User Panel
Posted: 1/31/2013 9:26:08 AM EDT
*This is a work in progress. *If you have any knowledge or experience to contribute, please feel free to do so *I am neither a lawyer nor an accountant/CPA/tax professional. I may include some advice sourced from the IRS website, but make sure to check with a lawyer/CPA/tax professional on any implications of working from home. *Hopefully this will be a good-enough resource that it can be stickied somewhere on the website. If not, I will include a copy on my Arfcom blog for easy reference. Table of Contents Post 1
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Overview This was going to be a relatively short post, but seeing the amount of interest and considering the potential helpfulness, I decided to go crazy. I'll try to keep this very well-organized so you shouldn't have a problem skipping straight to a section that interests you. My qualifications for writing this are nothing more than personal experience and research. I do my best to verify everything included. The biggest problem with any Work From Home venture is the possibility of getting scammed, especially for someone who hasn't done their research. Remember, there are companies out there that are only looking to get money out of you, will treat you like sh!t, fail to pay you, or even try to steal your personal information. Just like 'real life', except with more anonymity. I won't post an opportunity here that I don't think is safe, and I'll do my best to let you know about any red flags. Be safe though, and do your own research. When it comes to researching a job, realize that any at-home position is going to end up having more internet-vocal whiners. There are people who didn't read what the job was about, or what the hardware requirements were, or they simply sucked at their job... so they go online and scream SCAM!!! Just because you read about something being a scam doesn't mean it is, you'll probably find complaints against any of the companies listed here. Do your research, use your common sense, and find people who have experience with the company and talk to them. Anywhere I use a (?) indicates that the information was garnered from a third-party source rather than the company itself. Main Considerations Schedule - Fixed/Flexible. Your availability is paramount when looking at WFH jobs. Are you able to work the same hours every workday, or do you need more flexibility? Are you able to work 5 days a week, or do you need a job that lets you work just 1 or 3 days? Are you able to work mornings, nights, weekends, or can you only work from 9AM - 3PM while the kids are at school? Can you sit down for 2, 4, 8 hours at a time(excepting breaks), or do your kids require you to get up every 30 minutes? Type of Employment - Employee/Contractor/Freelance. This often goes hand-in-hand with availability. Do you want a job-job, as a FT/PT employee with a company and benefits? Would you prefer to be a contractor, getting paid for your work without employment ties and benefits? Do you just want to go free-lance, bidding on jobs and taking them on when you have the time? There are many implications, including tax implications, with each choice. Make sure you talk to a CPA/Tax Professional about what you want to do. You don't want to end up missing quarterly payments because you didn't know you had to file them. Type of Income - Up-Front/Residual. Depending on your situation and desires, you can look for either up-front pay, or work on building residual income. Sometimes, you can do both at the same time. As an example, you can write 500-word articles at $3/$5/$10+ each, or you can write 500-word articles either on your own website, or on an article website, and build up residual ad-revenue. Up-front pay is, obviously, less risky and pays off more quickly, but residual income can be much more, given time, research, and effort. That article you wrote and got paid $10 for? It might be making $1-$5 per month, every month, for two years. Just know that if you are pursuing residual income, there is no guarantee that you'll ever actually make much(or anything!), so you don't want to try and rely on it for necessary income. Pay - Do you need a job that will fully support a family of 4, or are you only looking for a little extra money? There are opportunities ranging from $1/hr(or less! Hurry, only 3 positions left available!), to more than $50/hr. It all depends on you, your experience, skills, drive, and how much time you have to put into this. Work Environment - Do you have a quiet place to work, or are there screaming kids(always screaming, all day, every day) around? Do you have a land-line? Do you have a dedicated internet connection you can use for work? Do you have a blazing-fast computer, or a 3 year-old netbook? Windows, Mac, or Linux? Do you have the space and money to make changes to your environment if a job requires it? Some jobs are completely flexible, some jobs are overseen by pointy-haired dimwits and evil cats in H.R. Communities and Other Resources Work Place Like Home Work At Home Mom Real Ways To Earn Money Online |
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Phone Opportunities Phone Opportunities generally fall under three categories: Customer Service, Technical Support, Sales, or any combination of those three. Many/Most phone jobs will require a dedicated land-line just for your work, and a quality headset like Plantronics. Some may provide the equipment for you, some may not. Arise Arise is an interesting company. They provide Customer Service, Technical Support, Sales, and Chat job opportunities. I haven't worked for them, but I seriously considered it and put in a lot of research. Essentially Arise is a firm that contracts with other businesses that need people to work their phones, and they also have some chat-support opportunities. Due to NDAs, nobody except for employees know who they contract with. It's a closely-guarded secret that definitely won't show up under a Google Search, and if you do manage to find information it will be highly encrypted. For example, you might find that they have positions with D*sn*y, C*rn*v*l, and *T&T. Arise is definitely unique. To work for them, you either have to form an LLC or Corp, utilize one you already have, or sub-contract through a corporation that already works with Arise. These groups are known as either a Virtual Service Corporation(VSC) or an Independent Business Owner(IBO). I don't know why they do it this way, but they do. So, the easiest way to get in with Arise is to find a VSC/IBO and work for them. There is a benefit to this, in that Arise either charges or deducts a small fee each month(I believe $50), but many of the large IBOs have negotiated to waive that for you. Please do note that an IBO is your boss, not Arise, and the IBO will determine how much you get paid. When I was researching this, many of the largest IBOs would pay 100% directly to you, but some(especially smaller) IBOs will take $0.50 or $2.00/hr out of your pay. The IBO should say if they pass-through all compensation to you, and you can check the reputation of any IBO online on sites like Work Place Like Home. Another important aspect with Arise is that, should you sign up with a client, you will have to pay to go through training. Could be a week, could be 6 weeks. Could cost $10, could cost $200. That information seems to change, and is listed each time a new 'Client Opportunity' is listed. Arise can be a good opportunity, if it's a good fit for you. You'll sign up for blocks of time with your client(s), and you need to be on the phone during those blocks of time. You need to have a quiet location. From memory, I would say the pay generally ranges from $8/hr to $15/hr, with some jobs offering more pay and/or commissions. There are a lot of nuances to working with Arise, I'll try to clean up this section and I"ll add in any information if it's sent to me. If you are looking for phone jobs, and considering Arise, be sure to do your research. If you use your own LLC/Corp, you can sign people to work for you. You can be compensated by taking part of 'their' pay, by charging a monthly service fee, or by earning bonuses(such as a $50-$200 bonus for each new contractor you sign up, that stays with a client for 30 days). Clearly, utilizing Arise as a business is much more in-depth than utilizing Arise as a job. http://partner.arise.com/ https://partnersetup.arise.com/media/49237/independent_business_guide.pdf http://www.workplacelikehome.com/forum/forumdisplay.php?f=27 Customer Service 1-800-Flowers Pay: $9 per hour+(?)(verified by Deej86 as starting at $9 with raise and advancement opportunities) Notes: Seasonal work, but holidays happen all-year round. You can get hired on year-round(Thanks Deej86). You have to live in one of the listed states, and there are strict hardware requirements. Check details at the link. http://ww30.1800flowers.com/template.do?id=template8&page=9000 Accolade Support Pay: $7.25-$9 per hour Notes: http://www.accoladesupport.com/openings.html ACD Direct Pay: Paid by the minute, works out to maximum hourly pay of $13 - $21 per hour Notes: This is similar to Arise, I believe you have to have your own business entity to register with. http://www.acddirect.com/becomeanagent.cfm Alpine Access Pay: $9/hour in training, $10/hr after (Courtesy TheJacket) Notes: Xbox program is 6 weeks paid training. You have to pass exams and a phone-interview roleplay. Good opportunities for promotion, supervisors can work from home without being at home, and are paid salary. (Courtesy TheJacket) https://jobs.alpineaccess.com/work-home/ Amazon Pay: Varies Notes: Inconsistent job offerings. Search for 'work at home' to see if they have any openings for your area. http://www.amazon.com/gp/jobs/ref=j_sq_btn?jobSearchKeywords=work+at+home&category=*&location=*&x=0&y=0 American Express Pay: $15 - $20 per hour(?) Notes: Inconsistent job openings. Search for 'work at home'. http://jobs.americanexpress.com/find.job?job=main.search&q=work+at+home&search=Search+jobs&startrow=1 American Support Pay: $8 - $9 per hour(?) Notes: http://jobs.americansupport.com/american-support-careers/at-home-inbound-outbound-telesales-agent Apple Pay: $10 - $15 per hour(?) Notes; Apple has a few different jobs. This listing is for the At Home Advisors program, which is a 1-year job opportunity for college students. They provide you with an iMac for work. Apple also has other positions, but I believe they are all filled through contractors like Arise. http://www.apple.com/jobs/us/aha.html Asurion Pay: $9 - $10 per hour(?) Notes: http://asurionforce.com/apply_now.htm Contract World Pay: $10 - $20 per hour Notes: Kind of like Arise, but you apparently don't need a business entity. You sign up for clients you want to service as they are available. http://www.contractworld.jobs/ Convergys Pay: $9 per hour, some positions with additional commissions. Notes: http://careers.convergysworkathome.com/faqs.php Direct Interactions Pay: $10 per hour Notes: http://www.directinteractions.com/default.aspx?type=content&id=2 Home Shopping Network Pay: Notes: http://www.hsn.com/article/hsn-careers-work-from-home/4983?nolnav=1 Kelly Services Pay: Notes: Search for 'at home' http://www.kellyservices.com/Global/Home/ Live Ops Pay: Varies Notes: http://join.liveops.com/ NCO Pay: Notes: Search for 'work at home' http://www.ncogroup.com/Careers/Search_for_Careers_at_NCO.html NEW Pay: Notes: https://www.newcorp.com/index.php/careers/home_based_ccr/ Sitel Pay: Notes: http://www.sitel.com/index.php?p=Careers&pageId=7 Skilled Reps Pay: $10 per hour plus bonus/incentive/commission Notes: http://www.skilledreps.com/Home/MoreInfo Support.com Pay: $13+ per hour(?) Notes: Select 'Work From Home' in the department box and hit search. http://www.support.com/about/careers/openings Support Space Pay: Varies, appears to have great high-end potential. $14 - $16 per hour listed on Glassdoor(?) Notes: Currently not hiring, website says they will have positions open in March 2013. http://corporate.supportspace.com/become-a-consultant/ Sutherland Pay: $8.50-$9.50/hr(?) Notes: Customer service and tech support positions. https://workathome-sutherland.icims.com/jobs/search?ss=1&searchKeyword=work+at+home&searchLocation=&searchCategory=&searchPositionType= TeleNetwork Pay: Notes: Technical support. http://www.telenetwork.com/careers.html Teleflora Pay: Notes: Search for 'at home' https://teleflora.tms.hrdepartment.com/cgi-bin/a/searchjobs_quick.cgi Teletech Pay: Notes: http://www.teletechjobs.com/athome-en-US/ U-Haul Pay: Notes: http://uhauljobs.com/contact_center.aspx?jobtype=workfromhome VIPdesk Pay: $8.50 - $12.00/hr ($8.50 + commission) Notes: http://www.vipdesk.com/info/careers/current-openings/by-name/?name=brand-ambassador-homeadvisor WestAtHome Pay: Notes: http://www.apply.westathome.com/applynow.html WorkingSolutions Pay: Notes: http://www.workingsolutions.com/work-at-home-agents/ WorldTravelHoldings Pay: $11/hr(?) Notes: http://www.worldtravelholdings.com/careers,work-home#.USKSKaVQHLl Sales/Cold Calling BlueZebra Pay: $15 - $25/hr Notes: Appointment setting. Must have 2 years experience. http://www.bluezebraappointmentsetting.com/dynamicpage.aspx?id=102 GrindStone Pay: Notes: http://www.grindstone.com/work-with-b2b-business-direct-telesales.html Intelemark Pay: Notes: http://www.appointmentsetting.com/jointheteam/ NexRep Pay: 100% commission inbound, $5 per hour + commission outbound(?) Notes: Seems to be a good company based on the information on WAHM.com, although you do have to spend $100 if you are hired to buy their equipment. http://www.nexrep.com/work_at_home_opportunities.htm SkilledReps Pay: $12 - $15/hr ($10/hr + bonuses) Notes: http://www.skilledreps.com/Home/MoreInfo |
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Up-Front Pay Writing Opportunities These opportunities are great for flexibility(although a few of them are real, full-time jobs). You can write from home in your bedroom or office, while travelling, at Starbucks, or even on vacation(makes vacation less enjoyable but more affordable). The list of opportunities is too long to put everything here, but I'm trying to list the most popular and best-paying ones I can find, and I'll add to this list regularly, until I decide it's 'done'. You can always find more information by searching for 'up-front pay writing sites'. There are a lot of good blogs and forums that keep track of new opportunities, I'll just list a few below to get you started. These opportunities can bring in anywhere from $50 to $5,000 per month, depending on your quality of writing, expertise, and the amount of time you can dedicate to writing. Communities/Resources http://realwaystoearnmoneyonline.com/category/writing-and-editing/upfront-pay-writing http://www.freelancewritinggigs.com http://www.wahm.com/forum/writing-freelancing-46/ http://www.workplacelikehome.com/forum/forumdisplay.php?f=126 Veteran Opportunities CareerProPlus - Great opportunity for people with military or federal job experience! Pay: $25,000-$60,000 per year Notes: PT and FT positions available. Job is for professional writers and career advisers. They are especially looking for people with federal or military experience, and even more especially people with experience writing to federal guidelines, such as NCOERs, EPRs, OPRs, FitReps, annual federal performance evaluations, and job descriptions. Knowledge of the federal hiring process and military hierarchy is preferred. They have a 3-6 month training program, I do not know if it is paid training or not. http://www.careerproplus.com/about-us/careers General Topics About.com Guide/Topic Writers Pay: $500-$700+/month(?) Notes: Programs combine fixed-pay and revenue-sharing. I've heard that some guides can make over $3000 per month after being there a while. Not likely to be full-time work, you're probably going to spend around 15 hours a week working for them, on your own schedule. Important: The hiring process with About.com is lengthy and they are looking for very-high quality. You might spend 2 weeks going through their process only to be turned down. http://beaguide.about.com/ ConsumerSearch Pay: $400+ per article(?) Notes: From their website, "Are you the kind of person who spends 25 hours researching toasters before buying one? If so, we’re looking for someone like you to join our team of freelance writers." http://www.consumersearch.com/write-for-us DemandMediaStudios Pay: $15-$25 per article Notes: http://www.demandstudios.com/freelance-work/writers.html eCopyWriters Pay: $9-$75 per article Notes: http://www.ecopywriters.com/start/ WiseGeek Pay: $10-$14 per article Notes: Choose your own topics. https://www.wisegeek.com/freelance-writing-jobs.htm TextBroker Pay: $3.50-$25 per article Notes: TextBroker basically will hire anyone who applies, but they will grade you based on your sample writing, from 2 to 5(you can't write if you get rated a 1). You can write articles in any star category lower or equal to your rating, so if you are rated as 3 stars, you can write 2, and 3-star articles. 2-star articles pay $3.50 per 500 words, 3-star articles pay $5, 4-star articles pay $7, and 5-star articles pay $25. You can also be asked to write specific articles by clients who like your profile and samples, and work on team articles. I've heard that some jobs can pay up to $50-$75 per article, if you're good enough. The amount of work available varies. At the time of this writing, there are 200 2-star articles, 150 3-star articles, 1,000 4-star articles, and 250 5-star articles available. As with other content mills, you can be targeted by clients who like your profile and work. Some people have regular clients who pay quite well. http://www.textbroker.com/us/author-information.php LoveToKnow Pay: $20-$25 per article Notes: http://www.lovetoknow.com/write-for-us.htm FundsForWriters Pay: $45/$50 per original article Notes: http://www.fundsforwriters.com/submissions/ ConstantContent Pay: $5-$50 per article Notes: It appears that the amount of available work may be low. When I first signed up there were hundreds of articles waiting. At the time of this writing, there were twenty articles waiting. You may have to 'camp' the job board to get jobs as they are posted. As with other content mills, you can be targeted by clients who like your profile and work. Some people have regular clients who pay quite well. http://www.constant-content.com/area/registerauthor.htm MediaPiston Pay: $5-$20 per article Notes: It appears that the amount of available work may be low. When I first signed up there were hundreds of articles waiting. At the time of this writing, there were two articles waiting. You may have to 'camp' the job board to get jobs as they are posted. As with other content mills, you can be targeted by clients who like your profile and work. Some people have regular clients who pay quite well. https://www.mediapiston.com/writers/signup E-Lance Pay: Variable, bid on jobs, etc. Notes: E-Lance is more than just for writing, but at the time of this writing there were around 3,000 current opportunities. Opportunities range from writing a single article, to contract to write 10 articles a day for 6 months. https://www.elance.com/ O-Desk Pay: Variable, bid on jobs, etc. Notes: Same as E-Lance. https://www.odesk.com/ Tech/IT Topics DeveloperTutorials Pay: $50-100 per tutorial $30-$50 per article Notes: They are looking for tutorials on AJAX, ASP, CSS, Flash, Illustrator, Java, JavaScript, Linux, MySQL, PHP, Photoshop, and Python. Tutorials should be at least 1000 words and include screenshots if necessary. http://www.developertutorials.com/writers.php TechNet Pay: Notes: Pay isn't listed, but it is probably quite high. This is writing for Microsoft, about Microsoft, and they are looking for 2000-4000 word articles. This might be quite lucrative, I've seen specialized opportunities before that were paying over $500-$1000 per submission. http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/magazine/cc299468.aspx SoftwareJudge Pay: $1-$50/review Notes: http://www.softwarejudge.com/rules SitePoint Pay: Notes: They are looking for articles on a variety of IT/Programming subjects. Check the link. http://www.sitepoint.com/write-for-us/ WorldStart Pay: $25-$50 per article Notes: Choose your own computer topics. http://www.worldstart.com/writers-guidelines/ SQLServerCentral Pay: $25 per article Notes: Choose your own SQL topics. http://www.sqlservercentral.com/About/WriteForUs/ SQLServerPerformance Pay: $25-$200 per article(?) Notes: http://www.sql-server-performance.com/contact/ DeveloperShed Pay: Notes: Programming, Web Development, Marketing, Video Games, and more http://www.developershed.com/writers.php SimpleTalk Pay: "Quite High" Notes: IT topics, appears to be looking for much more professional, high-quality articles than most sites. http://www.simple-talk.com/become-an-author.aspx Greeting Cards http://www.greetingcard.org/AbouttheIndustry/WritersArtistsTips/tabid/80/Default.aspx OatmealStudios Pay: Notes: Old-school, submit your ideas on 3x5 note-cards with a SASE. You don't have to be an artist, they just want you to describe the kind of imagery you think would go with your card. Needs to be funny. http://oatmealstudios.com/Writer%27sGuides/WG-Pg.htm BlueMountainArts Pay: Notes: http://www.sps.com/help/greetingcardwritings.html Humor Ephemera Pay: $50 per slogan Notes: http://www.ephemera-inc.com/writers-guidelines FunnyTimes Pay: $60 per story Notes: Old-school, submit your story on paper with a SASE. Paid upon publication, not submission. http://www.funnytimes.com/submissions.php#.UQqk1HlMv4Z |
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Leapforce/Lionbridge *NOTE: I work for Leapforce, and love it, but I can't reveal details about the job due to my Non Disclosure Agreement. I will not profit in any way from someone else working for them. Leapforce and Lionbridge hire contractors to do search engine evaluation work. Everything is covered by NDA, but information has been leaked. These jobs require someone who is technical, a self-starter, and can work problems out on their own. The only way I can really describe the work is that you are given a large manual of guidelines, and they say 'Go'. With Leapforce, you have to pass two tests to be accepted, I assume it's similar with Lionbridge. If you do your research into these companies, it might sound like the perfect opportunity, but there are some potential downsides. There may be periods where there simply isn't any work available. You may not receive any feedback to the quality of your work. Your contract might only be 6 months long, and you won't find out until your last day if you will be renewed for another 6 months or not. You may only be allowed to do the position for a year, period. It can also become extremely boring for some people, to do the same 60-second task over and over and over, day after day after day. There is also a form of unpaid training, when you are given a manual to read or when guidelines change. Of course, on the other hand, the hours are as flexible as you need(when work is available). There is little to no bureaucratic drama to deal with, nobody checks in on you, no meetings, etc. It can also be extremely interesting work, and some positions offer a large range in the types of jobs they provide you. Do your research, you'll find out about the good and the bad. Leapforce: https://www.leapforceathome.com/qrp/public/jobs/list Lionbridge: http://www.thesmartcrowd.com/workers/job-opportunities/ |
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Transcription
I decided to keep transcription separate from the rest of the article-writing positions, since the work is different in nature and there are just too many to list all together. Transcription jobs are available in legal, medical, voice-mail, insurance, finance, etc. Positions range from entry-level piece-meal work that pays an effective $3/hr, to $50/hr for experienced workers in a specific field. http://www.transcriptionessentials.com/ http://www.mtjobs.com/ (Courtesy mucknuggle) http://www.mtstars.com/ (Courtesy mucknuggle) |
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Post 7
Quoted: Now can we reply? Thanks, I really appreciate it.
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Post 7 Quoted: Now can we reply? Thanks, I really appreciate it. Ok so now we can reply? Post 8 |
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Post 7 Quoted: Now can we reply? Thanks, I really appreciate it. |
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IIRC, you're in Arizona?
I am a work from home agent for my company. We operate in Arizona. PM me for details. |
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Quoted:
Post 7 Quoted: Now can we reply? Thanks, I really appreciate it. Are you going for eight seperate posts in one thread that are TL:DR? Mundane boring shit is much more fun to read if I have to scroll past your avatar 8 times. |
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Quoted: Quoted: Post 7 Quoted: Now can we reply? Thanks, I really appreciate it. Are you going for eight seperate posts in one thread that are TL:DR? Mundane boring shit is much more fun to read if I have to scroll past your avatar 8 times. Why don't you just GTFO of this thread? I'm tired, I have a killer headache, and starting to get cranky because I'm trying to do something nice for people who are having a difficult time in their lives before I have to get back to making money for my own family tomorrow. |
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Quoted:
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Post 7 Quoted: Now can we reply? Thanks, I really appreciate it. Are you going for eight seperate posts in one thread that are TL:DR? Mundane boring shit is much more fun to read if I have to scroll past your avatar 8 times. Why don't you just GTFO of this thread? I'm tired, I have a killer headache, and starting to get cranky because I'm trying to do something nice for people who are having a difficult time in their lives before I have to get back to making money for my own family tomorrow. I'm with you OP. Thanks for the time and effort. I'm tagged on this. |
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Post 7 Quoted: Now can we reply? Thanks, I really appreciate it. Are you going for eight seperate posts in one thread that are TL:DR? Mundane boring shit is much more fun to read if I have to scroll past your avatar 8 times. Why don't you just GTFO of this thread? I'm tired, I have a killer headache, and starting to get cranky because I'm trying to do something nice for people who are having a difficult time in their lives before I have to get back to making money for my own family tomorrow. I'm with you OP. Thanks for the time and effort. I'm tagged on this. +1 Let the OP do his thing and post up the info. If you are to impatient to read it you are probably not interested in freelance writing opportunities anyway. |
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WTF is this shit? A dupe. TXL OOPS, even better, a dupe by the same OP |
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Here soon I'm going to be building a freelance writing nexus.
I have 4 part/full time writers on my staff, would like to expand to 200 to 300 this year at some point. It's easy to do if you've got a good background in english, and pays well as long as you meet the right people. |
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Web cam
Charge people to watch you get yo freak on. I mean even me wearing a Darth Vader helmet FAPin off somebody will pay to see that........RIGHT? What if I get a girl dressed like Leia and I bang her? |
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Quoted:
Web cam Charge people to watch you get yo freak on. I mean even me wearing a Darth Vader helmet FAPin off somebody will pay to see that........RIGHT? What if I get a girl dressed like Leia and I bang her? No one would ever pay to watch me get my freak on. At least I sincerely hope that's the case. |
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I opened an Amazon store.
The trick is finding a product that will sell profitably. It's a lot easier than building your own e-commerce website and unless you're the manufacturer it's a lot easier to get hits on Amazon than on your own site. The fees are a lot lower than on eBay. |
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I have been debating a 2nd job lately (more just for something to do on the weekends) and put a resume together but havent really submited apps yet. I have bene looking over "work at home" stuff but alot of it I keep finding is iffy at best as far as getting paid.
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Quoted: Web cam Charge people to watch you get yo freak on. I mean even me wearing a Darth Vader helmet FAPin off somebody will pay to see that........RIGHT? What if I get a girl dressed like Leia and I bang her? With a very few exceptions there is pretty much no money to be made for solo guys no matter how freaky you are. Solo girls, or guy on girl or girl on girl there is money to be made. How much depends on a variety of factors. |
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Quoted: I opened an Amazon store. The trick is finding a product that will sell profitably. It's a lot easier than building your own e-commerce website and unless you're the manufacturer it's a lot easier to get hits on Amazon than on your own site. The fees are a lot lower than on eBay. Ya, Amazon store looks like a nice gig. I looked into it a while ago, but I could not figure out the fees for the Amazon fulfillment for the product I had in mind. They don't make that part easy I'm still working on something, but w/o the Amazon fulfillment...just dropped shipped. Speed |
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Tagging for later reading. I could use some extra pay and a way to spend idle time.
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in. wife is going to be a stay at home mom soon and is looking for something to make afew bucks at home.
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hey guys, don't get this locked before my wife has chance to read it!
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Are'nt those things usually scams?
I would love to save money and do stuff at home, but everyone thats shown up in a local paper has turned out to be some flavor of scam after some quick research online. |
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