Instead of making more money, I hustle to spend less. Ride my bike instead of drive or take transit. Cook at home instead of eat out. Get clothes and furniture from the local Buy Nothing exchange group. Compost my scraps and grow produce in the garden.
The reverse-hustle! Love it, great way to get to the same end goal all while being good to yourself and the planet.
Love it !
Is this some American thing I'm too European to understand?
A hobby/thing you do to make extra cash on the side
A simple yes would have suffice
I was hoping the anti-intellectualism would stay on reddit...
How is that anti-intellectualism? First of all his comment didn't provide any information that OP hadn't already given, secondly the original reply is clearly a mock pointing out that people in Europe don't need a side hussle, which completely blew over his head.
I sell drugs to the community.
A local pillar of society!
So, uhhh, you still got any of those drugs...? No reason, just asking for a friend... shifty eyes
I have a full-time job and thankfully don’t need extra income. I try to relax and do things I enjoy when I’m not working.
IT around my neighborhood. If people need help and they have a connection to me I can usually find time to stop by. 90% of the time it’s something like restarting the router or force restarting their computer. I like seeing the joy on their faces that their problem is over plus I control the cost of my time which is nice. Usually it’s less than an hour and the people I help are so grateful that they insist I take far more money then I would’ve charged them. It’s like wizardry to them
You need to teach me your ways, sir. I'm pretty tech savvy, but not enough for a job in IT. If I could just get something going in my local neightborhood, I'd be in business.
It kind of just happened by word of mouth from family to their friends etc. I’ve always been good with computers and my family kind just saw my abilities when they needed help. I did get lucky because I got an internship in high school repairing computers. Some general tips
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Always make sure things that should be plugged in, are
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Always try to turning it off and back on if you can
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Ask before you do
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Don’t do if you don’t know, even if they beg you
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Make sure you can trust the people you work with, especially since you’ll probably be uninsured when you’re doing this work for at least the first few months. Until you get enough clients to help you decide if it’s something you want to invest in
Ask before you do
This one is absolutely key for me when I'm fixing someone's computer. I'm happy to give it a go, but I don't want to be responsible if it breaks further. I try my best to explain it in the simplest terms possible and then get explicit verbal confirmation that it's okay if I try my fix.
I made a website to compare prices across regions for Nintendo Switch games. It started as a Google Spreadsheet but because of traffic I quickly had to move to a standalone website. Getting around 2M users per months now. I’m trying to keep the ads to a minimum, and I’m partnering with online stores for gift cards.
I've used this, it's a great site.
I write a blog on Medium.
You need to have a ton of content to make any amount of money. After writing 200 articles, I started making a consistent $100/month. Not quitting my day job any time soon, but I have a lot of downtime at work, so it's a productive way to pass the time.
Oh, and the $100/month is pretty consistent. I took a month off from writing, and they still sent me money for the read time on my old articles. The pay is low... but my boss wouldn't send me a small stipend if I decided not to show up for a month. So, I really can't complain.
DoorDash driver. Pay is decent. Not labor intensive. No bosses, listen to lots of music. People who complain about this job baffle me. Been doing it for a year, top dasher almost every month. Just gotta be willing to take a shit order every now and again to keep your scores up.
Do the tips actually go to you and can you see if someone left you one?
Car reselling
People often have mechanical problems with their vehicles and instead of trying to fix it they buy a new car. You can sometimes get them to sell the car for half the value, especially if it's not running.
I bought an SUV for $1000 because it wasn't running. I spent 4 hours and $300 replacement a sensor and the brakes on it. I then sold it for $3000. That works out to $1700 of profit for 6 hours' work if you include the time to sell it. That works out to $283/hr.
They don't always go as well as that one but it's usually pretty close
how long does it take u to find a car? I'm looking to get into this once I save up a bit for the first one
5 hours of over time a week when I need it. I cant do second jobs and the monetization of things I enjoy makes me loathe actually doing them.
Nothing, I have absolutely no time to waste on collecting extra income, so I spend less. Holidays, eating out (or even ordering) and a night out are already in the bin. (I hate crowds, so the last 2 aren't that much missed, especially with a wife that can cook great)
I am searching, but no luck yet.
I installed a pi hole to keep my wife from seeing advertisements. It doesn't make extra money, but saves so much money.
Videography, hoping to make it my main source of income. Even though I don't make a ton of money doing it now, I absolutely love it. Seeing people's reactions to the finished product feels extremely rewarding.
I buy larp stuff in china, and sell it locally. Not dropshipping, which means I have a pile of potion bottles, foam arrows, electric candles, tapestries, etc. sitting in my attic, but since I also run a larp, that's fine.
I edit college essays and some academic papers for L2 English speakers. Decent pay, could be higher but I work through a small company that handles all of the client-side stuff so I just get papers in my inbox to edit every so often without needing to wrangle anyone. Slow now since its summer, and sometimes you end up doing way too much work or have people who want content rather than grammar editing (sorry I don't know any actual physics, just how to make English write good) but overall its been really helpful as a little side income.
Life Coach. Would love to turn it into my main hustle, but I like doing the work cheap/free so that it actually helps people rather than makes the rich feel good about themselves.
Edit: I charge 'Pay as you feel'.
Is life coach just an unlicensed therapist that doesn't listen to you
Yes. It's a complete scam
I have a question, if someone sells their ideas, thoughts and experiences to someone who wants them, and bothe people fully understand that no qualifications have been taken, proven or identified, is that a Scam?
I understand that many people may Scam one another in this particular scenario. But coaching for many things don't require qualifications, for example parenting. If your getting advice counter to what a parent miss guided you with and pay someone without a qualification, who appears to help you. Is that a scam? Or is there a whole party of the internet I missed?
Genuinely interested.
You're a scammer.
I study. In my field we get promoted by doing competitive exams. So I study to do that exam and earn a promotion.
Actuary?
Seems an interesting field but no. I work in computer science.
I'm marginally curious, can you give a high level example of the industry? Meritocracy is rare, anymore.
It used to be my side hustle but is now my main hustle - I'm a minicab driver. The pay's pretty damn good and very consistent. I set aside a bit of cash so I can literally wake up one morning and decide to go back to bed, and still pay my rent. The only downside is having to deal with random people all day long.
Posting reviews. Only have 1 client, and he was the one that approached me. Definitely would love to expadf but can't say marketing is my strong suit.
I’m not sure I understand. You post reviews for one client’s products? Or different products on one client’s website?
Doing things I want to do. I already have one job, and damn sure don't want another. Fuck them bills lol.
Same. I'd rather enjoy my miserable life as much as I possibly can while I'm still young enough to do it.
I'd like to start selling things that I 3D print, but finding buyers will probably be difficult. Not to mention that if you try and sell prints of free models you find online then you'll just be selling what other people are probably already selling, so it's a race to the bottom regarding the price you can charge.
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