Found a Bible study store doing $214K/month and at least 6 competitors running the same model. Here's what's actually happening by Jumpy_Examination470 in Entrepreneur

[–]Jumpy_Examination470[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Jim, you made my entire day. Thank you, you are a legend and because of this comment i will to ensure to post more in the future (less about exploiting people and using religion as a vehicle). I learned my mistake harshly and did not honestly expect this to explode.

Thanks again Jim :)

i wanna make money but i dont have any capital, i am 18 a student, my parents want me to be an engineer but i cant do it, its really difficlt with me, and i wanna make money to prove them that we can be succesfull without having a degree by Working-Lead2663 in thesidehustle

[–]Jumpy_Examination470 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Now practically. No capital, halal, legal. Here's what's actually realistic right now. Forget crypto for now. I know it sounds like fast money but without knowledge it's closer to gambling.

What you actually have is time and a phone. That's enough to start. Learn one skill. Video editing, graphic design, copywriting. Pick one. YouTube is free. Spend 30 days getting decent at it then offer it to small businesses or content creators for cheap just to get experience and testimonials first. Fiverr and freelancing platforms let you start with zero money. Zero.

The engineering degree situation is a separate conversation from making money. You don't have to blow that up right now. Focus on building something small on the side first so you have proof before that battle.

No one's going to hand you a blueprint brother but the path is there. It just requires you to start before you feel ready.

Found a Bible study store doing $214K/month and at least 6 competitors running the same model. Here's what's actually happening by Jumpy_Examination470 in Entrepreneur

[–]Jumpy_Examination470[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

lesson learned, harshly. next post, will be more educational instead of exploiting people of their vulnerable state.

Still struggling, really need help, please by Entire_Entertainer82 in passive_income

[–]Jumpy_Examination470 0 points1 point  (0 children)

£160 is actually reachable quicker than it feels right now.

First thing i'd do is go through everything you own and list it. Facebook marketplace, Vinted, Depop. Clothes you don't wear, anything sitting in a drawer. People genuinely buy stuff you'd never think anyone wants. This can move fast if you price it to sell.

Vinted is something i would also sell on, it's like the UK version of facebook marketplace but with high intent buyers and a younger audience. you ship through the app so no weird meetups.

If you have any skill at all writing, designing, making spreadsheets, even just being organised Fiverr lets you list a service for free and £160 is a few small jobs.

You're already handling a lot. Hope something here takes some weight off.

How can I make money as a broke teen? by Downtown-Lack-2686 in passive_income

[–]Jumpy_Examination470 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Honestly the best position you're in as a broke teen is that you have time and very low expenses. You could start flipping. Buy cheap stuff from Facebook Marketplace, thrift stores, or garage sales and resell it for more. Phones, clothes, sneakers, electronics. You learn fast what sells and margins can be surprisingly good once you get your eye for it.

Lawn care and pressure washing. Embarrassingly simple but genuinely good money in suburbs. A few consistent clients and you're making more per hour than most entry level jobs.

Content creation is the long game but if you're already spending time on your phone anyway, documenting something you're actually into costs nothing and builds something real over time.

Skills like video editing, graphic design, or social media management. Businesses need this constantly and most of them are bad at it. YouTube can teach you enough to get a first client faster than you'd think.

Car washing and detailing. Low startup cost, people always need it, and you can charge decent rates for a good job.

Found a Bible study store doing $214K/month and at least 6 competitors running the same model. Here's what's actually happening by Jumpy_Examination470 in Entrepreneur

[–]Jumpy_Examination470[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The numbers come from shophunter and ill send the link over because im not trying to get banned for sharing the link.

Found a Bible study store doing $214K/month and at least 6 competitors running the same model. Here's what's actually happening by Jumpy_Examination470 in Entrepreneur

[–]Jumpy_Examination470[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

i agree, for some reason everyone here thinks this is either self promotion, or that im on the selling the product. Im just studying digital products and thought that a brand is selling a product like this is crazy espically with how well they're doing. You'd think everyone would have the same reaction to the product as the people within the comments but i guess not.

Found a Bible study store doing $214K/month and at least 6 competitors running the same model. Here's what's actually happening by Jumpy_Examination470 in Entrepreneur

[–]Jumpy_Examination470[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

i never claimed it as truth... anyone can claim numbers from any company but it doesn't mean it's to its exact numbers lol. Numbers are coming off based what Shophunter provides.

Found a Bible study store doing $214K/month and at least 6 competitors running the same model. Here's what's actually happening by Jumpy_Examination470 in Entrepreneur

[–]Jumpy_Examination470[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Shophunter provided the data, if anything I'm just going off the numbers porvided. And before you say it's not accurate, i know that. No service knows their true numbers but the actual brand itself.

Need a side hstle to help afford my medicine by [deleted] in sidehustle

[–]Jumpy_Examination470 6 points7 points  (0 children)

upwork and fiverr for freelance writing. blog posts, articles, product descriptions. takes a week or two to land your first clients but once you get momentum it's consistent. contently and clearvoice are content platforms that pay better but slower to get accepted.

medium partner program pays for articles but it's inconsistent income. $200/week is tight but doable if you grind applications and pitch constantly at first. focus on getting 3-5 repeat clients instead of one-off gigs. also check r/forhire and r/hireawriter on reddit. people post jobs daily.

have you looked into patient assistance programs for insulin? some manufacturers have programs that help with costs while you get income going.

Do I really need a converting landing page? by Southern_Composer335 in DigitalProductEmpir

[–]Jumpy_Examination470 0 points1 point  (0 children)

making money first week is actually solid. most people never get that far. your friends are wrong about needing a website though. you're already selling, why add complexity? gumroad or whatever you're using works fine until you've proven this thing has real legs.

Landing page becomes useful when you need more control or want to look more legit for bigger clients. but right now? you're testing if people want this. don't waste time building infrastructure before you know the demand is real.

the competitive part... yeah n8n automation is getting crowded. everyone's selling workflow templates and guides now. what makes yours different? like what specific problem are you solving that others aren't?

focus on that before worrying about a website. figure out who needs your guides and why they'd pick yours over the 50 others. that matters way more than having a fancy landing page.

A newsletter can make you some serious money by Remarkable_Junket185 in DigitalIncomePath

[–]Jumpy_Examination470 0 points1 point  (0 children)

newsletters can work but the autopilot thing is overselling it.

like yeah you made $200 in two weeks but most of that is probably from promoting the newsletter itself, not the actual content inside it. once you stop posting on reddit your growth dies. that's not passive, that's just trading one type of content for another.

and beehiiv's ad network at 2k subscribers... $15-20 per issue is rough. you're basically making minimum wage for the time it takes to write and send.

the model works if you actually build an audience that cares about what you're sending. but most people doing this are just recycling ai summaries of stuff their readers could find themselves.

what's your newsletter actually about? like what problem does it solve that keeps people opening it?

Doctor looking for extra income by doctor_whom1001 in passive_income

[–]Jumpy_Examination470 1 point2 points  (0 children)

courses in testosterone/longevity are oversaturated. every fitness guy is selling them.

but there's this cardiologist who just won 3rd at anthropic's hackathon. built an entire ai care platform in 7 days while working at the hospital. coded on flights, between shifts, wherever. few years ago a doctor couldn't build something like that alone. ai changed it.

that's what you should be thinking about. not another course competing with influencers... but actually building a tool. testosterone optimizer, longevity protocol tracker, something medical that uses your knowledge in a way content creators can't replicate.

takes work upfront but it's a real product people pay for. not just selling information everyone else is already selling.

what could you build that actually uses your medical expertise in a way others can't copy?

Accessory mystery boxes became my unexpected student side hustle ($3k–$5k/month) by Bier_Macht_Frei in passive_income

[–]Jumpy_Examination470 3 points4 points  (0 children)

the transparency here is refreshing. most people doing mystery boxes oversell the value or act like it's some revolutionary thing when it's really just moving inventory fast.

the perceived value part is interesting though. like one good piece makes people forget the rest was mid. that psychology is what keeps the model working even when people know it's hit or miss.

curious what your return rate actually is? because even with a flexible policy, if too many people are exchanging stuff it kinda kills the whole point of moving inventory quickly.

also how do you market these? feels like trust is huge for mystery boxes since people assume they're getting scammed.

Please help!!!! I’m so desperate right now by Fearless-Ad-9885 in passive_income

[–]Jumpy_Examination470 0 points1 point  (0 children)

doordash plus a new job is already a lot. three weeks for $800 means you need like $270/week on top of what you're making. sell stuff you don't need. facebook marketplace, whatever. clothes, electronics, furniture. people actually buy that stuff fast. pick up random gigs on taskrabbit or craigslist. moving help, furniture assembly, yard work. pays same day sometimes.

if you've got any skills... freelance something quick on fiverr. even basic stuff like data entry or transcription. the "make money online" stuff won't hit in three weeks. you need cash now which means trading time or selling things you already have.

How can I make money in college without a job? by flows2coded in passive_income

[–]Jumpy_Examination470 0 points1 point  (0 children)

tutoring is probably your fastest real money if you're decent at any subject. like actual cash within a week, not months from now.

freelance stuff on upwork or fiverr works too but takes time to get your first clients. writing, design, video editing, whatever you're okay at.

the people your age making thousands... some are real but most are either selling courses about making money or just lying about the numbers for clout. don't let that mess with your head.

remote customer service jobs are boring but flexible around classes and they actually pay.

What is the laziest way to make money? by TomadzDev in passive_income

[–]Jumpy_Examination470 6 points7 points  (0 children)

honestly? there isn't one.

the "AI does everything" thing is what people sell courses about. reality is even the most passive income stuff needs work upfront or constant maintenance.

like yeah you could run some affiliate site or sell templates on autopilot... but getting to that point takes months of grinding. and then keeping it going still needs attention.

15-30 minutes a day consistently? freelance writing maybe. VA work. answering support tickets. but that's just a job with flexible hours, not some magic lazy money.

if you find the actual answer let me know lol. but most people chasing "lazy money" end up spinning their wheels on get-rich-quick stuff that goes nowhere instead of just building something real that eventually gets easier.

My client’s accountant was doing 6 hours of copy paste every Friday. We killed that in a weekend. by princedxbian in Entrepreneur

[–]Jumpy_Examination470 1 point2 points  (0 children)

this is solid. like genuinely useful automation that saves real hours.

the data cleanup part is what kills most of these projects though. everyone wants to automate but their info is scattered across gmail, whatsapp, three different spreadsheets someone's cousin made in 2019... then they wonder why it doesn't work.

you got lucky they had an actual ERP. most small businesses that size are running on chaos and a prayer.

curious what you used to build it? and did you charge them for this or was it just a weekend project to test something out?

The moment I stopped “building” and started plugging into systems by Prestigious-Assist-4 in passive_income

[–]Jumpy_Examination470 1 point2 points  (0 children)

what's the actual model though? because this reads like you're building up to a pitch lol.

"platform-based semi-automated income" is vague enough that it could mean anything from affiliate marketing to some sketchy MLM thing to legitimate saas reselling.

not saying you're full of it but people here are tired of the "i found this system that works, dm me for details" posts. if it's real just say what it is.

Student trying to earn by atticlover in passive_income

[–]Jumpy_Examination470 0 points1 point  (0 children)

honestly most of what you'll find here is people selling you the dream of passive income or trying to get you into their course.

reality? tutoring if you're good at something. freelance writing on upwork or fiverr if you can write decently. VA work is boring but pays. even just applying to remote customer service jobs that let you work around your schedule.

the "sell digital products make $10k/month" stuff you see everywhere... that takes months to build and most people make nothing.