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How can I make a side income of $100 a day?

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  • #16
    What are you planning to buy for your business? Just curious.

    Anyway, you need to be specific on what you want to do to make $100. What are you willing to put in to get to that point? Do you like writing, selling, making videos, and teaching. There is thousands of ways to do it but there is only a few that will work for you. I have tried multiple business models that easily could have made me $100 a day but they were not compatible with me. You need to find what is going to be compatible with you. What are you good at and what do you know a lot of information about. Take that and figure out how to make money with it.

    I'm assuming you plan on creating an Internet business. Such business models that can be run with an hour of time are typically blogs, ecommerce stores, and niche sites. It might take a long time to get to $100 a day working at that pace though. Once you get there you'd only be managing your sites, which would only take about an hour.

    I hope that answer helped. It's a little vague but I can't give you a step by step guide. That's something you’re going to have to figure yourself.

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    • #17
      Just get a good side job.
      My son in law was making $12 / hr working in a tool & die shop after hours, weekends, etc., and his boss was pretty good about being flexible with his work hours around his class schedule.

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      • #18
        What can you do? What are your skills?

        If you know web design or programming, freelancing on the side is an option. You might not make 100 bucks/day in the first week, but, with experience and a decent portfolio it's not impossible.

        Whatever skills you have (even if not a designer / programmer), you can earn money. The trick is to know how to sell your services for good money and also be extremely productive, to be able to also study.
        Personal Finance Blog | Dojo's PF Musings

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        • #19
          get the best grades you can so you can get more scholarships and grants. Try work study in a job within your major, get some money (not $100/day) but gain future job experience that will make you marketable in your career. Be a resident assistant in a dorm, back when I was in college RAs did not have to pay for housing. And that's an easy job.

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          • #20
            Folks, do you realize this is a 3-year-old thread?
            Steve

            * Despite the high cost of living, it remains very popular.
            * Why should I pay for my daughter's education when she already knows everything?
            * There are no shortcuts to anywhere worth going.

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            • #21
              I paid for grad school with freelancing. If you can write, there are lots of opportunities... elance, freelancer.com. DemandMediaStudios (not sure if that's still an option). Lots of options -- it takes some up-front building, but once you're even decently established, it's a good source of money!
              http://frankfacts.org/

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