Loading...
Answers
MenuIs there any sustainable way I can earn $100 everyday continuously for one year by using internet as medium?
This question has no further details.
Answers
There are an infinite number of ways to do this. Remember that you get paid for adding value to people's lives. Paid webinars, monthly newsletters, selling or reselling via ebay/etsy, ebooks (especially via Amazon/Kindle), digital products (check out Clickbank) as a creator or affiliate. Look for something you're interested in so that your interest won't wane. If you're only in it for the money, it won't last long and you won't have the drive to make it high quality. Check out Pat Flynn's site Smart Passive Income for ideas and resources.
A key for any business is to leverage your time and create recurring revenue. Freelancing tends to be another job (dollars for hours). Creating something once that can be sold an infinite number of times (all digital products) is the key to growing your income.
Developing a network of supportive people who can help you build your idea and can later help you promote your products/services is also critical. Don't think you can do it all yourself. Leverage (and support!) your connections.
It usually takes time to develop the infrastructure and following/tribe/audience/customers. Don't give up too soon. Eighteen months is a good benchmark. After that, if you've put in the work, the business will start to take off. Don't expect "fast cash" before that though. Be willing to put in the hard work, delivering value all along the way (usually for little or no money in the beginning to develop a following who will buy from you later).
You need to work hard to get to the point where you can earn $100 everyday...it will not be like turning on a switch suddenly. After some initial set up, and some hard work, you may get up to the $100 per day mark. Some potential ways:
1) Get a large following on a blog site or on social media such as youtube. Work with retailers and affiliates to promotes products.
2) Develop a series of tutorial videos about a subject matter that you have expertise in which also happens to be in high demand. Sell for $25-$50 per lesson download/access on sites like Udemy.
3) Start an online e-commerce shop on Shopify, Amazon, eBay, or via your own commerce site. Find relatively high margin products to sell, and use drop shipping to avoid inventory.
3 Ways you can make money depending on your situation:
1. If you have an established company website, bog page, etc. you can find companies that will pay you to link their website to yours. You can make $100 pretty easily with this method.
2. If you love writing consider become a freelance writer. Companies all over the internet need writers for various type of content. Simply find your niche and contact the big players in that space and start writing.
3. If you love teaching several site on the internet allow you to help people around the world learn your language. Just search help other learn *language* and join the site that matches your experience.
There are many more ways to make easy money on the internet just depends on your interest and skills.
Related Questions
-
At what point does an idea become valuable enough to warrant being monetized?
If it's SaaS, you should be monetizing from day one. An MVP in SaaS is the minimal product that people will pay for, that's the starting point. You evolved the product from there. If it's a consumer app, that's a little more complicated. Often times, monetizing preemptively can stunt growth and kill the trajectory, due to lack of focus, user experience, etc. It's really a question of access to capital in this scenario.AD
-
What is the best place to find freelance designers?
You'll find that to be the case on any outsourcing site. Focus on the reviews and comments left on a designer's profile. This will give you an idea of the quality of their work before contacting them. Further, check out LinkedIn and search for "freelance designer" or "freelance graphic design" and sift through the results. Good luck! They're out there!SN
-
What are some of the different marketplace monetization models for selling second-hand collectibles?
Your pricing model should hinge on the fact that the perceived value of services should outweigh the cost associated with it. You can consider looking at online marketplaces like Craiglist, Kijiji, Airbnb, etc to understand various types of business models. However, the approach shouldn't be based on what others are doing. Rather, you should understand your niche, values associated with the niche, and adopt appropriate pricing model. Invest your time in designing the business model for your startup, followed with reviewing it vis-a-vis other models. Need help with business model? Feel free to reach out.SB
-
Where is the best place to find real high end "professional" freelancers?
My solution has always been. 1) Leverage your network but be specific in the ask "Do you know a programmer that's $20-$40 hour (likely from eastern Europe) that you've worked with and like?" 2) There so many new marketplaces jumping up focused on niches that may be worth trying (ex: http://elto.com & others). The only other solution (if you want to spend avg. ~$100/hour) is to call a local dev shop and try and get a "bro deal" / that may work great if you live in a small town and they have capacity. Hope that helps.DM
-
What is the average amount of profit that a business should aim for?
One thing I like about your question is the fact that you're ASKING it. Trying to quantify profit. Most people never even get that far. They treat profit--especially if it is that of their own business--as some ethereal thing they will "get later" if possible. "To manage we must measure" is a business maxim and a fundamental one for me. If we don't build Profit into our revenue equation, we're unlikely to get any. And so asking this question and building profit right into your revenue target is a powerful idea nearly all small business owners totally miss. As for an answer...that amount is really up to you. What do you need to survive? There are so many variables we don't know about: what kind of business, what scale, what paths to market are you using, etc. etc. that affect costs, together with the price tolerance of your marketplace, that it's not possible to give an "average" answer. When I train business owners on how to set their operation up for success, I recommend 20-30% of revenue be built in as a monthly amount for profit. However, this is usually for consultants, and may not be possible for other business models. Sometimes 5% profit is what's achievable, say for a commodity provider, and if they make money with that, OK. Have you done any studies of comparative firms in your niche?JK
the startups.com platform
Copyright © 2025 Startups.com. All rights reserved.