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5 Ways to Make Money Online without Startup Money

You can make money online with little or no start-up cash by selling your products or handmade crafts, reviewing products, writing website content, posting to social media, or providing online services.

By Stephen DaltonPublished 4 years ago 7 min read
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Work from Home Free Image from Pixabay

Just because you don’t have the money to start a business, does not mean you cannot make money online without start-up money.

Don’t fall for those emails with headlines such as, “Make Money Online” or “Just $50 Can Buy an Online Opportunity to Make Millions.” Some are legitimate, but seriously if you make millions online, why do you need my $50?

However, I am not here to make you smarter about not getting fleeced by online predators.

These are not in order of the best or worst opportunity because every opportunity is what you make of it. None of these are “get rich quick” schemes, and all these require hard work or a time commitment. The amount of effort you put into any legitimate initiative will determine your results.

Crafted Christmas Tree Angels image by Stux on Pixabay

#1 — Make Money Selling Your Crafts or Reselling Items!

Some things just won't sell, no matter how good you are at making those or how much effort you put into marketing. However, if you have a product that sells without a website, imagine how well you can do with one.

The same goes for reselling things. Say you found hundreds of widgets at a yard sale or storage locker auction, and you are reselling those individually.

Look into one of these great sales platforms:

Etsy

Bonanza

eBay

Shopify

I like Shopify (not Spotify, that’s music). It gives you the ability to open a shop right from your Facebook page. It is a little expensive, though. It cost $29 per month. That’s money that must come back in profit before you ever make a dime.

Shopify also gives you the ability to connect with your customers instantly with Messenger. Shopify gives you the potential to reach millions of potential customers. Sales on Shopify have already reached $55 billion.

What’s more, setting up drop shipping is easy when you read Tim Ferriss’s #1 Wall Street Journal Bestseller, The 4-Hour Work Week. Who wouldn’t like that?

Product Reviews Image by Mohamed Hassan from Pixabay

#2 — Make Money to Review Products

What I really like about this opportunity is being able to keep the products I review afterward. Not all companies allow you to do that, and some you wouldn't want to keep. However, many are, and if you don't want to keep an item, you could always resell it.

You don't need a lot of writing skills to make money online with this job because it's usually just 100-200-word descriptions. The hardest part is coming up with another way to say this product is great time after time.

Here are five websites that allow you to make money writing reviews:

Swagbucks – Gift cards for watching movies and taking surveys. Get $5 just for joining.

User Testing - $10 per test – watch a 20-minute video and get $10 on PayPal.

Review Me – This is good if you have a blog, they pay by check after $25, to your card after $20, or to PayPal after every review.

ReviewStream – Review movies, books, clothing, or restaurants for $2 plus a $.10 residual or pay-per-click (PPC). This is paid every time a member votes on your review.

Amazon – Everybody knows Amazon is a good place to make money online, but not everyone knows how to get paid for reviewing products. Click to find out.

Other sites offer payment for reviews. Check Well Kept Wallet’s article, 45 Ways to Get Paid to Write Reviews.

Editing Image by Wokingham Libraires from Pixabay

#3 — Make Money Writing and Editing

I could write a book about this area because this is what I do. Although I have a degree in Journalism, it was so long ago I don’t remember much of that. So, don’t worry about a degree, just get started.

With all the online tools, for editing, it’s easy to make money online writing or editing without a degree, such as Grammarly, Ginger, or ProWritingAid.

Sit down at the keyboard, bang out an article, and use the tools to perfect it. Sure, you will still make some mistakes, but you must start somewhere.

One thing I like about Grammarly is if you have a blog, you can write a review or post about it and make $25.00 as an affiliate, plus PPC.

From Grammarly: “Requirements for Blog Entry:

- Entry must be honest and reflect the author’s own views

- Content must represent Grammarly in a professional and relevant manner

- Proper punctuation, grammar, and spelling should be used (take advantage of the free upgrade offer!)”

Writing for Content Mills

What you need to understand about online writing is it needs to be simple. Think grade 7 or 8 or the average 12 to 13-year-old. There’s even an online readability index to check your writing.

With Textbroker.com and some other content mills, you can write articles that contain mistakes and still get paid.

You must provide a sample article, which they rate from 2 – 5, and that is your starting pay scale. The difference is how much you get paid per word.

In most cases, people who request articles there are looking for inexpensive keyword-focused content at $5 or $6 for a 500-word piece, which is mostly for search engine optimization (SEO).

The client gives you specific keywords and directs how many times it must appear in the article. You cannot turn it in until you have met the minimum number of keyword entries.

Many of these sites are set up to make money online by using keywords on websites that use AdSense's PPC. However, the better your grammar, spelling, and formatting, the higher you will get ranked, and the more you will get paid. Level 3 makes one cent per word and level 4, 1.4 cents.

Your completed assignments are evaluated generally after every three accepted submissions, and your rating could go up or down depending on your most recent five articles.

You will not get rich writing for content mills, but you could make $25 or $30 a day if you're quick. A few new entries to the mills are Contently, ClearVoice, and eByline.

Conte ntly is an excellent FREE place to set up a portfolio for written articles, photography, and fashion. You can take a look at mine here.

Virtual Assistant Image by Mohamed Hassan from Pixabay

#4 — Make Money as a Virtual Assistant

Everyone knows you can find a job on LinkedIn. Still, you can also make money online by posting articles, images, videos, and ads on LinkedIn, Facebook, Instagram, Pinterest, and other social media sites.

Many companies and individuals will pay you to post ads and articles, promote products, services, and brands, and assist them in growing their business.

There are many opportunities for Social Media Managers, up until a year ago, I didn't even know there was such a title. Some places to start are:

ModSquad

Indeed

FlexJobs

Keep your eyes open, join groups in your niche, share articles you find interesting, and comment on those articles (Not just, "Great article, I enjoyed it." put some thought into your response.) Within the groups you belong to, you could become a person whose opinion people respect.

By Mimi Thian on Unsplash

#5 — Make Money from Remote Jobs, Services, or Work from Home Opportunities

Another way to make money online from home is telecommuting or remote work, such as:

SpeakWrite Transcription Services a service that pays people to transcribe audio or video to written documents from home. You can also bid for these types of jobs on Guru.com and Upwork.com.

LiveOps, a home-based business where you can earn around ten dollars an hour (more with commissions) as a call-center representative.

Leapforce is another work from home adventure, evaluating websites for Google.

OneSpace, formerly CrowdSource, is another source of remote work.

Does That Help?

That’s a rhetorical question because I know if you really want to make money online, these are some great places to start. Even if you are just looking for a few hundred a month to pay the rent or buy more groceries, if you apply yourself, you can do it.

If you need someone to write quality content for your website's About Us Page, Blog, Privacy Policy, Terms & Conditions, etc. check out my portfolio, testimonials by clients, and send me a contact request.

About Me

Stephen Dalton is a retired US Army First Sergeant with a degree in journalism from the University of Maryland and a Certified US English Chicago Manual of Style Editor. He is a freelance journalist currently living in the Philippines.

You can see his portfolio here. Email [email protected]

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About the Creator

Stephen Dalton

Stephen Dalton is a retired US Army First Sergeant with a degree in journalism from the University of Maryland and a Certified US English Chicago Manual of Style Editor.

Website | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | Reddit | Ko-fi

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