11-14-2022, 06:58 AM
(An oldie from 1990)
Contents:
Preparing Curriculum Vitae
Researching Family Trees
You Name It
Invent-A-Game
Cherished Car Numbers
When Words Are Simply Not Enough
How To Do This That And The Other
Come And Join Us
List Selling
Gimmicks And Seasonal Items
Still relevant today; mostly.
I gave the hard copy of this to a relative struggling to find extra money to pay off his mortgage arrears.
That was around 7, maybe 8 weeks ago.
Yesterday he told me he'd made nearly £900.
Not a fortune but it helps.
How Tom made his money.
No website or email needed; not even an internet connection!
1: He made £49 from producing a Curriculum Vitae and making 12 copies of it for one of his buddies looking for a job.
(Preparing Curriculum Vitae)
2: He helped a senior citizen friend sign up to a website, (I forget the name of it) and got him started on compiling his
family tree. A little over an hour. Money earned, £25. (Resesearching Family Trees)
Not counted here is the ongoing hour a week Tom has been booked for. Not counted as he's not actually done the work and
therefor not been paid.
3: The best earner. (Cherished Car Numbers)
Sold car number plate. Not the actual number plate, but the right for the buyer to register it on another vehicle. (Retention
certificate). Sold for £550
Best part is.
The owner had been served with a notice to remove what was left of the car. Owner had sold the parts, leaving just a shell.
He didn't want to pay the £150 for it to be towed. So Tom offered to do it for £90.
Tom is the owner of a tow truck and towed it to the scrappy. Don't know how much Tom was paid for it, or if he had pay the
scrappy.
Kerching!
4: How To Do This That And The Other. Not exactly what this section is about. But Tom got the idea from it. Instead of
writing a guide, he used his experience of flat pack assembly and charged his neighbour £30 to help errect a garden shed.
From this he got two more jobs.
The neighbour has a son with a flat pack "greenhouse" (in NOVEMBER!?*), and fish pond that needed finishing off.
Total earnings, £150.
If you ask me Tom under-charged big time on this. Both jobs together took a little ove two days. Seems to me it should have
been at least another 'ton' :)
Just goes to show, you can still make extra money when you need it. Quick cash on the day, (just make sure you give the tax
man his cut), in the real world. Not that there's anything wrong with making money online; I do it all the time.
Anyway grab the guide here.
DL:seyarabata
Contents:
Preparing Curriculum Vitae
Researching Family Trees
You Name It
Invent-A-Game
Cherished Car Numbers
When Words Are Simply Not Enough
How To Do This That And The Other
Come And Join Us
List Selling
Gimmicks And Seasonal Items
Still relevant today; mostly.
I gave the hard copy of this to a relative struggling to find extra money to pay off his mortgage arrears.
That was around 7, maybe 8 weeks ago.
Yesterday he told me he'd made nearly £900.
Not a fortune but it helps.
How Tom made his money.
No website or email needed; not even an internet connection!
1: He made £49 from producing a Curriculum Vitae and making 12 copies of it for one of his buddies looking for a job.
(Preparing Curriculum Vitae)
2: He helped a senior citizen friend sign up to a website, (I forget the name of it) and got him started on compiling his
family tree. A little over an hour. Money earned, £25. (Resesearching Family Trees)
Not counted here is the ongoing hour a week Tom has been booked for. Not counted as he's not actually done the work and
therefor not been paid.
3: The best earner. (Cherished Car Numbers)
Sold car number plate. Not the actual number plate, but the right for the buyer to register it on another vehicle. (Retention
certificate). Sold for £550
Best part is.
The owner had been served with a notice to remove what was left of the car. Owner had sold the parts, leaving just a shell.
He didn't want to pay the £150 for it to be towed. So Tom offered to do it for £90.
Tom is the owner of a tow truck and towed it to the scrappy. Don't know how much Tom was paid for it, or if he had pay the
scrappy.
Kerching!
4: How To Do This That And The Other. Not exactly what this section is about. But Tom got the idea from it. Instead of
writing a guide, he used his experience of flat pack assembly and charged his neighbour £30 to help errect a garden shed.
From this he got two more jobs.
The neighbour has a son with a flat pack "greenhouse" (in NOVEMBER!?*), and fish pond that needed finishing off.
Total earnings, £150.
If you ask me Tom under-charged big time on this. Both jobs together took a little ove two days. Seems to me it should have
been at least another 'ton' :)
Just goes to show, you can still make extra money when you need it. Quick cash on the day, (just make sure you give the tax
man his cut), in the real world. Not that there's anything wrong with making money online; I do it all the time.
Anyway grab the guide here.
DL:seyarabata
Magic Button :
Code:
https://seyarabata.com/63714e38a638d
Magic Button :
Code:
DL:mediafire
https://www.mediafire.com/file/owb3wmejbpr73lt/Ten+Great+Ways+To+Make+A+Lot+Of+Money.pdf/file