Do You want to Learn how to make money fast online?
Then Lets Make Some fast Money
Welcome to Money, lots of money, this website is designed to give
you inspiration, thought and belief that you can make money fast on the
internet. It is not a get rich quick scheme, it is hard, well I say
hard, what I mean is you have to be patient to make a lot of money but you can
start generating money fast.
You will find that with a little work each day the profits will
grow, and when you look back you will realise you have done a lot of
work. Unfortunately you already know you have to work for money, but
you can work from home on your computer to do it. Follow my step by step guide
in my blog of how I am making money online.
Please note, I'm not here to take your money by selling products to you and I'm not
trying to sell you an e-book full of ways and methods of making money fast online. I'm not even signing you up for a newsletter, or
trying to sell links to increase my web traffic. This website
was put together more as a hobby and an experiment for myself.
It may change your life, remember who to thank!
Some fast ideas I've posted here are good and have good reviews, other money
making ideas are quick fly by night sites trying to get money from you -
defeats our purpose of making money! But all these methods allegedly generate
money lots of money, and every single one is legal.
The best start is to get a webpage, there are a lot of web hosts out there,
but be careful, this is important, the last thing you want is a limited usage
preventing potential profits for you. Choose a reliable host, below is one of
the good ones:
I personally use:
I've put together a lot of these ideas from hours discussing
businesses for sale with their owners. Its amazing that they share these ideas,
but if they are selling a site, they seem more approachable. They've shared with me how their
businesses operate, how they make money online, how they built their businesses
up etc. They've given me access to their traffic stats, their earnings and
accounts and tax figures. Many even gave me access to their Adsense or other
"main earner" accounts. Some of those businesses seem so irresistible that I
just wanted to buy them outright, but so far I've resisted!
Most of these business ideas can be run from anywhere in the world, even the
United Kingdom, USA, Australia and non-English speaking countries.
Each method is summarised in a single small paragraph so appreciate it's not the
complete unabridged version. And, no, I haven't tried each one so out of the
business models to make money fast online let me know what you find more likely to
make you money.
With all this in mind, here are my top 10 of my making money online ideas.
1. Social Networking
It might seem very unlikely but making money online as you trawl through profiles of friends,
prospective and ex boyfriends and girlfriends is actually a
reality. Yuwie,
is an upstart social networking enterprise, offers to pay its users as they
increase the page impressions of their public profiles, upload
photos to share and refer others to join in the fun. All of this is achieved by a proportionate payment structure that sees around half of the websites advertising revenue, its chief source of income, distributed directly to its user
base.
Admittedly its still early days but with around half a million registrations
to date and no shortage of testimonials, Yuwie looks like the real deal.
As painful a means of making money online as you're ever likely to find,
completing market research surveys for cash is time-consuming, invasive and
very dull, in my eyes at least! It also happens to be very effective. Opportunities in this
field are virtually endless too, with literally thousands of research groups
vying for your time and attention. Perhaps the most well known of these is:
Whose methodology involves obtaining responses from an invited group of internet users at prices
ranging from £0.50 to £2.00 per survey completed. Registration is free and
relatively painless, though if you are planning on going down this route, you
would do well to create another email account solely for the purpose of survey
completion - your personal details are going to be getting bandied around an
awful lot.
3. Poker
Likely the most controversial inclusion in this list, the online poker world
is awash with sob stories of empty wallets and broken dreams from people of all
walks of life who just didn't know when to quit. If you feel like having a go at
making some big bucks through gambling, extreme caution is urged. Quite apart
from the fact that players need a fair degree of skill in the game to get
anywhere, starting small is crucial - only bet what you can afford to lose with
a smile. If you are skilled - and lucky - the potential rewards are vast, with
some players regularly earning in excess of £1,000 per day. But, remember, the
pitfalls are even greater. Texas Hold Em is by far the most popular variant of
the game - get some free practice via
MSN Games.
When your ready to play for real make sure you choose a reliable company
like:
Ok so you've signed up to the poker site above, now lets
learn some other gambling formula's.
The thing is, I've tried both these options and although I
made about $50 a night for about 3 nights, I lost it all in
one bad set of numbers. This to me is not the way to guarantee
riches, but can give you a quick $100 or in my case £70
roughly!
4. Blogging
There are two ways to make cash through blogging: either by
earning commission from advertising banners placed alongside a
blog of your own or by engaging in the (slightly dubious)
practice of "sponsored" blogging. An array of third party
tools is available in the case of the former option; Google's
AdSense remains
one of the more popular solutions. Just establish yourself a
decent blog, configure the ads and see what happens. Sponsored
blogging on the other hand is an altogether more calculated
affair, with specialists such as
Blogitive and
PayPerPost providing a
platform through which companies essentially contract bloggers
to post favourable content about their products in exchange
for cash. Unethical, granted, though nonetheless undoubtedly
fruitful for those subtle enough to get away with it.
5. Message boards
Every message board - both small-time niche operation and gargantuan general
interest community alike - relies on posts from its members in order to sustain
user interest. Newly-created forums are particularly dependent on regular
contributions in order to encourage conversations and attract the registration
of new members. This, of course, is where you come in. In exchange for a nominal
fee of anywhere between £0.01 and £0.10 per post, message board administrators
frequently advertise externally for "ringers" to sign up to their endeavours and
get the ball rolling. Popular recruiting grounds include
webmaster-talk
and Digital
Point.
6. Stock photography
If you've a keen eye for an impressive frame, or even just some half-decent
camera kit at your disposal, selling pictures to any one of the plethora of
stock photography agencies scattered across the web represents a sure-fire
method of generating an income online. The likes of
iStockPhoto and
Fotolia offer budding photographers the
incentive of earning potentially significant sums for their snaps on a
per-download basis in exchange for their other royalty payment rights.
Predictably, the most sought-after depictions are of a fairly mundane nature -
think three-quarter view angles of pretty women dressed in suits - though
equally inevitable is the high demand in some quarters for photographs of an
altogether more risque nature...
7. Games
Believe it or not, it is possible to make money simply by playing computer
games. Second Life, one of a range of
so-called massively multi-player online games, allows users to both buy in-game
currency called Linden dollars (a name derived from its creator, Linden Labs)
and later exchange any amount amassed within the game back into real-world
funds. Ailin Graef made the headlines in 2006 having claimed that her in-game
avatar, Anshe Chung, had generated enough resources to allow her to be
classified as a millionaire in reality. Other prospects include
Moola, which claims to pay players over five
million pounds for the straightforward task of winning thirty of its games in a
row. Perhaps tellingly, the grand prize is yet to be claimed.
8. Freelancing
If you have a talent - be it for writing, graphic design or even programming
- online freelancing will allow you to exploit it for a handsome profit.
Services such as Elance and
oDesk advertise outsourced remote working
opportunities on behalf of thousands of companies and allow members to sign up
to assignments according to their desired criteria. Naturally, there's a catch -
said services also take a cut of up to 15 per cent of your potential earnings.
Depending on your skills and availability though, there is a lot of money to be
made in this fashion, with the fastest-growing fields - like document
translation - paying the best rates.
A method as old as the internet itself, hawking wares through virtual
auctions and shops provides a quick income boost for many students, enabling
unwanted Christmas to be disposed of with ease. The obvious starting points are
eBay and
Amazon Marketplace , though classifieds websites such as
Ad Trader are proving increasingly
popular. Those of you looking to secure revenue on a more long-term basis will
need to source in-demand products and be able to sell them at a mark-up on the
price that you yourself paid. One example is "vintage" clothing - cheap clothes
with retro appeal are available in abundance at charity shops and can easily be
sold to other fashionable students online at a higher price.
10. Doing something crazy
Most truly spectacular success stories of making money online don't involve
any of the aforementioned routes at all. Instead, they showcase brazen
opportunism that flies in the face of all logic and reason. Take Alex Tew's
MillionDollarHomepage from
2005 for instance - a website set up with the sole intention of selling pixels
at one US dollar apiece to advertisers in order to fund its proprietor's
university degree. On paper it was a ludicrous concept - of course it was - but
a 21 year-old Tew soon found himself a certified millionaire. So too did the
founders of Doggles, an internet business
devoted to selling goggles for dogs. The point is that, just as in the "real"
world, originality paired with good business acumen may potentially reap far
greater rewards than any supposedly tried-and-true method of generating cash
that you might care to mention. So be creative.
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1. Spend all day browsing Site For Sale forums (like the list we have here) for
the myriad ways people earn money online. People looking to sell their sites
actually tell you how they make money! Pick one that suits you. Research it a
bit, and away and start your own business. Or use a search engine to find ways
to make money online. It seems to be so easy that it's almost impossible to find
someone who doesn't know how to do it. (But why stop at one search engine (SE)?
Most people get to less than 1% of the top qualify info they're seeking because
they use just one SE like Google, don't have the vaguest of ideas of the
advanced search features available, and don't know the benefits to be had using
specialised SEs, local SEs etc. )
2. Bundle the two above to tell other people how to make money online. They
always want to know. It doesn't matter if you don't know yourself, you can still
charge them for it. I obviously don't have a clue as I'm giving it all away. You
can now ignore everything else I say. But don't go spending money on internet
cons promising to make you a millionaire and here's how to spot them.
3. Be more inventive with your search. Look for small business franchise
newsletters. Or for home jobs in your particular niche or hobby. (And check
point #2 above for those specialised SEs). You can also go through the
appropriate DMOZ categories (examples: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12)
But using "search" is just the start of the game. There are simply so, so many
ways. We hope you hang around to find out.
4. Like the guy you can pay to stick a message in a bottle for you and throw it
into the sea. He's made tens of thousands of dollars already. And there are
several others like him in all parts of the world. Do you live near a sea or
river? Or join the cleanup of those bottles and get your council to contribute.
Domains
5. The dot com gold rush made many millionaires but there's still plenty of
money in domain real estate and still some good catches available. A good dot
com may be difficult to find now. But there are a lot of gTLDs and ccTLDs from
the .info to .eu to .tv to .co.in and they all present opportunities being
discussed in several good forums. Put your thinking hat on, buy a famous word
domain for a few dollars and put it up on the domain selling sites.
6. Lost your thinking hat? Hang out at SEDO. DNForurms, Afternics and other
places where domains are bought and sold. Provided you learn enough about the
market to recognise bargains you could make a living from just buying existing
domains and reselling them.
7. If you're smart you'll run dictionary checks against available domain names
and auto-check them against search volumes (using OST, Wordtracker etc.) for
that term and Pay Per Click (PPC) rates in the major ad networks (example) to
work out which ones are likely to be more profitable (how to make money with PPC).
If you can pick up the domain for a profitable term that's searched for often
you can use a domain parking program. Or post a little bit of relevant content
and get a link or two ... and the search engines will start sending you traffic.
If the phrase people are typing in coincides exactly with your domain name it
gives you a great head start with SEs.
8. If you're smart AND a linguist you'd be doing that in multiple languages. And
not paying for any domain till you've tried it free for five days to see if it
does indeed get any type-in traffic (and how well that traffic converts). After
you've tried it for five days and dropped it there's nothing to stop you
immediately picking it up again for another five day trial. Strange, but true.
It's not kiting, it's legal.
9. Misspellings. Massive opportunities still exist in the misspelling/typo
market. People trying to get elsewhere land on your site instead ... and you
sell them stuff (or use the domain parking idea). Some even tempt fate by making
PPC opportunties out of typosquatting on trademarks. Finding typos has never
been easier. There are many tools that will find misspellings for you. How easy
can it get?
10. Domain parking and type-in traffic: People sometimes guess at URLs. If they
want a plumber they may try plumber.com though they've never used that site
themselves. Find terms that people may be typing in (I will provide a detailed
guide to this when I get a chance), buy the domain and populate it with ads.
There are several ad programs to monetise your parked domains. Or combine this
with the previous idea to buy plummer.com or similar typo domains to make money
online.
11. Drop catches. People sometimes forget to renew their domains and these
expire. Picking them up will give you some remnant traffic from sites that link
to this domain/people who've bookmarked it etc. In some cases the traffic can be
pretty high. Provided you're fast enough to replace the copyrighted content that
was there with something else you can make quite a profitable business from
doing nothing else but this.
12. A variation on the above. Sell the domain back to the previous owners. Note
that you may want to tread carefully and get familiar with the rules for that
TLD before you start sending off ransom notes. For example, with ICANN (domains
that end in .com, for example) the moment you send the previous owners an email
saying you've got their domain and you'll give it back for $10K... you've lost.
It can't look like a ransom demand. Be reasonable and read the small print of
the UDRP. No UDRP required if you're sitting hostage on myspace.com/theircompanyname
or the equivalent at blogger, twitter or other big destination. LOL, watch them
kick themselves and sack their web advisors who told them about taking the "dot
info" but omitted to mention the importance of protecting the brand by owning
the associated myspace directory (and others)! And it costs you nothing!
13. Run a domain management service. Hundreds of thousands of webmasters (or
more) have a large portfolio of domains. A lot of them would like the boring bit
taken out of their domain management. You can run their DNSes or just a service
reminding them when each domain comes up for renewal. Or an automated monitoring
service to tell them when one of their domains/sites is inaccessible.
14. Start a directory to list domains for sale. That's what people like SEDO do.
You can get money just for allowing domains to be listed in your directory.
15. If you're running a service putting buyers and sellers of domains/sites in
touch with one another you could get money for add on services (like providing
escrow facilities). For ideas have a look at what existing domain intermediaries
offer.
16. Run a domain research service. Wonder what happens when a manufacturer is
looking to name a new model car? Or starting a new range of clothing? They need
trademark and patent research but now they also need some domain research. Which
of the literally thousands of combinations and misspellings (+ <brandname>sucks.com)
are taken and which do they need to buy? With a few of the free domain tools
discussed on this page, here, and one or two more - like free DNS tools - and a
little time you could provide them a service they'd pay a lot of money for.
17. Start your own country: Whoa! yes, you're reading it right. If you've heard
of Sealand (what is Sealand) you'll know that starting your own country is not
that far fetched. Once you have your own WhackyCountry you can apply for a .wc
(yuk) TLD. Sell millions of domains. Keep some for yourself. Ever wanted a
Google.___?
18. Perform domain services for businesses and then send them a proforma (even
if they've never heard of you). Explain that it's free this time but you'll
gladly keep acting for them for a small fee. For example, there are thousands of
big businesses whose half-wit webmasters/ developers didn't put in a redirect
from the non-www to the www versions of their sites (or vice-versa). One
entrepreneur made a few thousands just from pointing out to businesses how they
were losing hundreds of customers every year who were landing on http://xxx-companyname.com
and finding nothing there.
I'll talk about domain opportunities some more on this page when I get a chance.
Buying and selling internet businesses
19. Many sites runs on "auto-pilot". A common price these sell for in
site-for-sale forums is 12-24 months' worth of net earnings (silly price, but
it's true). Provided you don't mess the site up you can recover your capital in
as little as 12 months and then ... sell the site to recover your capital again.
Double your capital every year. 100% return. Sack your stockbrokers. It really
is a crazy world!
20. Site flipping doesn't require as much capital and expertise as many people
believe. Like property flipping, you buy one that needs a bit of TLC. Do it up,
then sell it on for a whacking great profit. And, the beauty is you never have
to deal with tenants!
21. How about cornering a little market? There are DMOZ categories with
grandfathered sites (sites that have been listed for many years) which aren't
being updated. If you can pick up a few sites in the same category and merge
their content suddenly you "own" that niche. That opens a lot of possibilities.
Old Fashioned Job finding
If you need help finding a job try the links below, they offer great advice
on setting up as a contractor: SAP Recruitment