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If you want to make a little spending money from home or earn a full-time salary, now’s the time — especially if you have a computer. Just going online opens up a host of opportunities. The trick is knowing which businesses are legitimate. Here are my top picks.
Sell your crafts

If you knitting or how to create unique jewelry or how to sew, there are lots of opportunities to sell handmade wares online. On Etsy ( etsy.com), you’ll have your own online store to showcase your items. Registration is free, but you have to pay a fee of 20¢ to list an item with up to five photos for four months. Etsy will take 3.5% commision from your selling. There’s no limit to how much you can charge.

To open a free online store at Jewelry Wonder, a seller mus have 30 items at least. There’s no charge to sellers — no setup fee, monthly or transaction fees, or listing or hosting fees. And sellers set their own prices, so the sky’s the limit.

ArtFire ( artfire.com) is the home of artists, crafters, suppliers and media creators from around the world. Sellers can choose either a basic free account that includes unlimited listings with four pictures per item plus the ability to sell directly from your blog or website, or a Pro account for $15.95 a month with 10 pictures per item plus a customizable “store” and promo features. There are no transaction fees on ArtFire, so you keep what you make. The site also offers online training in merchandising and marketing.

At Fiverr (
fiverr.com), you can
offer services that use your skills — designing a business card,
creating a podcast jingle, planning a trip — for five bucks a pop.
Fiverr keeps $1 and the seller gets $4 per gig. Stefanie Strobel, 28, of
Newport Beach, California, writes people’s messages in the sand at the
beach and takes a picture that she then emails to them. “I make about
$300 per month and can do about 10 to 15 messages per hour, depending on
length and complexity,” says Stefanie.
Be a nurse on call

If you’re a registered nurse, consider a company like Fonemed ( fonemed. com), which provides phone-based triage and medical information to their customers in Canada and the U.S. These companies contract with medical-related clients, mostly doctor’s offices and especially pediatrician’s offices, to answer questions when the offices are closed (the work hours are typically evenings, nights and weekends). You must be licensed in the state or province where you are located and have at least three years of recent clinical experience with adults and children. Fonemed nurses are paid an hourly minimum plus a fee per call, and are eligible for benefits like health insurance and paid leave. A typical Fonemed nurse makes $27 per hour, according to Fonemed owner Charlene Slaney.
Write, edit, proofread

Sites like Demand Studios (
demandstudios.com) and Associated Content (
associatedcontent.com)
hire experienced freelance writers, editors and filmmakers to work on
projects for sites like eHow, LiveStrong.com and YouTube. At Demand
Studios, assignments pay anywhere from $15 to $100; if you meet tenure
and activity requirements, you can be eligible for health insurance
plans. At Associated Content there are three ways to earn money: Upfront
payments for content you write ($2 to $15 per article), assigned
articles ($10 to $100 per article) and performance payments ($1.50 for
every 1,000 page views of your article if it’s posted online).
Design graphics and websites

Elance ( elance.com) works like an online marketplace, setting up designers and computer programmers with companies that need their services. Companies post jobs and freelancers bid on them, listing their experience, portfolio and the price they will charge for the job. If your bid is chosen, you’ll pay Elance a commission of 4 to 6 percent of what you earn.
Tutor kids or adults
If you have a college degree or are currently enrolled in
college and think you have the skills to tutor math, science, English or
social studies, tutoring online might fit you perfectly. Check out
Tutor.com, where tutors work as independent contractors and earn around
$10 to $14 per hour based on the subject and hours worked. Very active
tutors can earn anywhere from $800 to $1,600 a month.
Give advice
Know a lot about medicine or car repairs? JustAnswer
(justanswer.com) is a paid question-and-answer site that’s growing its
community of experts in the medical, legal and financial fields, as well
as in other specialties like car repair and home improvement.
Registered customers ask a question and then name the price they’re
willing to pay (usually from $10 to $40) for an expert answer. The
expert usually responds within an hour, and once the customer accepts
the answer, keeps from 25 to 50 percent of what the customer pays. How
much experts earn depends on how many questions they’ve had accepted by
customers. Experts are vetted through a fairly grueling process, with
credentials, education and background verified.
Provide customer service
Many retailers are outsourcing their customer service
operations to third-party companies like Alpine Access
(alpineaccess.com) and Working Solutions (workingsolutions.com), who in
turn contract with home-based workers. The reps, who typically work 20
to 40 hours a week, take calls for large and small companies. The hourly
rate is about $9, but agents can earn up to $13 with incentives and
bonuses or up to $30 for special projects. Some companies offer benefits
like health and dental insurance and a matching 401(k) plan. LiveOps
(liveops.com) is similar, but service reps operate as independent
contractors, typically invoicing LiveOps $10 to $15 per hour depending
on the type of call and performance. And with LiveOps you can work as
many hours as you want. The hiring process is rigorous: Expect a
comprehensive written or online application, skills exam, phone
interview and background check.
Make a little spending money
When career librarian Rachel Singer Gordon, 40, of Lombard,
Illinois, quit her job in 2005 to take care of her children and pursue
freelance writing, she knew she’d need to find other sources of income
to supplement her writing. She dove headlong into couponing and
frugality, and became a wizard at finding ways to earn money online.
Soon Rachel was bringing in small amounts of income from lots of sources
she calls “multiple profit centers.” “They’re the equivalent of a nice,
steady part-time job,” says Rachel. In 2009, she started the blog
Mashup Mom (mashupmom.com) to share all the stuff she was learning. In
fewer than two years, the blog has become yet another profit center for
Rachel, as has her first book, Point, Click, and Save: Mashup Mom’s
Guide to Saving and Making Money Online. Tap into multiple profit
centers with Rachel’s favorites.
COMMENTS
Thanks for your advicesRohith January 20, 2011, 1:01 pm
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