So I was just brainstorming a bit thinking of ways to earn a little extra without the responsibilities of actual employment, meaning you can do it when there’s time and put it on hold if you have to. Personally I like crafting so I could imagine having something like a little etsy store. I could carve beads from wood, antler or bone and turn them into jewelry. Something like that. That wouldn’t just be a way to make money but also sounds like a nice hobby. Not sure how financially feasible it would be though, maybe someone here already has some experience? But yeah I’d love to hear about your ideas/advice. Anything that’s legal and not exploitative, be it entirely independent or also freelancing stuff that doesn’t require special training.

  • null_dot@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    2 hours ago

    I’m a tax consultant, so I see a lot of people’s side hustles.

    As other’s here have said, once you monetise a hobby it’s not a fun hobby anymore… just another responsibility.

    Take the beads thing for example. Carving some beads to make some cool jewellery sounds like a great hobby, and you could make some really amazing unique gifts for family. However, if you want to make money from it then you need to compete with other etsy vendors - you’ll very quickly find the pieces that sell and then it becomes a question of how many of those pieces you can turn out per hour or per day.

    Economically, making money requires time, or skill, or capital. The most appropriate will be a mix of all three that fits your circumstances. As a “side hustle” you kinda want a little of each rather than a lot of each. Good examples might be:

    • window cleaning - for businesses or residences
    • gutter cleaning - get one of those telescopic pole thingies with a camera so you don’t actually need to go on anyones roof
    • lawn mowing - just a few customers in your street

    These things aren’t “hobbies” but they will be a lot more satisfying, enjoyable, and profitable than carving beads.

  • RebekahWSD@lemmy.world
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    15 hours ago

    Do you live in a place where cottage laws are a thing? You could bake or can and sell them, if you have good cottage laws. Depending on where, might need various certs before doing it though.

    • Venus_Ziegenfalle@feddit.orgOP
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      14 hours ago

      I live in Germany and to no one’s surprise there’s quite a bit of bureaucracy involved unless you’re selling raw produce. But it’s a good idea. I like cooking so maybe I can come up with something.

  • octobob@lemmy.ml
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    12 hours ago

    Just started wiring houses on the side with an old friend. He works for himself with one apprentice. My electrical career is basically 100% industrial, other than random stuff like this

    30/hr cash, I can work nights and weekends, make some extra cash and it helps him out. This is on top of my full time job, which usually requires overtime and traveling around the country to different industrial sites and steel mills.

    I enjoy the work. I like being physically active and learning and using my brain.

  • arin@lemmy.world
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    13 hours ago

    There’s a reason onlyfans got so popular. Get training or follow them

  • WxFisch@lemmy.world
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    22 hours ago

    One of the risks around monetizing hobbies is that while you may enjoy that hobby now, doing it to make more adds level of stress and responsibility that can quickly make it into another job that you no longer love. Places like Etsy are competitive and reward consistency in listing and sales, so to have any real success you can’t really list just one or two items and wait for them to sell. You’ll drop far down in search rankings and suddenly your store dies because Etsy stops sending people to it.

    This isn’t to say don’t try, but be aware it isn’t as easy as “hobby but get paid for it”.

    • lordnikon@lemmy.world
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      19 hours ago

      I know my wife sells glass art but really only doesn’t it to make room and break even on materials. So it may be allot more work to make a profit at it.

  • ragebutt@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    24 hours ago

    This is tough without special training or scummy morals

    Like you can resell stuff but that’s gross

    Crafting is cool but that’s a special skill. I know people that sell crochet, needlepoint, etc

    I refurbish electronics but that’s also a special skill, it’s not terribly difficult to learn though and can actually be quite lucrative. Good for the environment too. Buy a switch that someone is just going to throw away, fix it, resell it as refurbished, that kind of thing. This is getting much harder though. Ebay was the primary way to go and they’ve been shifting away from refurbished and used sales a lot over the past few years

    I have a friend that does custom artwork for people but that’s a special skill. I have another friend that sells music for people that wants beats but again special skills. Fivver type stuff

    Basically a lot of these will be “monetize your hobby”

    • algorithmae@lemmy.sdf.org
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      11 hours ago

      Like you can resell stuff but that’s gross

      Buy a switch that someone is just going to throw away, fix it, resell it as refurbished, that kind of thing.

      Huh? So are you for or against reselling?

      • ragebutt@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        8 hours ago

        Fair question, I should’ve expanded. To clarify I think it is helpful and good to divert something that was going to be trashed anyway and resell it for a fair price based on your labor to restore it. I actually think it is important. Most of what I do is stuff that people were literally going to trash and while I do earn a decent amount I sell the stuff for fair prices, usually at least 30-40% off of retail

        I think it is scummy to merely act as a middle person that artificially buys up supply and then resells at artificially high values (eg consoles, Pokémon cards, sneakers, etc). Scalping, basically

    • Venus_Ziegenfalle@feddit.orgOP
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      23 hours ago

      Basically a lot of these will be “monetize your hobby”

      Yeah that’s totally within the range of what I’m looking for. I meant special training more as in people want to see certificates. I’m fine with investing a little time to teach myself how to do something.

      • ragebutt@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        23 hours ago

        Well then the skies your limit, you just have to get good enough at something.

        I could never get good enough at the creative stuff to justify that. I love music and write my own stuff but I’m not nearly good enough for that. It takes me like 2 weeks to write one song. My friend that writes beats will bust one out in like 40 minutes and can basically do whatever. You want reggaeton? Sure

        But I buy up broken shit and resell it. You spilled a drink on your macbook? You broke the hdmi/usbc on your console? Your graphics card died? I will swoop in and lowball you since I know you’re gonna throw it away if I don’t buy it. I take on a lot of risk because a lot of things either can’t be fixed or aren’t economically viable to fix but at the same time I also often pay like $1-200 for a ps5 and resell it for $400 refurbished with like 2 hours of work and $10 of parts so it balances out. Graphics cards are the worst ones tbh, the risk:reward is too high. I get a ton that are just fucked and are parts boards but every once in a while I get a repairable one and then it’s a $5-600 profit or more. I won’t pay more than 2-300 for a dead 4090 because they’re often totally fucked

  • DagwoodIII@piefed.social
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    22 hours ago

    [off topic]

    Get this book. “Discover What You Are Best At” by Linda Gail. It’s a series of self tests that gauge what skills you already have, and then lists the jobs that use those skills. For example, a hair dresser and a nurse both need good social skills and good dexterity; two totally different jobs with a similar skillset.

    I spent my whole life thinking I’d never find a job I actually liked, then I got the book and it led me to a career I enjoyed and got a decent salary.

  • PriorityMotif@lemmy.world
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    22 hours ago

    I created !flipping@lemmy.world as I resell as a hobby on eBay and marketplace. It’s a good way to clear out stuff that you don’t want or need and fuel your hobbies. I think it’s pretty funny that the other user says that reselling is gross and goes on to explain that they buy and resell things for a profit.

    I’m going out to the middle of bfe this morning to pick up some stuff I won through an online estate auction. I got a dresser for $1. I might keep it I might sell it for a profit. Nobody else wanted it and I’m saving the family the hassle of having to throw it away somehow and someone else might be really happy to have it after I clean it up.

    • BarneyPiccolo@lemmings.world
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      7 hours ago

      I took up guitar during Covid and got obsessed. Now I am buying up beat up old guitars, cleaning, repairing, restringing them, and reselling them at a profit. It feels great to take an old guitar that may have been neglected for decades, and put it back in the hands of someone who will give it a new life.

    • Venus_Ziegenfalle@feddit.orgOP
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      22 hours ago

      I think it’s pretty funny that the other user says that reselling is gross and goes on to explain that they buy and resell things for a profit

      I think what they meant is drop shipping where you’re just selling any old crap from alibaba

      Reselling sounds like a neat idea if you have the space.

      • PriorityMotif@lemmy.world
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        22 hours ago

        It’s highly recommended that you sell small items anyway. I’ve sold 6 CD’s and a cassette tape this month. Some graphics cards, a motherboard, handheld game system that I repaired, etc. I have a small shelf with my inventory on it. I rarely do larger items, but I think I can sell the dresser in a day or two if it doesn’t work well in my space.

        If you have a hobby like video games or card collecting you can buy collections and resell what you don’t want she keep what you do or sell games after you’re done with them. It’s fully scalable so you can put in as much or as little time as you want and pause your listings if you decide to go on vacation.