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12 September 2008

How to Make Money Teaching

How to Make Money Teaching.

Each of us knows how to do something that other people would like to learn although most people never take advantage of that fact.

It might surprise you to learn that there are ways you can share your talents and make a significant income without becoming a certified teacher.

Whether you’re knowledgeable about renovating an old house or collecting old china, there’s probably a market for the expertise you have to offer.

If you’d like to make money teaching, here are some ideas for putting your talents to work and getting paid for it:

Make money teaching - Network with local community colleges

You don’t have to be a professor or a scholar to teach a course at a local community college. Many of these colleges offer practical trade courses as well as non-credit courses on fun topics such as “How to Get Started in Genealogy” or “How to Improve Your Memory”.

Write out a list of course ideas you could potentially teach and contact you local community colleges with your proposals. You might find them to be very receptive to your idea.

Make money teaching - Hold training seminars for corporate clients

Do you have expertise in salesmanship, how to get free publicity, or some other aspect of business?

Develop a training course in that area and offer it to the employees of local businesses in your area. You could narrow it down even further and concentrate on a particular niche.

Have you been a successful waiter or waitress in the past?

Offer a training course to local restaurants where you teach their staff how to improve their serving skills and get more tips. Many restaurants need trained, professional wait staff but don’t have the time to teach them all of the nuances of providing good service. After visiting a few restaurants, you’ll be able to see how badly this service is needed!

Make money teaching - Teach an online course

There are a variety of websites that will allow you to design and teach the online course of your choosing and share the profits with you.

One example is universalclass.com. Another strategy is to contact large websites that promote products in your area of expertise and offer to host an online course or seminar for them. This would be a great traffic builder for them and could be quite profitable for you.

Make money teaching - Offer courses for local churches and organizations

If you have craft or hobby skills, contact local churches and organizations in your area such as women’s groups and offer to host a course or seminar teaching your hobby or skill. Don’t think that the skill you’re teaching has to be highly complicated or technical.

Do you have a flair for fashion?

Show local women’s groups in your area how to expand their wardrobe using unusual accessories. You could even hook up with women’s boutiques in your area and use their accessories in the seminar for a small fee.

Most boutiques would gladly pay you for this type of exposure. If you’re a jewelry maker, you could use your own handmade jewelry in the seminar and possibly make a few sales. Think out of the box.

With a little brainstorming, you can find a variety of ways to make money teaching in your local community and online.

People will always have a desire to learn new skills.

Why not give them what they want?

06 September 2008

Writing For The Net

Writing For The Net.

By Elizabeth Chayne

The Internet means a lot to the freelance writer.

Submissions with the click of a mouse, quicker replies, and most of all, more markets. We’re not just talking e-zines here, either.

There are hundreds of new opportunities to be found online, whether you’re looking for one-time cases or long collaborations.

What astounds me is that

there are now websites dedicated to making us—that is, us freelance writers—money. Sites that are not scams and actually work for the writer instead of making us work for them. Ah, the wonders of the Net.

There is a catch, of course. Most print editors probably won’t think much of your online credentials, and the people who buy your article may never ask you for another. But if the important thing is having some extra cash in your pocket, read on.

All these sites pay with PayPal, which is pretty much the way to get paid in the virtual world nowadays. Don’t worry, though, it’s real cash!

Constant Content (http://www.constant-content.com/) is a little like the eBay for writers.

You can post up articles you’ve written, along with the prices/terms you’d like to get, and hope someone buys it. Or you can check the “Requests” section where publishers, editors, and people who need a writer put up their requests, along with the prices/terms they’re willing to pay. All content submitted to the site is run through editors, who proofread and check that there is no plagiarism.

Another site where you can publish your articles is Associated Content (http://www.associatedcontent.com/).

You are paid a direct fee for your work, which, like Constant Content, has to be run through editors first. This site has an interesting payment feature known as Performance Payment, meaning that you get paid according to the number of views your page gets.

The current payment per thousand page views is $1.50, though the site says this is subject to change. Note that international submitters are only eligible for performance payments due to tax complications.

Writers on About (http://beaguide.about.com/) are required to send in a certain amount of articles and add updates to their blogs within a certain amount of time.

Currently, the minimum requirement is two articles every fourteen days, and one to three blog updates every week. They also pay in page views.

A tough site to break into is Suite101 (http://www.suite101.com/).

They also have minimum posting requirements, and writers of the site have to go through a selection process. The site pays via Google Adsense, which means you get a share of the advertising revenue.

These and many other sites are a great “modern” way to find buyers, or just stick those articles you wrote “for fun” and don’t know what to do with—who said writing was all about the money, anyway?