30 Easy Ways to Make Money Online

The interwebz iz good for more than just porn and video games – it can make money too! Think of the web as a giant public space where all types of business goes down. If you’re looking to make some money, the interwebz provide a myriad of ways to get yourself financially solvent. Check out 30 easy ways to make money online, if you know what you’re doing.

Advertising

  1. Amazon Associates

Amazon Associates is Amazon’s program for bloggers and other webmasters to earn money by placing Amazon links and banners on their site. You can earn residual income through this site – this means even though you’re only receiving 6-10% of each sale, once you build the link, the income is automatic.

While advertising is the easiest way to make passive income over the internet, it depends on driving traffic, which means you have to place relevant links. Focus on content you would want to see to convince you to click through, rather than trying to trick site visitors into clicking a link.

  1. Google Adsense

If that sounds like too much work, there’s an easy button – Google’s advertising platform is as simple as signing up, enabling (on Blogger) or pasting a small code on your website, and allowing the advertisements to automatically roll in. The problem with this program is that you don’t get any commissions – and you don’t get to control the ad content.

Also it doesn’t work with WordPress-hosted sites, although you can use it with a Worpress site hosted on another server. This is useful for some, but powerful users will want something a little more robust.

  1. Rakuten Linkshare

Another great affiliate option outside of Amazon is offered by Rakuten. Each advertiser has their own terms and conditions for applying along with commission structures. All are routed through one simple interface.

Through Rakuten, you can advertise iTunes, Starbucks, The Honest Company, and other vendors that offer products and services outside Amazon. Linking directly to these sites can also assist your site ranking, in addition to passive income.

  1. Company Referral Programs

I often attend trade shows and deal with PR companies. They all want their products and brands advertised on the mainstream and high-traffic media companies I work with. While I maintain journalistic integrity for sites I’m paid to write for, others want free content from me, so I make money side hustling links and obtaining review units to write about.

Not only does this boost income, it gets me free or discounted products. Don’t be afraid to reach out to brands to communicate your needs and offer services.

  1. Klout

Klout is a San Francisco-based startup that rewards social media influencers with free samples and other giveaways. While the majority of Klout’s offerings are promotional samples, there are occasional gems being offered, so if you’re already spending all your time on social media, you may as well be compensated for it. Think of it as a social media rewards program.

Sales

  1. EBay

EBay is the premiere internet auction site, spawning PayPal along with a slew of imitators and haters. Instead of holding a garage/yard sale, where you have to make signs, advertise in the paper, and get up early in the morning to haggle with yokels over how many Star Wars collector cups $5 buys, you can create an auction, set bid and reserve prices, and mail boxes off at your convenience.

  1. Amazon

Amazon is constantly trying to compete with EBay, so it’s no surprise their marketplace allows independent sellers to offer new and used goods. Other than site branding, there’s very little difference between the two sites, aside from EBay allowing obscure items with no SKU and Amazon allowing the sale of ebooks and other digital content.

  1. App and Play Stores

Musicians and other audio/videophiles can create podcasts and other media to sell through the App and Play stores. Even programmers can make apps and games, although the App store is a bit more difficult to get listed, and you’ll be competing with tens of thousands of similar products, so marketing is the ultimate key to making money – these stores simply provide a marketplace.

  1. Craigslist

When I was a kid, we advertised everything in the Classified section in the back of the newspaper. Now people under the age of 40 only know of newspapers from their parents or vague memories from childhood. These days, we post classified ads on Craigslist, a localized posting board where you can find a job, offer services, find a job, or sell any of your old junk.

Like classified ads before them, Craigslist is the subject of a variety of paranoid (often untrue or exaggerated) stories of people being killed, kidnapped, raped, etc. via Craigslist. While this can and does happen, the site is far from the only culprit. Common sense will save you in a variety of situations, so don’t use any site blindly – if a deal sounds too good to be true, it probably is.

  1. Etsy

If you’re crafty, try selling crafts on Etsy. Handcrafted items are the bread and butter here. Plenty of people make good side money on the site, which is basically an EBay for crafters and artists. Set up a sellers account with Etsy, and you’ll be asked to set up your virtual storefront and put up at least 5 goods for sale. Once you have this initial process done, you’ll be ready to sell to anyone.

Once you have this down, you’ll be a budding Etsy entrepreneur. Provide great quality to your customers, and they’ll often return. Many people are willing to pay a premium for quality handmade designs. Etsy (like EBay and Amazon) takes a cut off the top for selling items through their site. PayPal takes another cut, and you have to be careful with taxes on all income, so be diligent while building your online business.

Services

  1. Website Building

The interwebz iz filled with two kinds of people – content creators and service providers. The barrier to entry for service providers is financially impossible to overcome individually, so focus on creating content. In order to do this, you need a website. In order to build a website, you need a host (i.e GoDaddy), a template (i.e WordPress), and content.

The first two parts are easy to find, and content is only as difficult as you make it. You can post blogs, items for sale, pictures, videos, or whatever you want. Opening up your own website gives you the potential to make money from the avenues I’m going to mention.

Once you get used to designing websites and driving traffic to them, you can start charging others to build and maintain a website. Some small businesses only want basic sites that will require a one-time fee, while others are web-savvy and will pay a subscription fee for you to maintain the site.

  1. SEO and Content Marketing

Any time you type a keyword into a search engine and press Enter, you’re presented with a list of (often millions of) results. The order of this list is carefully determined by a variety of search algorithms developed and maintained by the search engine company. Optimizing your site for all search engines increases visibility, so learning the secrets of Search-Engine Optimization and Content Marketing is essential.

Once you have these skills, you can begin finding clients to offer marketing services, which can carry monthly subscription fees of hundreds to hundreds of thousands of dollars. These projects take a lot more work than you think, though, so be prepared to spend 20-hour days placing relevant anchor links and building traffic to show results.

  1. Buying/Selling Social Media Accounts

Whether you’re on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat, or whatever other platform, it’s all social media, and both brands and advertisers are aware these services have our attention. This is why services exist to pay users to advertise, buy/sell accounts, and buy/sell followers. Often these services are against the site’s terms and conditions, so be sure you’re dealing with a reputable company that won’t get you banned.

  1. Blogging

I make most of my income blogging. This includes finding pictures, coming up with content, building links, formatting posts, etc. It’s a full-time job in and of itself, but over time, it pays off. If you want to start blogging, sign up with Blogger, WordPress, Tumblr, or Joombla, and get started. Tumblr is more of an advertising platform for blogging, but all exposure is good.

Monetizing a blog involves the residual affiliate advertising methods described above, along with obtaining payments for blogging. My clients include media outlets, ghostwriting clients, and more. Sometimes I pitch stories (Like my Main Street Bud Trimmer’s Guide), and other times they’re assigned to me (like my original Lifehack of 24 Ways to Make Money on the Internet). Either way, being paid to write is my ultimate goal, and it beats flipping burgers or hustling on the corner.

  1. YouTube

For more visual artists, YouTube provides a great platform to make money generating traffic to videos. A variety of Internet stars have been birthed on Google’s YouTube service, which focuses on user-created content to stay alive. However many of them are rushing to reroute traffic to their own personal sites to regain control over their income as YouTube continues to tighten its terms and conditions.

Side Hustles

  1. Porn

Probably not your first choice to make money, there’s no denying porn is the largest traffic driver on the internet. If you’re a female, you can make money getting naked online, although your content will likely be stolen and advertised better than you’re doing. A variety of Internet porn stars make decent money off subscriptions and by posting their Amazon wish list in public (lonely guys will do anything for attention).

  1. ThePirateBay

During my school years, I supported myself trading bootleg movies, TV seasons, albums, and software. By simply installing thousands of dollars of software on a cheap computer, tablet, or phone, you can instantly raise its value. Look for high-value stuff like pro audio/video/photo editing programs, emulators and roms, web design software, and new release movies (skip cams). With a printer and Lightscribe burner, you can create any DVD, game, or Blu-Ray you want to sell.

  1. Kickstarter

If you haven’t seen South Park’s episode about Kickstarter and Washington Redskins Go Fuck Yourself, you’re missing out. Crowdfunding is a popular way for startups and entrepreneurs to raise money for projects though. Be prepared to provide some graphs, stats, and proof of concept, but if you have a great idea for an invention or service, Kickstarter can get it off the ground in no time.

  1. Extreme Couponing

I used to have a newspaper delivery route as a kid. Every Sunday and Tuesday, the paper included a variety of coupons and advertisements, as the editions were distributed to a wider audience. We often provided free copies to everyone in the neighborhood. Before delivering the papers, however, I made sure to search through it for any valuable coupons. Extreme couponers take this concept to the extreme.

Once you get started searching for freebies, free samples, and store coupons, you’ll find a variety of apps and sites all helping you do the same thing – stock up on coupons, watch sales cycles, and buy in bulk to beat the system and pay pennies (or even get paid) for the food, hygiene items, and cleaning supplies you buy and use all the time.

  1. Wikipedia

Although Wikipedia is a non-profit reference site, it’s also one of the most heavily trafficked sites online, so everyone wants to be on it. It’s not difficult to find companies and other interests looking for Wikipedia editors. Create a profile and start editing all those articles you complain are inaccurate. Not only will you be maintaining the integrity of the site, you’re building your portfolio so you can apply for jobs editing Wikipedia.

  1. Yelp!

Like Wikipedia, many brands and companies will pay you for Yelp reviews, but only if you have a valid account that’s actively used. Keep up with reviewing places you go on any service (TripAdvisor, Foursquare, etc.) and you’ll be available to make a quick $15-50 just for posting a 100-300 word review about a company. I like to keep multiple accounts on every social media account in order to continue taking these types of jobs while maintaining the integrity of my personal online brand.

  1. 20/20 Surveys

Despite having the capability to monitor our every thought and desire online, some companies still like to ask us what we think. A variety of companies offer marketing surveys, but most are a scam. 20/20 offers panels for a variety of clients and is consistent with pay and participant selection. It’s possible to make $100 or more for qualifying for certain surveys targeting specific demographics. Sign up for their alerts to be notified whenever you may qualify for a new survey.

  1. Sweepstakes

Another seemingly dark corner of the Interwebz is sweepstakes. Don’t ever click on a banner ad claiming you won something, but legitimate brands you use and stores you shop at often offer legitimate sweepstakes with low entry counts because everyone assumes it’s a waste of time. Follow every brand on Facebook, visit their websites, and check weekly ads to know who’s offering which sweepstakes. So long as you’re not paying for entry, you’re not wasting time trying for something free.

  1. Darknet

Digital contraband is aplenty on The Pirate Bay, but for physical contraband, you have to log into the Darknet. I’ve discussed the Deep Web and Darknet in-depth throughout my blogs, so if you’re unaware of it, check them out. Once you’re in, you’ll be able to buy and sell anything you want around the world. Ran out of cans to recycle and items to sell in a garage sale? Sell your organs, children, drugs, or more on the Darknet.

Employment Opportunities

  1. Fiverr

A website built off the old TV commercial jingle, “What would you do for a Klondike bar,” Fiverr is where you offer to perform a variety of silly pet tricks or services for $5. It takes time to build your reputation, and, like everywhere visual online, your odds increase if you’re a broad, but money can be made for simple tasks, such as posting a pic on your social media account holding a sign for someone’s brand for a viral marketing campaign.

  1. Mturk

Amazon’s Mechanical Turk program is a great place to get involved in crowdsourcing (not to be confused with crowdfunding). After linking your Amazon account, you’ll perform a variety of micro-tasks for pennies. It doesn’t sound like much, but most tasks only take a few seconds to perform, so it’s possible to earn $5-10+ per hour on the site.

You can look forward to data entry, clicking links, rating pics, describing porn clips, and more. I like to work on Mturk while mindlessly watching TV or killing time in the library in between assignments.

  1. Care.com

Care.com is the place for experienced nannies and other caregivers to make money peddling their services. By listing yourself on the Craigslist of Childcare, you widen your brand’s exposure and increase your odds of finding a gig. You can be pickier with what kids you watch when you have the reputation and traffic to pull in more customers. Join Care.com and start making money by investing in the future of our youth.

  1. Indeed

Maybe what you need is a job. It doesn’t matter which job search site you prefer using (even Craigslist) – Indeed tracks them all, and then some. You can find jobs posted on company websites, through temp agencies, and more at Indeed. If money is something you really need, Indeed is most definitely the place you want to visit to browse career opportunities.

  1. Elance

Where Indeed excels at finding job postings across the web and acting as a search crawler for employment, maybe a full-fledged career is too big of a commitment at this point in your life. Elance is a site to find freelance work of all types. I’ve used it for quick writing, editing, copywriting, resume building, and other odd jobs and temp gigs. The experience has been great.

Elance offers a wide array of technical, data entry, accounting, and other freelance and temp gigs. If you’re just looking for something short and sweet, log in, input and showcase your marketable skills, and begin searching through their job database, using any parameters you desire. Once you submit a bid, you’ll receive an acceptance or denial – you may get a few rejections, but don’t sweat it. Negotiate the terms of your bid, and get to work. You have money to make.

  1. LinkedIn

LinkedIn is a social media site for professionals. This isn’t a direct way to make money, but it’s a great way to connect to your current and potential peers, customers, clients, vendors, and more here. You’ll build a reputation and get in the loop on important developments in your chosen career path and/or industry. One day an old college buddy may hit you up for a dream job you never considered at the exact moment you are looking for a new vocation. Whether you like it or not, keeping your LinkedIn profile current is a great way to get surprised with new work opportunities out the blue.

and as a bonus…

31. Lyft/Uber

Have a car, truck, van, or bus? You can start your own taxi service. Instead of using a cab company, which is prohibited from certain practices, you can be just another Lyft or Uber driver charging fares per person, driving drivers’ unions up the wall faster than you can make $1000 pimping your ride out.

Brian penny versability whistleblower beanie headphonesBrian Penny is a former Business Analyst and Operations Manager at Bank of America turned whistleblower, troll, and writer. Penny has been featured on Main Street, Cannabis Now, Hardcore Droid, and The Huffington Post.

Blogging Tips from The Joneses

It’s an older movie, but The Joneses perfectly encapsulates the spirit of what life is truly like as a blogger. David Duchovney, Demi Moore, and the rest of this brilliant cast show how far marketing companies go for a sale. The couple play a fake family selling a fast-paced lifestyle in affluent suburbia.

While it didn’t seem related to blogging, with marketing being such an important part of content creation, the themes were striking.

It’s cool if you visit my blog – even better if you read the content. I don’t make my money from you, so it’s of no concern to me how well you connect to my content.

How Content Creators Earn a Living

Pandering to an audience can make a little money, but the large bulk of my online income is derived from two revenue sources: advertising and distribution.

The Joneses aren’t selling anything. They’re simply enjoying all the free expensive stuff they have. This passive sales technique is exactly what type of ads I post in my blogs. I don’t directly make the products, but I can make a living selling them if I find a creative way.

versability joneses david duchovney

Swag Saves Money

If you’ve read a magazine, watched television or movies, listened to a song, or even driven on a highway, you’ve seen product placements. Sometimes these placements are paid – other times swag is creatively bartered.

By attending trade shows, conventions, and expos, I met a lot of PR and marketing reps for brands across all market segments and industries. In doing so, I was able to get my hands on review units to include in my work.

The Joneses  sell themselves more than a product. The products are things you’re buying simply to mimic people you idolize. If you become a trendsetter, the focus of your grind changes.

Artists need to think more about business. It’s a big data approach to marketing, and the big guys are doing it. This is the real revenue stream in entertainment, so ignore the piracy hype from the MPAA and RIAA.

Brian Penny whistleblower Versability GonzoBrian Penny is a former Business Analyst and Operations Manager at Bank of America turned whistleblower, troll, and writer. Penny has been featured on Main Street, Cannabis Now, Hardcore Droid, and The Huffington Post.

 

How I Survive on Less Than $20k a Year Blogging

I’m a full-time writer and this has been my only income for the last three years. It took a long time to get everything up and running, so don’t think it was easy.

My paychecks come from all over the place – marketing, guest posting, and ghostwriting assignments are the bulk of my monthly income. This triad pays the bills and keeps me working for another day.

Behind the simple paycheck system is a level of perks and swag I receive as a blogger. From my special edition Zippo to my Manduka yoga mats, a lot of the band’s I mention in my blogs have sent me review units to test and often keep.

In writing about yoga, travel, tech, games, and such, I’ve been invited to cover a variety of trade shows and conventions. This gets me free stuff for writing about products.

All the solar gear I reviewed for Goal Zero, Enerplex,  and the like became part of my personal collection, some of which I traded for other accessories with a PC gaming journalist I met at E3 and PAX. LL Bean and REI outfitted my outdoor travel this fall and winter.

The only time I pay for pot anymore is when I write about the cost. Otherwise dispensaries and caregivers normally give it to me.  I’m known in the cannabis industry, so I get a lot of concentrates and nuggets free.

The trick to all of this is to follow your passion. I got all this free stuff by writing about it in major publications.  It’s not payola – DJ’s need to hear a song to play it, retail associates need to own products to sell them, and critics need products to review.

It becomes a symbiotic relationship in which providing exposure for brands like Celestron and personalities like Snoop Dogg got me access to bigger brands. The PR industry is small, and word spreads when you deliver.

Much of my swag networking was put on hold when I was forced to defend myself from a banking executive in court. I’ll rebuild soon though.

Brian Penny blogger anonymous versabilityBrian Penny is a former Business Analyst and Op

erations Manager at Bank of America turned whistleblower, troll, and freelance writer. His work has appeared in Huffington Post, Main Street, Fast Company, and Hardcore Droid.

The Lifehacker’s Guide to Attending Trade Shows, Conventions, and Expos

It wasn’t easy, but I’m in the last stretch of my year of travelling the trade show circuit on the west coast.

From outdoor adventures to gadgets, expensive tech, drugs, food, and music, I’ve seen the back end of a lot of professional industries. I also learned a few tips about the shows themselves, along with the PR industry.

Brian Penny cannabis cup media credentials

1. Apply Early

To get into major trade shows like E3, Comic-Con,  Infocomm, Marijuana Business, Defcon, CES, and Outdoor Retailer, you need to apply early. Check out their websites today to see when tickets are available.

2. Get Credentials

For any trade show, you can gain free attendance as a media analyst. To do this, you’ll need an active online presence and knowledge of the industry. Without this, you may still be able to gain attendance, but you will have to pay.

3. Show Up Early

Familiarize yourself with the lay of the land early. Coming a few hours prior will give you the opportunity to network your way in if you don’t already have a badge. If you do, you’ll get a free shot with at least one booth before the crowds barge in.

Nintendo smash bros wiiU E3 LA

4. Find Media, Vendor, and Worker Areas

These are the break areas that will have the food, Wi-Fi, charging stations, etc. Try to walk in until you’re stopped, regardless of what credentials you have. You’d be surprised where this can get you in life.

5. Move Around

Don’t spend more than thirty minutes at any given booth. Everyone is there to make sales. Introduce yourself, hand out a business card, and ask for a review unit. Then move on.Brian Penny Press Credentials Infocomm E3 PAX Outdoor Retailers CES Cannabis Cup

6. Bring Business Cards

Business cards are the best investment I ever made. I’ve traded them for clothes, food, hotel stays, VIP entry, and more. Everyone will ask you for a card, and people hate hearing excuses. Always have business cards.

Brian Penny Versability SignatureBrian Penny is a former business analyst and operations manager at Bank of America turned whistleblower, writer, and troll. Penny has been featured on Huffington Post, the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, and more.

 

20 Quick SEO Tips for Bloggers

Blogging is how I make a living. Outside of this blog, I’ve worked for content farms, small businesses, individuals, and everywhere in between. It wasn’t easy, but I picked up a lot of wisdom along the way. Here are 20 quick SEO tips for bloggers:

1 – Keep writing – there’s no point driving traffic to a blank site…

2 – Try to fit at least one relevant external link and one relevant internal link in every post…

3 – Email other bloggers and ask to exchange guest posts…

4 – Mention your blog everywhere (even email signatures)…

5 – Promote every post on social media, but make sure you post something personal for every spammy link…

6 – Don’t just write keywords, write about them…

7 – Thank people who share your links…

8 – Proofread your work…again…and again…

9 – Learn Content Marketing, SEO, and other internet search lingo…

10 – Learn HTML…

11 – Do your own formatting as often as possible…

12 – Optimize all pictures…

13 – Picture names matter…

14 – Create a Google+ account and keep your author bio updated…

15 – Optimize your bio, tagline, and author signature…

16 – Always cross-promote…

17 – Track your Google Analytics, Bing Analytics, etc, and monitor all incoming traffic sources…

18 – Sign up for any and all news desk or assignment desk emails in stay on top of current trends…

19 – Write about what you know…

20 – Keep it relevant…

Brian Penny versability anonymous blue tie fedoraBrian Penny is a former Business Analyst at Bank of America turned whistleblower, freelance consultant, and troll. He’s a frequent contributor to The Street, Cannabis Now, and Fast Company, Huffington PostMainstreetLifehack, and HardcoreDroid.

8 Reasons You Lack Success

Change gon’ come…

Everyone’s working hard – everyone has plans to climb to the top. So what makes the difference between those who succeed and the people who work for those people? Success has a simple formula, and if you ever hope to achieve it, you need to get on board  Here are eight common reasons you lack success…

1 – You Don’t Believe in Yourself…

If you don’t believe in yourself, no one will. It doesn’t matter if you find yourself standing up against impossible odds — whether you win or lose, people will respect you for trying. There is no factor of success that matters more than putting in the effort.

The long story short is you fail every time you don’t try, and you can only succeed by believing in a positive outcome. You shoot where you aim (or, at the very least, in the vicinity).

2 – You Fear Success…

A lot of people know they could’ve been amazing at some other part of their lives. There’s always someone who could have been a doctor or singer or entrepreneur if they only had that one shot. The reality is you wouldn’t know what to do with freedom if you gained it – you’re afraid of your own success.

Fear of success is a leading cause of never achieving it, because people who are afraid of spiders tend to avoid spiders; you get my drift?

3 – You Listen to Bad Advice…

If you’re going to take advice from people (and occasionally in life you’re gonna wanna do that), you need to take it with a grain of salt. You’ll eventually gain an instinct for knowing which advice is good and bad, but until you do, stick to trusting those in the positions you want to be in – they have all the good advice you want…it’s just a matter of whether or not they want to talk to you about it.

4 – You Give Up Too Easily…

Having made a lot of plans in my life, I’ve learned people like to give up as soon as something gets difficult. Much like you’ll never succeed if you don’t try, you’ll never succeed if you quit every time the going gets tough. There’s no easy path to success. No matter what you decide to do in life, there will be difficulties and obstacles — I have no commute or boss and still make money…and still I manage to have problems at work.

5 – You Don’t Have the Right Team…

Sometimes the problem isn’t that you give up too easily; sometimes the problem is you don’t give up easily enough. When it reaches a point where people on your team aren’t delivering the way they should, it’s time to cut and run. Love and business have no place inter-mingling, and sometimes difficult decisions must be made. Just because somebody is your friend doesn’t mean they understand the value of your business.

6 – You’re Not Working Proactively…

You’ll never get ahead if you don’t learn to think ahead. Proactive thinking leads to proactive action, which can be shortened even further to pro-action. So long as you’re reactive, as opposed to proactive, you’ll never get anywhere in life. Get ahead of the game and start calling your own shots; it’s the only way you’ll ever accomplish anything.

7 – You Lack Killer Instinct…

You may have the best ideas ever. You can be intelligent, creative, and a great worker — none of that matters. Planning is an important stage, but so is execution. If you’re ever going to succeed, you need to be willing to look your opponent in the eye and pull the trigger. If you’re going to end a fight, finish him; don’t wait for an imaginary judge’s card at the end.

8 – You Can’t Handle the Heat…

The instant you start climbing up or moving forward, people will begin hating you. Anyone who’s different is a target. If you’re not ready to stand up against the heat, make sure you never work toward success. So long as you keep your head down and avoid success, you should be fine though.

Brian Penny Versability Whistleblower Anonymous smokingBrian Penny is a former Business Analyst at Bank of America turned whistleblower, freelance consultant, and troll. He’s a frequent contributor to The Street, Cannabis Now, and Fast Company, Huffington PostMainstreetLifehack, and HardcoreDroid.