Side Hustles For Dummies. Alan R. Simon
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Your side hustles may — and probably will — evolve over time, along with your interests and experiences. I’m a great example of this proposition. My side-hustle journey began with doing small business PC applications on the side and teaching people about then-new microcomputers. After 40 years in the technology world, I’m ready to leave databases and analytics and other techie stuff behind. I may still write a tech book or two, or do some data- and analytics-oriented videos every now and then. But I’m much more energized writing novels or doing videos about my lifelong hobby of baseball and sports cards or writing about non-tech topics … like side hustles!
Chapter 2
Surveying Your Options
IN THIS CHAPTER
Identifying your side-hustle topical area
Fleshing out your idea
Deciding what your side-hustle venue should be
Matching up your side hustle with your full-time job or other side hustles
Tallying your financial considerations
Zeroing in on your time commitments
Identifying any special side-hustle skills or licensing
Coming up with your side-hustle short list
You’re all-in on the side hustle game — or at least the concept. But how do you even get started?
You can do an online search for “best side hustles” or “side-hustle ideas” or a similar term, and you’ll wind up with hundreds of results, many containing dozens of ideas. How do you make sense out of this information overload? How do you find the needle in the haystack: the side hustle that’s a great fit for you?
Fortunately, you can follow a methodical, step-by-step process that will help you narrow down thousands of different side-hustle ideas into a small subset that matches your interests, abilities, and goals. Specifically, you need to consider and evaluateVarious topical areas available to you to focus on for your side hustle
How to flesh out and add substance to your initial topical area
Various venues or formats through which you can enter the side-hustle game
How your side hustle should relate to your full-time job or career or possibly other side hustles that you already have underway
Financial considerations on both the moneymaking and money-spending side of your side hustle
Time considerations, including the highly valued — and often misunderstood — concept of “passive income”
Whether you need special skills, training, or licensing for your side hustle
You can then mash the results of each of these areas together, and — presto — that overwhelming list of hundreds or thousands of side-hustle ideas is now magically narrowed down for you to make your final side-hustle decisions.
Your Side-Hustle Topical Area
Cooking!
Photography!
Fashion!
Baseball cards and sports memorabilia!
Gig-economy work, such as delivering takeout meals, providing rideshare services, or shopping and delivering groceries or other items!
Sports and exercise!
Travel!
Finance!
You have hundreds, maybe even thousands, of different topical areas — think in terms of “subjects” or “focal points” — available to you for your side hustle. Before you even think about making other critical decisions such as whether you should try to actually sell products or services versus make money from free content accompanied by online advertising, or whether you should do your side hustle on your own or partner up with somebody else, you first need to decide what topic or subject you want to use as the foundation for your side hustle.Ask yourself some very basic questions:
What am I interested in?
What do I know a lot about?
Is there something that I know only a little about right now, but would like to learn a lot more about and maybe make some money from that new knowledge?
Besides what I’m interested in and know, is there some sort of generic activity that I can spend time doing just to make some extra money?
In general, side hustles fall into two major “buckets” that you should consider:
Side hustles built around an area of interest to you that you’d like to monetize (make money from), at least to some extent
Side hustles that aren’t necessarily interesting or exciting to you, but that still present a way for you to earn extra money beyond what you earn from your full-time job or other side hustles that you already have going
Cindy majored in mechanical engineering in college. These days, she lives in Seattle and works for an aerospace company. She enjoys her full-time career, but on the weekends she really wants to forget her day job and enjoy the Seattle party and music scene. While Cindy was in college, she worked weekends as a bartender in one of the most popular bars near campus. Just because Cindy graduated and now has a “grown-up job” as a mechanical engineer doesn’t mean that her bartending days need to be in the past. Cindy makes an important