8. Hawk Your Random Skill for a Quick Five Bucks
Fiverr.com poses an awesome, straightforward question: what would you do for $5? Apparently, all sorts of things. The site is insanely popular, and you can find people offering just about anything, including things you didn’t even know you wanted.
Want to prank call someone, but don’t have the guts or self-control? There’s someone on Fiverr who will do it for five bucks. Want to learn some magic tricks? Buy yourself a five dollar lesson.
It’s simple to start peddling your goods or skills, as long as you’re cool with five bucks a pop. Just create an account, and you’re on your way to seeing more Lincolns than a nursing home parking lot.
9. Freelance Write for Content Sites
Whether you’re searching for “How to Properly Set a Dinner Table” or for a list of Uzbekistan’s past rulers, you will likely find many results from “content sites.” These sites have no particular specialization other than compiling as much information about as many popular subjects as possible, and then paying the authors for the number of page views received. Sites like
Associated Content,
Helium, and
Demand Studios all “pay for performance” for just about anything you’d like to write about.
Similarly,
Examiner.com will pay you for anything you can prove to be an “expert” about. Alabama football? Restaurants in Des Moines? If you can put it to digital paper in an easy-to-read format, Examiner will be happy to pay.
The pay rates are definitely low in comparison to what established writers should expect, but if you’re still in college, or even high school, this could be a great way both to hone your skills and break into the world of freelancing.
10. Be an Independent Human Resources Specialist
Sites such as
Referearns,
Zyoin,
Bohire, and
WiseStep connect employers with prospective employees (who may not even be actively job hunting) via the people who know these qualified candidates. Payment for referring a candidate who gets hired ranges from $50 on up to several thousand dollars – not chump change. If you know a lot of job-seekers (and who doesn’t these days?), this is a great way to break into the recruiting business.
11. Be a Middleman
Referral fees are a common practice in business, but they haven’t been used much in online networking sites because there was no way to track them. Sites like
Salesconx and
uRefer now provide that.
Vendors set the referral fees they’re willing to pay (and for what), and when the transaction takes place, the middleman gets paid. uRefer also allows merchants to set up referral programs for introductions and meetings, as well as transactions.
12. Design Logos
This one is my personal favorite.
Come up with something brilliant, and if yours is chosen, you’ll get the money–often hundreds of dollars for even small projects.
Our world is swarming with logos, but how many of them do you remember? Quite often the most memorable logos aren’t the flashiest or most graphically intensive, but masterpieces of minimalism and simplicity. A simple Nike swoosh goes a lot further than a multicolor mash-up of lines and text.
Also, most logos can be created with software as simple as MS Paint, or you can use the freeware GIMP image editor, so you won’t incur any investment cost outside of your time. Head to
99designs or
CrowdSpring where you’ll find a list of projects that need logos. Come up with something brilliant, and if yours is chosen, you’ll get the money – often hundreds of dollars for even small projects.
The downside to this is that it falls somewhere between “real” work and contest submissions. But with every attempt your work will become better, along with your understanding of what people are looking for in a logo.
13. Be a Microstock Photographer
People are constantly in need of stock photography for websites, presentations, brochures and so on, and are willing to pay for the right image.
Obviously, the greater the image quality, the more favorable it will be to buyers, so it’s worth investing in a solid
DSLR camera or equivalent–but not always entirely necessary. People generally search for images on stock photography sites by keywords, not by photographer, so you have the same chance as anyone else of having your image picked. Just be careful that you don’t have images of trademarked brands, copyrighted art or people’s faces that are readily identifiable (unless you have a model release), but just about anything else is fair game, and I promise you’ll be amazed what images people need, so don’t make any assumptions. If it’s a decent photo, upload it.
14. Play Games for Peanuts
With Moola, players receive free “credits” to wage against others in return for watching a 10, 15, or 30 second video advertisement and randomly answering a trivia question about it. In this way, players have the ability to accrue more credits without actually risking any money. Once you’ve accumulated a confident bankroll, bets can be placed and real money won, and you can cash out after you’ve made at least $10.If you’re thinking that making money from playing games sounds too good to be true, think again–it’s true, it’s just too good to be
easy. So, if your aspirations of becoming a professional video game tester or sponsored Halo player aren’t panning out as you’d hoped, a website called
Moola.com might be the next best thing.
In theory, after winning 27 consecutive games you’ll have a balance of $1,342,177.28. However, whether anyone’s ever reached this far (much less the top of the Moola Tower) is both debatable and unlikely. The upper limit of winnings ends somewhere around $10 million.
15. Start a Content Site
The most common way webmasters earn money is probably from contextual programs such as YPN or
Adsonar, though by far the biggest fish in this pond is
AdSense.
It’s quick and doesn’t involve any complicated new skills. Simply put up a website containing useful content, add the code provided by Google, get a few links to the page, and wait. In theory, traffic will start flowing in, the volume depending on the website topic and the quality of content.
Visitors see ads served by Google and related to the content of the page. Each time they click on an ad you get anywhere from a few cents to several dollars. I personally know at least 20 webmasters who earn in excess of $10,000 per month this way.
So there you have it, 15 legitimate ways to make a bit of extra cash over the Internet. Obviously there are a load of ways to do so