ASK:HN Recommendations on new sources of income
20 comments
Build a mobile app. An app I built a few years ago is still making money on auto pilot. If you rank high on the App store you will get a steady stream of downloads.
Build a website. Because of SEO traffic this can be pretty passive. I have a few websites that are making income that I stopped working on years ago.
Invest. Investing is a great way for passive income you can look for dividend stocks, REITs or just plain real estate. Take a look at some options here https://senzu.io/investing/compare
For actively making money you can try to do contract work in your free time
Build a website. Because of SEO traffic this can be pretty passive. I have a few websites that are making income that I stopped working on years ago.
Invest. Investing is a great way for passive income you can look for dividend stocks, REITs or just plain real estate. Take a look at some options here https://senzu.io/investing/compare
For actively making money you can try to do contract work in your free time
Did you put a lot of effort in writing original text content for the website? My experience has been that, even if a website might be useful for other reasons, it needs to have lots of original text e.g. to be approved for Google ads.
I'm not sure this is true. I had a one article blog where ads were approved. Though it had 800+ comments and ranked better than the thing it talked about (card options in an underbanked country where banks suck at making their products known). I'm almost certain very few of the people who got a card didn't visit the site(and it's the very reason I wrote it: it was hard to find any pertinent info in one place when I wanted to get a card that I felt the effort should never be repeated by anyone).
Once you are approved they dont really seem to care a lot
Hey that's a great list, thanks for the encouraging words.
So SEO is probably an important aspect of your passive website income. I have a site that's live now but it is totally javascript (clojurescript on the front-end) and there is absolutely no SEO yet because there are no persistent URLs or server-side rendering yet. Your message makes me throw this back up top on priorities. Make magic and make sure people can find it!
So SEO is probably an important aspect of your passive website income. I have a site that's live now but it is totally javascript (clojurescript on the front-end) and there is absolutely no SEO yet because there are no persistent URLs or server-side rendering yet. Your message makes me throw this back up top on priorities. Make magic and make sure people can find it!
This is a video that drilled into me the importantance of SEO https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hUwNgxwN_pE
Obviously it depends on the type of business you are starting but even on mobile people use search so SEO can be a huge source of traffic
Obviously it depends on the type of business you are starting but even on mobile people use search so SEO can be a huge source of traffic
I am getting a lot of traffic in the past week to http://www.averageweather.io yet my SEO doesn't seem to change. I'm the #2 most upvoted post on r/weddingplanning in the past 24 hours. I did 2k visitors yesterday.
Any advice? Current revenue is 100% AdSense.
Any advice? Current revenue is 100% AdSense.
Really good advice.
I especially resonate with the whole SEO traffic for building websites. I had a niche website a few years ago that made around $40 a month passively without touching it for a year.
It can be a good source of income and not a ton of work involved if you're able to outsource the content generation.
I especially resonate with the whole SEO traffic for building websites. I had a niche website a few years ago that made around $40 a month passively without touching it for a year.
It can be a good source of income and not a ton of work involved if you're able to outsource the content generation.
If you want side income in short order, your best bet is to sell your time (freelancing). Regardless of your profession, there's something to do to make extra income - if nothing else, drive for Uber or Lyft.
If you want side income in the long run, then consider chasing passive income plays where you don't sell your time - blogging, building a bunch of mobile apps or web sites, selling things on Amazon or eBay, etc. These things take a lot of time. Figure out something that intersects your skills, passion, and (a small) market and pursue it relentlessly. Give it a year or two for each idea.
If you want side income in the long run, then consider chasing passive income plays where you don't sell your time - blogging, building a bunch of mobile apps or web sites, selling things on Amazon or eBay, etc. These things take a lot of time. Figure out something that intersects your skills, passion, and (a small) market and pursue it relentlessly. Give it a year or two for each idea.
Here are a few I can think of off the top of my head:
* Tutor
* Create some online content (ebook, course, blog) and either put ads on it or sell the content
* create a side project that you want to productize (this will take more time and may not lead to any money)
* become a secret shopper.
* Get a part time job at a local place of business (retail, restaurant) this would be the "easiest" of them but may not be the most rewarding
* buy a site/app that is already generating revenue and either maintain it or fix it up
* put your skills up on fiverr or other similar site
* Tutor
* Create some online content (ebook, course, blog) and either put ads on it or sell the content
* create a side project that you want to productize (this will take more time and may not lead to any money)
* become a secret shopper.
* Get a part time job at a local place of business (retail, restaurant) this would be the "easiest" of them but may not be the most rewarding
* buy a site/app that is already generating revenue and either maintain it or fix it up
* put your skills up on fiverr or other similar site
Is becoming a secret shopper like a legit thing? I always only see those annoying pop-ups.
It is a thing, there are legit organizations, but the pay is miniscule. I did one once to do an oil change at my dealership. They paid for the oil change plus some small amount of money. There is definitely some hassle in filling out the online forms exactly the way they want them. I only did 1-2, too much hassle.
Do you live near a University? I got offered $35 an hour to tutor intro CS kids the other day. Not sure if that is what you are looking for, but a few hundred a week is a nice supplement, particularly if you are a grad student.
First, there is no such thing as "passive" that is 100% sustainable for a long period of time.
But, there are things that you can do where you will not ALWAYS trade your time for money. That should be the goal. I call that passive for me. But don't focus too much on the word itself.
Some ideas:
- Create a SAAS. It can bring money where you don't always trade your time for that money BUT it requires time to do support, maintenance and enhancements. You can decide how much. Lot of small products that are doing under 10K per month with not a lot of hours spent per week.
- Write a tutorial/E-Book and sell it. This again can generate income for which you won't always trade your time. But it has a huge upfront cost.
- Work an extra job during weekends. Not recommended but it technically answers the question "how can I generate new sources of income". Silly answer but technically correct. Of course, you are trading time for money 1-1 with this one.
- If you are good at something but cannot a tutorial/e-book, then offer your service live for a fee over the phone or skype etc. Live coaching, tutoring, code mentoring etc.
Note that all of the above requires marketing efforts specially in the beginning. You cannot magically expect people to find you and pay you. The "find you" part is the critical one where a lot of us fail.
But, there are things that you can do where you will not ALWAYS trade your time for money. That should be the goal. I call that passive for me. But don't focus too much on the word itself.
Some ideas:
- Create a SAAS. It can bring money where you don't always trade your time for that money BUT it requires time to do support, maintenance and enhancements. You can decide how much. Lot of small products that are doing under 10K per month with not a lot of hours spent per week.
- Write a tutorial/E-Book and sell it. This again can generate income for which you won't always trade your time. But it has a huge upfront cost.
- Work an extra job during weekends. Not recommended but it technically answers the question "how can I generate new sources of income". Silly answer but technically correct. Of course, you are trading time for money 1-1 with this one.
- If you are good at something but cannot a tutorial/e-book, then offer your service live for a fee over the phone or skype etc. Live coaching, tutoring, code mentoring etc.
Note that all of the above requires marketing efforts specially in the beginning. You cannot magically expect people to find you and pay you. The "find you" part is the critical one where a lot of us fail.
> First, there is no such thing as "passive" that is 100% sustainable for a long period of time.
I think a large enough and diverse enough investment is.. i.e. something across many markets across many asset classes. That is as close to passive income as you can get.
The downside is obviously you need $1 million dollar seed money to tap out 40k a year from it...
I think a large enough and diverse enough investment is.. i.e. something across many markets across many asset classes. That is as close to passive income as you can get.
The downside is obviously you need $1 million dollar seed money to tap out 40k a year from it...
yes correct. I was specifically talking about creating something and not just investing money in a fund investment.
> Create a SAAS [...] Lot of small products that are doing under 10K per month
Could you point me to an example? I find it hard to figure what small apps are actually capable of pulling any income.
Could you point me to an example? I find it hard to figure what small apps are actually capable of pulling any income.
Indiehackers has some good examples:
https://www.indiehackers.com/businesses
https://www.indiehackers.com/businesses
Find a niche on eBay and sell it. Old stuff like cards, vinyls, retro hardware hauls that you can get on CL and resell it for a nice profit. News stuff like electronics boards, good headphones, mechanical keyboards, etc,... you could import from Aliexpress and resell with support.
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Active or Passive income, due to my minimal resources I see active as my only realistic option but happy to review any and all suggestions!