to offer,
check out the various freelance sites (sometimes called "personal
outsourcing"), like elance.com and guru.com (see the Resources section
for the links I mention).
You can post your skills at these
sites, so potential customers can check you out, and you can also look
around for freelance projects that others have posted.
There are
tons of opportunities for freelancers, in very varied fields. Common
projects, though, are writing, computer or graphics design work,
creating web pages, programming, writing brochures or reports,
illustration, photography, and so on.
Pay can be pretty
good, especially after you've earned a quality rating at one or more of
the freelancing sites. At the same time, though, keep in mind that
you're competing with freelancers from around the world.
Take a look at the "How Elance Works" video on their main page to get a quick overview.
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Try Writing Web Content
There are a quite a number of ways to take your skill as a writer and turn it into cash.
One
of them is right here at eHow. Write brief "How to" articles on any
topic of your choosing, and get paid for the article. The more popular
the article, the more income you can expect. A good article will bring
in $50 per year or more. Write 10 top-notch articles, and that's $500.
A hundred articles...you get the picture.
I can't say enough
good things about eHow. To my mind, it is the best income generating
opportunity available. Google the term 'ehow101' to learn more about
how to make it work.
UPDATE: eHow is now run through its parent
company, Demand Media Studios (DMS). If you want to apply to write for
eHow or other DMS properties, or to be an editor, check out the
freelancer's application at demandmedia.com.
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Write Product Review
ConsumerSearch.com, a site
owned by the N.Y. Times, pays freelance writers a minimum of $350 per
article for product reviews. While that sounds like good money (and it
is...and you can earn even more than that!), their particular brand of
reviews requires good research and writing skills, and takes a lot of
work. Check 'em out at consumersearch.com/jobs.
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More writing opportunities
--At SoftwareJudge.com, write reviews of select software products...top reviews earn up to $50 each.
--Product
Reviews. You may be familiar with epinions.com, but did you know they
pay cash for good quality reviews. You won't get rich, but you can get
started.
--Suggest domain names according to site descriptions at Pickydomains.com Get $25 for each name that is chosen.
--At Xomba.com, write anything you feel like, and collect 50% of any advertising income from Adsense clicks on your page.
--Become
a fledgling journalist at examiner.com, and cover a special topic area
in your neck of the woods...they pay pretty well.
--Other
writing sites include associatedcontent.com, firehow.com, helium.com,
and Squidoo. In fact, one of my eHow colleagues has put together a very
nice Squidoo 'lens' with 101 sites where you can get paid to provide
content...check it out in the Resources section.
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Check out Q&A Sites
I earn much of my income
as an online researcher, answering folks questions on everything under
the sun: investments, market research, divorce law, homework help...you
name it. If this sounds like your cup of tea, here are some resources to
explore:
--The Association of Independent Information
Professionals (aiip.org) can help you build you own Q&A website and
business. I've built my research business at xooxleanswers.com, and it
is a steadily growing source of income for me.
--I also work
with Uclue.com Though they are not accepting new researchers right now,
it's worth a look to see how a well-developed Q&A site works.
--Another Q&A site is JustAnswer, and they offer small payments for answers to questions.
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Earn money from your own blog or website
The key
is to generate as much traffic as you can, and to have your visitors
click on ads and affiliate links. The more people visiting your site,
clicking on ads, and buying affiliate products, the more income you can
earn. As good as this sounds, income is generally more a trickle than a
flood. But again, steadily building your site (or sites), and building
traffic, is the key to generating a steadily growing stream of income.
Google Adsense is the most commonly used service for placing
banner and text ads on blogs and websites. As I've learned to maximize
Adsense income over the years, I've come to recognize this as one of the
best income-generating opportunities available.
You can also
incorporate in-text ads (the colored, underlined text with small pop-up
ads). I like InfoLinks.com for this, and Kontera.com is another
commonly used service.
Affiliate ads usually pay whenever a sale
is made for a product. Amazon.com has one of the most well-known
affiliate programs that all you to sell books or other Amazon products
on your site or blog, and earn a cut of the sale.
Other good affiliate resources are Commission Junction at cj.com, LinkShare.com, and AssociatePrograms.com.
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Blog With the Best of Them
If you don't have a
site of your own, starting a blog is pretty easy at sites like
Blogger.com, and Wordpress.com. Blogs make money through online
advertising and affiliate sales, such as through the Amazon.com
affiliates program. Blogger makes it very simple to automatically place
Google Adsense ads on your blog.
Also, at Orble.com, you can take
ownership of an abandoned blog with a specific focus, like Film, or
Travel, and collect a portion of the ad revenues. The advantage of this
is that the blog is already well-represented in search engines, and can
often generate much more traffic than a new blog of your own. See
Orble under the Resource links for more information.
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Sell your photos
At sites like istockphoto.com and
shutterpoint.com you can upload still photos or videos for sale, and
receive a royalty payment every time someone makes use of your content.
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Take Online Surveys
I mention survey work with a
good deal of trepidation...the surveys are tedious, the pay is meager,
and there are many sites that are dubious, or out and out scams.
The
most legitimate operation I know is GlobalTestMarket.com. They offer
real surveys, and they pay real money. Again...tedious, and earning
takes a long, long time.
CashCrate.com also pays users to take
online surveys. They strike me as legitimate, but I confess, I don't
have any first-hand experience with it, so approach with caution...
SurveyScout.com
is another possibility, but unlike CashCrate, they charge a membership
fee before you can get started (Boo!). I've also heard some negative
feedback from users of this site, so proceed with caution (if you
proceed at all!).
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Teaching and Tutoring
Search on [ Online tutoring ]
and you'll uncover dozens of sites in this booming corner of the
internet. Many accept applications for online tutors, with variable
rates and topic areas. Two to consider are tutor.com and
ehomeworkhelp.com
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Check into online "Jury Duty"
Here's an odd one.
Lawyers looking for feedback on how a case will play before a jury can
make use of online e-jury sites to solicit input from the type of
average citizens that show up on juries. Yes, you get paid. Fees for
complex cases can run over $50, though $20 is more typical. To serve as
an online juror, check out onlineverdict.com, or trialpractice.com.
Be
aware, though, that none of the sites I've registered at has ever
actually contacted me for a jury case, so I'm not sure just how active
these services are. If anyone knows more about them, please leave a
remark in the Comments.
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Become a virtual office assistant
At
TeamDoubleClick, you can sign on for temporary jobs as an office
assistant, handling correspondence, emails, bookkeeping, data entry, and
other office jobs. Think of it as an online temp agency for virtual
work. Pay is varied, but you are not obliged to take jobs that don't
meet your financial needs.
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Play games
At moola.com, you can get paid to play.
This
is probably the strangest one yet, and I can't personally vouch for it
(I've only tinkered with the site), but it looks legitimate. Moola
starts you off by giving you a penny, which you can then double, and
double again, through a variety of games and activities.
Presumably,
they make oodles of money through ads, and are willing to throw some of
it your way by participating in their zany set of games and marketing
gimmicks. They call themselves a "Massively Multiplayer Rewards Game".
It's too complicated to explain here, but worth a look.
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**Participate in crowdsource design**
"Crowdsourcing"
is the buzzword for getting a lot of people to do your work for you.
If you're good at designing things like t-shirts, logos, fancy fonts,
and other graphics, take a look at the challenges at 99designs.com and
threadless.com.
If your design is chosen, you can collect hundreds or even thousands of dollars.
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More blogging opportunities
How does $100 a
month sound for writing a few blog posts every week? That's what you
can be paid (actual range is $84-140) if you get accepted as a blogger
at Creative Weblogging. They are a large blog network, and seem to have
mastered the art of monetizing their many sites. All they need are
people to write them, and keep the content fresh.
UPDATE:
Creative Weblogging has changed hands and is changing how -- or if -- it
pays bloggers. Stay tuned for additional updates.
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Earn with any type of content
Blogging, articles,
photos, video, you name it. Flixya offers 100% of ad revenue to anyone
who posts at their website (you need to have your own Google Adsense
account to participate). Words, pictures, videos, whatever ya got.
Post it, bring in some traffic, and collect some ad clicks. (Haven't
tried it yet myself, but Flixya has a good reputation).
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Just Visit
Another site that pays for content is
mylot.com, but they also promise earnings everytime you use the site!.
They also pay for referrals. Haven't given them a test run yet, so use
them with caution, but they seem worth exploring, at least. If you have
experience with them, please post a comment, below.
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Listen to music
At slicethepie.com, you can get paid for listening to music.
Say
what!!! Yep, listen to upcoming artists, and review their music. The
more reviews you write -- and the better you are at spotting new talent
-- the more you can get paid. Some folks are pulling in several dollars
per review.
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Typing and Dictation
If you have good typing skills, consider Speak-Write.com, an online dictation service.
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Stay focused
You can participate in online focus
groups at 2020research.com, where you review a product you've used, or
discuss an issue of interest to you. Payment ranges from about $50-150
per session. Participants are typically asked to join a group once or
twice a year.
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Work for Google
Ha, ha...couldn't resist. But you can earn through Google by posting content at Google Knol.
This
online encylopedia-like site is a place where anyone can contribute
content, and you can "monetize" your efforts by placing Adsense ads on
your article to generate revenue. I wrote a Knol about eHow. You can
see it by searching on the term ehow101.
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Review websites for usability
You can get paid for
reviewing websites. Usertesting.com pays $10 per website review, where
you provide feedback on quality and usability. It's not
open-ended...you have to be selected to test, based on your demographic
profile.
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Earn money reading emails
Really! Of course,
there are ads involved, and you might be asked to click a few things,
but it's not difficult. Expect to get 5-10 emails a day (more, if you
register multiple email addresses), and earn a few pennies per email.
Check out InboxDollars.com.
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Try a little bit of everything
Genuinejobs.com
is a legitimate work-at-home (telecommuting) site that lists hundreds of
jobs, none of which require a fee, and many of which can be done
online. Registration is simple...worth checking out.
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Write for the NY Times
Really! The Times owns two sites that regularly hire writers.
I
already mentioned ConsumerSearch.com up above, a site that uses
freelance writers to create detailed reviews of common consumer
products...minimum pay is $350 per write-up, and they do a lot of
hiring.
About.com, another Times property, hires writers as
guides. These positions, paying $725/month or more, are tough to get,
but worth looking into.
And don't forget...
At the risk of repeating
myself, eHow is just about the best opportunity out there. Although
getting on board through Demand Media Studios takes more work than at
the eHow of old, it's still worth the effort.
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