السبت، 7 مايو 2016
Mohegan Sun hosts Run For The Roses Hat Revue
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Frailey-Miller selected for ATHENA award
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ShawneeCraft Brewery growing its business but sets limits
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Twelve Things That Changed My Life (and Cost Less Than $50)
Most of the time, when people post memes and images on Facebook, they’re pretty dull and forgettable. Every once in a while, though, I’ll see something that really makes me think. The other day, a friend of mine posted such a memorable item.
It was simple, really. “Name five things that changed your life.” I loved reading the answers that many of my friends posted and, when I decided to post my own, I actually found myself thinking about it quite a bit.
What actually did change my life?
I tried to come up with this list in several different ways. Did my friend mean five physical objects? Or were non-physical items okay? Should I think about big picture things in life? But what about the little things that subtly make every day better?
I kept writing and editing and re-editing that list and I ended up spending more thought on it than pretty much anything that has ever been prompted by Facebook.
And as I looked at the lists I was making, a few things occurred to me.
First, almost none of the items – whether physical items or not – were very expensive. Many of them were free. Even the physical objects I named were pretty cheap. The things that really changed my life the most were things that didn’t involve a lot of expense.
Second, the things that kept coming up were things that had a daily impact, not one-time things that happened in the past. Almost everything I came up with directly affects my life every day – or at least every few days – and the indirect effects are everywhere. There were many experiences in my life that were impactful, but they didn’t singularly change my life as much as anything on this list.
Third, I found that the ultimate test of something is to imagine subtracting it from my life. If things got far worse, then it probably was something that transformed my life for the better when I discovered it.
In the end, I came up with a list of twelve things that really transformed my life. Some of them were a bit of a representation of a broad group of things and thus might be considered “cheating” in a way, but I’m pretty happy with it. To me, this list shows that you don’t need a lot of money to have an amazing and fulfilling life.
1. A strong and lasting relationship with my wife
This is easily at the top of my list. My relationship with Sarah has been the glue that has held my life together for the last two decades of my life. She is my best friend, my sounding board for ideas, my co-planner for every future endeavor, the woman I love, an amazing mother for my children, an incredible hostess, and a charming and witty companion all rolled up into one person.
Yes, I put work into that relationship and time, too. One could argue that I’ve surely invested money as well, but the truth is that I’m thoroughly convinced that every dollar invested in that relationship has been repaid to me in some way or another, either through the direct economy of cohabitation and the tax advantages of marriage or through indirect benefits that come from her constant consideration and help.
I could gush on and on for pages about Sarah, but there’s no need. She’s the single most important person in my life and she has brought far more into my life than I can ever repay.
2. The Simple Dollar
In a way, this item could easily be extended to any major project I’ve taken on in my life that I’ve put a lot of time into. By this, I don’t mean little projects that can be completed in a day or even a week, but big projects that suck down hundreds of hours. However, among those that I’ve achieved in my life, The Simple Dollar stands far above them both in terms of success and also in terms of the proceeds from the project.
This site has been a daily part of my life for almost ten years now. I started writing articles in late 2006 and there have been multiple postings a day pretty much constantly since then, mostly by me but also by a number of other writers. It went from a passion project on the side to my full time gig to a small business with a handful of employees and then to ownership by another group with my continued support as a full time writer.
It has been unbelievable in so many ways to watch this site grow, to see how it has affected people, and to watch people move on in more positive directions in their life. It’s amazing to realize that I have written almost ten million words of content for this site. That’s just a stupendous amount of writing almost any way you slice it.
More than anything else, this site showed me that if you have a passion and direct that passion in a way that will appeal to others and really throw your heart into it and give it tons of time to grow without flagging or giving up, good things will happen.
3. A strong friendship that has lasted more than 20 years
When I first went away to college, I was the first person in my immediate and close extended family to actually go to college after high school. I went to a pretty good school that was far enough from home that I couldn’t live at home or even see my family all that often, but it was a school where I literally didn’t know anyone.
That first year, I made two very good friends, one of whom has been one of my closest friends ever since. We actually first started hanging out together before classes even started that first year because we lived on the same dormitory floor. It was a friendship that grew over years until we chose to share an apartment together near the end of our college careers. I visited him repeatedly during the months when he struggled to find work after college, then he couch-surfed with Sarah and I when he did find work. He was the best man at my wedding and present within hours of the birth of each of my children.
He’s been as reliable and constant and trustworthy as a friend could be. His anarchic sense of humor has brought just the right amount of levity to countless situations in my life. He’s been there when I’ve needed him more times than I can count.
There are few things better than having a friend in life that you can truly rely on like that.
4. A really good calendar and task management system
I started this article off with a few less tangible things, so it’s perhaps appropriate to spend the rest of the list looking at things that really are physical objects – or at least intimately connected to physical objects.
And it makes a lot of sense to start with this one, at least in my eyes.
I am a father of three. I am a husband. I have a challenging career. I have a couple of side gigs, too. I am a homeowner. I volunteer in the community and for political causes. I have a very healthy number of friendships that I want to maintain.
If you add those things together, it makes for a very busy schedule. A typical day has a healthy handful of scheduled events at certain times, a frighteningly long list of things to be done, and usually several brushfires that need to immediately be put out. That’s just the normal course of everyday life.
If I did not have a strong, reliable system for keeping track of dates and appointments and tasks and things that need done, all of this would fall apart. I simply could not continue to juggle all of these balls. Just like a juggler, I need a system in place to keep all of those balls in the air, and that system is a smart calendar and to-do list.
I currently use three elements to keep all of this going. First, I use Google Calendar to manage all of my dates and appointments. It sends me alerts in advance of events and makes it easy to see my daily, weekly, and monthly scheduled events. Second, I use Remember the Milk to keep track of all of my tasks (though I very highly recommend Todoist for new users – I’m just wedded to the specific quirks and features of RtM at this point). Third, I use Panda Planner for an offline daily review as it provides a great format for it, though previously I just used blank pages.
5. A slow cooker
How on earth does a slow cooker wind up on this list? It might seem like a bizarre choice, but our slow cooker has enabled our family to eat a lot of meals around the table together that would have essentially been logistically impossible during busy evenings, and I find that our family meals are the centerpiece of our days as a family and a big part of our strong family bond.
It’s pretty simple, really. If an evening looks busy, we make supper in the slow cooker. We have a huge variety of recipes that we use, from lasagnas to sandwich mixes, from enchiladas to soups and stews. We can prepare these meals in the morning and set them to cook automatically during the day so that when we’re all at home, we have a meal ready to go. All we need is a fifteen minute window where everyone is at home together – or a significant portion of our family is together – and we can have a family dinner regardless of whether anyone has been around in the late afternoon and early evening to prepare it.
Our almost-daily home cooked family dinners around our dinner table are a central part of our family life. It gives us a chance to see each other, to talk to each other, to share our day’s experiences, and to eat something reasonably healthy and tasty together. Without a slow cooker, this would essentially be impossible most nights.
6. A good pillow
When I decide to end my day and head to bed, my goal is to fall asleep as fast as I can so I can get the best night sleep possible in the time available. That means getting under the appropriate amount of covers in a very dark room, but for me, an absolutely essential part of that is a good pillow.
Simply having my head at the right angle when I lay on my side (yeah, I’m a side sleeper) to fall asleep makes all the difference. If it’s at the wrong angle, I toss and turn and can’t fall asleep for a long while and usually wind up with a restless night of sleep.
That’s why, at home, having the right pillow is absolutely magical. For me, it’s central to getting a great night of sleep, and a great night of sleep provides much of the fuel that gets me through a busy day.
7. A good pair of shoes
I’ve worn dirt cheap shoes. I’ve worn expensive shoes. I’ve worn generic dollar store shoes. I’ve worn dress shoes of all kinds and athletic shoes of all kinds.
In the end, a pair of shoes that allows your feet to tolerate many miles of walking without blisters and without significant discomfort is absolutely vital.
For me, a pair of shoes like this isn’t all that expensive. I have a few brands and models that I watch for in my size with online sales, ones that have worked for me many times in the past. I’m personally a big fan of New Balance shoes, both in terms of walking/running shoes and casual shoes. I can walk and walk and walk in those shoes without getting blisters and without getting sore feet.
I’ve experienced awful foot blisters before. I’ve experienced incredible sore feet before, once in the midst of a family vacation. It’s just miserable. Simply having feet that aren’t sore and blistered is wonderful.
Good shoes make my life choices so much more flexible. I don’t even give it a second thought when I feel like going on a long walk, even if I know the kids are going to want to play soccer later.
8. A good all-purpose kitchen knife
When I first moved out of the dorms in college and moved into an apartment, I had no idea how to cook my own food. I was lost. I picked up a few cheap pots and pans and made some fumbling attempts, but honestly I was so broke that I lived on a steady diet of ramen and free food on campus for at least a couple of years.
It wasn’t until I had launched my professional career that I actually had the opportunity to try cooking for myself – and I was pretty awful at it. I messed up almost everything I tried.
Over time, however, I came to learn how to prepare quite a few things in the kitchen. I now cook all kinds of things and prepare all kinds of meals for my family.
If there’s one single tool that is the most indispensable in my kitchen, it’s a good all-purpose chef’s knife, like this one. Keep it honed and it will basically do anything and everything you need to do in the kitchen, cutting meats and vegetables in countless ways. Sure, pots and pans are important tools, too, but having a knife that you know exactly how to use after many years of practice makes so much meal preparation as easy as can be.
9. Ledges State Park
I could simply say “state and national parks” in general here, but this is far and away my favorite park.
I love walking on the trails here. I love going off the trails here. I love the picnic areas. I love the streams. I love the recreational spots. I love the widely varied terrain. I love the widely varied trail difficulty.
I’ll often take day trips to the park in the spring. I’ll find a very shady spot to work, rattle off a few hours of writing, and then put my bag back in the vehicle and go on a trail walk. The scenery of the park, the way I feel after climbing up a big hill and looking out over the top of it, the sounds of nature, the smells, the relative solitude, the beauty of it all… it just inspires me and makes me feel alive.
I could talk positively about many other parks, but Ledges just feels like “my” park. It makes me feel renewed in a way that few things ever have.
10. A chess board
Perhaps this is just emblematic of strategic board games in general, but I think a chess board simply winds up on top of the pile for me, even if I’m not particularly good at the game.
Why does it appeal so much? It’s easy to find the pieces for it almost anywhere. It’s relatively easy to teach – my five year old knows the basics. Yet it’s so deep that it is essentially impossible for the human mind to master. You can chase that rabbit down the hole and it just keeps getting deeper.
It’s also been a big part of how I bonded with several close friends. One of my roommates and I bonded over chess, as we kept a constant game set up in our house and made moves on the board once or twice a day and would have a great postmortem at the end of the game (as we both would take pictures of the board and make notes at various points). I bonded with my wife’s younger sister over chess, too, building one of my first strong connections with her family.
If I were stuck on a desert island with another thoughtful person – or even just with myself – I’d probably start making a chessboard out of whatever materials I could find.
11. A library card
I’ve been an avid reader for most of my life. Some of my earliest memories involve sitting on a pile of pillows in my closet reading books (it was kind of my “reading nook” as a child). Even now, I read about two books a week – usually one fiction and one nonfiction.
The only way I can really feed that passion for reading in a way that wouldn’t bankrupt our family is to use the library. I can simply go to the library, wander the aisles, find countless great books to read, and take them home, for free. The library isn’t just a source for books on the shelves, either – I can request just about anything I want and they’ll eventually get it for me. Wandering the shelves becomes something of a book discovery tool for me, too.
Not only that, it’s also kind of a central part of our family bonding. I take my children to the library at least once a month and they do the same thing. They explore the shelves, find interesting things, and take them home.
You’ll often find everyone in our family sitting around our living room reading books from the library together. It’s become a tool for growing our intellect, our imagination, and our family connections, too.
12. A journal
I’ve written in a journal with amazing regularity since I was about ten years old. It’s contained a lot of different things over the years: the things I did that day, my thoughts on the books I was reading or the music I was listening to, my frustrations and joys regarding interpersonal relationships, the things I learned, the big problems I was thinking about, and so on.
Those things are valuable, but the thing that carries a journal onto this list for me is how my journals have been a tool for me to plot out my future.
Many of my journal entries, even from the earliest days, are about plans for the future. They’re concrete expressions of dreams, in other words. I’d write about something I wanted for myself in the future, but I wouldn’t stop there. I’d start constructing a plan to make it happen.
I’ve never wanted to be fabulously wealthy. I’ve never wanted to be famous. Instead, what I’ve always wanted is a comfortable life with the freedom to do interesting work and with a family around me that loves me. Over the past twenty five years or so, I really have achieved those things, and it was all planned out and considered in the pages of my journal.
It’s easy to start a journal. You can start an electronic one on your computer essentially for free, or just go buy a college-lined notebook for a few dollars at the store. Then, just start writing down the things that are on your mind and piece together how exactly you arrived at those thoughts and, if it’s a goal, how you might move your life in that direction. Sure, a lot of it won’t come to fruition, but enough of it will that your life will be far better for it if you stick with it.
Final Thoughts
When I think about things that have shaped my life, these things bubble to the top. Many other things that are part of my life are deeply important to me, but they almost all take a backseat to the things on this list.
Yet nothing on this list is expensive. Many of the things are free. The value that they bring to me is either through the investment I’ve put in or in how they support the fundamental needs of my life – food, sleep, basic comfort, family, close friends, and health, both mental and physical.
In the end, if I can maintain those things, I’m going to have a pretty good life. For me, the things on this list play a big, big role in supporting that life.
The post Twelve Things That Changed My Life (and Cost Less Than $50) appeared first on The Simple Dollar.
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14 Ways to Make Money in College
Memories of college include eating beef ramen noodles by the case in order to save a few bucks.
I was fortunate that the Army National Guard paid for most of my tuition plus my mall job of selling vitamins and protein powders at GNC helped with my bills.
Despite this I always felt broke.
Scratch that, I was broke!
I was always looking for ways to make extra money in college.
Oh how I wish articles like this existed back then!
Even if you have your finances carefully planned in advance, sooner or later you’re going to find yourself needing to earn extra money to get you through college.
I’m going to recommend some money making methods that are more entrepreneurial than job-related.
The problem with holding a job in college is that they typically pay no better than minimum wage, which forces you to work long hours that cut into your study time.
I’m also not going to recommend some of the standard make-money-in-college ideas, like filling out surveys, donating blood, or selling on eBay. Most of those efforts produce very limited income, and get old in a hurry.
Instead, I’m going to make recommendations that can play into your natural talents, provide you with a flexible schedule, and hold the potential to earn a lot more money than a minimum-wage job. And some of them even have the potential to grow into businesses that you can continue after graduation.
Good deal? Check these out…
1. Tutor
Being a tutor can be especially lucrative in a college community. This is because you will be able to provide your services not only to college students, but also to local high school and elementary school students. In many markets you can learn at least $30 per hour.
Another advantage is that the subject areas you can cover are pretty broad. The greatest demand is usually for math and science, but you can also tutor in writing and reading, as well as history and soft sciences. If you’re bilingual, you may even be able to tutor in languages, or with English as a second language.
Tutors don’t typically require any kind of special education or licensing. You can market your services through the various departments around the campus, as well as local high schools, middle schools, and elementary schools. A simple flyer showing your subject areas, geographic range and a personal description can do the job. You can also include your hourly fee, but that can work for or against you, depending on how competitive your fee is compared to what others are offering.
In addition to high pay, you can have control over your work schedule, as well as where it is you will commute to (services are generally provided at the student’s home, but you can also arrange to do it in school or at an agreed-upon neutral site). Still another advantage is that the work runs with the school year, so you’ll be free over summer vacation.
Tiffany Alexy of DivvyInvestments.com tutored while in college. In fact, she tutored two kids in Spanish and three brothers in Chinese! How much did she make? $15-$35 per hour. Not bad it all! It pays to use your skills (in this case, knowing multiple languages) to tutor others.
Pauline Paquin of ReachFinancialIndependence.com also tutored while in college, teaching Spanish and English and earned around $30 per hour. Pauline also put her musical abilities to good use and taught piano for $40 per hour. $40 per hour!
2. Bartending/Serving in a High End Restaurant or Club
You probably have a good idea as to what bartenders and servers do, so I won’t spend any time on that. However, the type of establishment you work in will have a huge impact on how much money you earn. High-end establishments typically come with much higher tip income, while those on the lower end could be no better than minimum wage.
Bartending and serving can also be a good way of blending your social life, at least if you work at establishments that your friends frequent. It also has the benefit of paying daily (or more likely, nightly), since most of your pay comes in cash tips.
The downside is that you may find yourself working when everyone else is out relaxing or playing. For example, dinner shifts tend to be the best for servers, and weekends are generally better paying for bartenders. The work can be tough, but you can probably make more money working two or three shifts per week than you could working for five days a week in a minimum-wage job.
Bartending may require that you complete a bartending course, though there generally are no formal requirements for a server.
3. Babysitting
As ordinary as this sounds, it can actually work quite well for college students. This is because babysitting often involves long periods of low- or no-activity, such as when the kids you are sitting are doing homework or have gone off the bed. The benefit is that this downtime will give you time to do your own homework. In can seem as if you’re getting paid to do your homework, which is no small advantage.
Pay is generally in the $10 and $12 an hour range, but you can get more for special occasions, and sometimes even collect tips over and above regular pay. And since babysitting gigs usually happen on an as-needed basis, you won’t have a grueling schedule to keep. That can make the work easy to blend with your school schedule.
4. Freelance Writing
There are tens of thousands of blogs and websites on the Internet, and many of them need content on a regular basis. If you like to write, have good writing skills, and have command of one or more topic areas, you can earn money writing articles on the web.
How much you can earn will depend upon how much time you put into the venture, as well as the types of sites that you write for. On the blogging side, you can earn anywhere from $30 to well over $100 per article. Business websites may pay even more, particularly for writing on technical topics or creating marketing copy.
You can sometimes find work writing for agencies, but the pay per article is much lower than the numbers quoted above. The best way to find clients, particularly those who pay a decent amount, is to approach those clients and websites directly. This will also provide you with the ability to choose the specific sites and topic areas that you want to write about.
5. Create Videos for YouTube
This can be excellent venture if you are creative and have a flair for capturing what’s unusual, interesting and fun. If you can, you may be able to create videos that can generate a steady flow of views, and earn advertising revenue as a result.
This isn’t anything like a job or even providing a service, but more like a business. You create videos, put them on YouTube, set them up with Google AdSense (much as you would with a blog), then earn income as people view your video, and click on the ads displayed.
Should your videos draw thousands of viewers, the income can be steady, providing you with a regular monthly income from the ads. This will require that you produce multiple videos, since some may be popular, while others may go nowhere. But if one or more of your videos goes viral and draws hundreds of thousands of views, ad revenue can be substantial.
The disadvantage is that you may need to produce several videos before you generate a steady income. You will also need to create fresh videos as existing ones fade. But an unexpected bonus is that success in this venture could translate into a profitable business both now and after graduation.
6. Do What You’re Good At
We’re talking mostly about the Internet here. College students are often more savvy in navigating and using the web than most of the rest of the population. For example, along the way you may have become quite accomplished in regard to social media, graphic design, creating websites, or creating videos. Any one of these skills could be sold to both businesses and individuals with the potential to produce a large income.
Pick your specialization, see what others are charging the same services, then set your fees a little bit lower. Many businesses and individuals are looking for someone to handle special projects for them, and being able to do that at a low fee can often get you business.
Once you get a few projects going, and you are getting repeat customers, you can look into increasing your fees. But your primary purpose at the beginning will be get some paying clients. This is another business venture that could mushroom into something more serious after graduation.
7. Becoming a Sports Referee
Virtually every community has a network of recreational athletic leagues, and they all need referees for their games. If you played any sports when you were growing up, you could be a referee for any of them at the local level. And since sports are seasonal, it will be to your advantage to be prepared to referee for sports that cover different seasons. For example, you might referee basketball in winter, baseball in spring and summer, and soccer or football in the fall. That will keep you busy year-round.
Referees are typically paid a flat fee per game. You might earn anywhere from $20-$50 to referee a single game. The lower age groups that play shorter games (maybe 40 to 60 minutes) will be on the lower end of the pay scale, while the higher earnings will come on longer and more competitive games played by older kids. It may even be possible to eventually work your way up to where you are refereeing for high school games at higher rates of pay.
Since so few people want to be referees in amateur sports leagues, there are usually plenty of openings. No formal qualifications are usually required, other than your own knowledge of- and experience with- the sport, though some leagues may require completion of a first aid course of some sort.
Once you sign up to be a referee in a league, you are added to the rotation. Games will be assigned based on your availability, and will generally take place on weekends. If you love a sport or two, becoming a referee is a way of turning your passion for it into a source of income.
8. Mow Lawns
If you’re in college and have access to a truck, a lawn mower, and an edger, make use of those tools and mow lawns!
This is a fantastic business for college students living in sunny areas where the grass grows quickly. And, because grass grows faster during the summertime than any other season, you’ll be able to run your yard maintenance business while you don’t have any classes.
At this job, you’re going to have to be fast and skilled. There is a lot of competition out there, so make sure you do a great job for your clients, be polite, and throw in some extras like weeding or blowing off the walkways.
You’re probably not going to need a business license for mowing lawns, but be sure to check with your local government to see if you do.
You might be able to get $100 per month for weekly service. Let’s say that you do. If you mow a residential lawn and it takes you an hour, that means you’re making $25 per hour – not including preparation or driving time. That’s not bad at all.
Try mowing lawns to make money in college. It’s worth giving it a shot.
9. Housesitting
Summertime is also a great season to do some housesitting for folks vacationing at the beach (or wherever else they are). There are a few reasons why people want someone to housesit. Let’s explore them.
First, many people want someone to watch their house because they actually want them to watch their pets! Many pets don’t go on vacation (like cats), so they’ll need their litter box cleaned, water dish filled, and food dish filled on a regular basis. Sometimes this means coming at least once per day.
Second, some people like the idea of having someone they trust monitor the house for security purposes. While they probably won’t expect you to bust out your ninja moves on intruders, they will expect you to call them, the police, or the fire department should something suspicious or dangerous happen.
Some homeowners simply want someone to take care of the pets and monitor the home. If they’re cool with it, you can even do some studying for classes while you’re housesitting.
This job probably won’t pay very well if you look at it from the perspective of an hourly rate, but remember, you’re probably not doing very much while you’re there anyway.
Let people know you’re available to housesit by posting about it on bulletin boards at community centers and tell your friends and family.
10. Be a Virtual Assistant
Virtual assistants help business owners get more stuff done. What makes a great virtual assistant? Here’s what you need to know.
Great virtual assistants are fantastic at organization. They live and breathe it every day. Just about aspect of their lives are organized, and believe it or not, many successful entrepreneurs need the help of virtual assistants to keep everything going in the right direction.
The tasks a virtual assistant might help with might include but aren’t limited to:
- Organizing a business owner’s calendar.
- Managing virtual employees or freelancers.
- Maintaining a business task list.
- Orchestrating speaking engagements, meetings, or events.
- Completing research on behalf of the business owner.
- Reminding the business owner of their schedule to keep them on task.
These are just some of the main ways a virtual assistant can help. But there are others.
Virtual assistants are often skilled writers, designers, or tech experts. Sometimes they help lend their skills to build something online for the business owner.
Truly, how you define yourself as a virtual assistant matters. Seek out your very best skills, advertise them, and see what happens.
11. Blog!
Yes, you can make money blogging. If you would have asked me years ago if you could, I would have probably said no way. But today? Yeah, I would believe you.
That’s because I’ve found tremendous success with blogging. I believe you can make money blogging, and while it may take you several months or years to see results, it’s a fun and rewarding experience.
If you can write, and you’re passionate about a topic, you can blog. WordPress is a popular blogging platform you can use to create a free blog. If you want to host the website yourself, you’re probably going to have to pay a few bucks, but it’s worth it.
If you’re going to make money blogging, you have to have great content. Whatever you do, don’t write just for the sake of writing or earning money. Produce content that you can be proud of and will help other people.
It helps to get the advice of some other bloggers before you start. Study their tactics and discover what worked well for them. The most important tip I can give you is to never stop learning. Search engines are continually updating their search algorithms which in turn affects your website traffic. And, your website traffic affects your ability to earn money.
The other great thing about blogging? You can do it anytime, day or night. Many jobs require you to be at a certain place at a certain time. As a blogger, you can be anywhere there’s an internet connection and write anytime. It’s one of the most flexible jobs available.
So, if you aren’t pressed to make a lot of immediate income, and you like the idea of being free to work whenever it fits with your schedule, then blogging might be the ticket.
By the way, if you’re into finance and you want to blog about it, I encourage you to attend the Financial Blogger Conference. There, you’ll learn from top bloggers and financial experts about the topics that interest you. Why take the long road when you can attend a conference and learn from the best?
12. Drive for Uber
Have a nice car? Put it to good use and drive for Uber.
Uber is a company that connects riders with drivers – and drivers with riders! Uber allows riders to request a ride from their smartphone. That’s when you, the driver, gets a notification letting you know there’s someone that needs a ride.
You can track how much you earn as a driver through the Uber app, and best yet, you can set your own schedule. So, if you’re in college and meet Uber’s qualifications, this is a great opportunity for you.
You might also want to try driving for Lyft, a similar company.
Either way, you can make quite a bit of money as a driver for these services. Just make sure to check your local regulations to ensure you can operate as a driver in your area.
13. Become a Handyman
Are your friends always calling you up asking you how to fix this or that? Do you have more tools than your local hardware store? You just might be a handyman – why not put your skills to good use?
You can do all kinds of jobs as a handyman, including but not limited to: plumbing jobs, construction jobs, woodworking, and much more. Some of these jobs you might need to be licensed for, so be sure to check with your local government.
Just imagine the possibilities. You might have yourself two career paths to choose from by the time you’re done with college: to continue your handyman business or to follow the career related to your major. The choice will be yours! The more doors you have available to walk through in your career, the better.
14. Help Out at the College
Colleges love hiring students to do all kinds of tasks around campus. For example, you might help out with some of the janitorial duties or serve as a secretary or receptionist. You might enjoy overseeing a dormitory or providing security for the college. Make sure to ask your college about the opportunities that are available to you.
Professors also sometimes need help with some of the technical aspects of their jobs. Ask them to see if there’s anything they might need help with. You might help them with preparing slideshow presentations or creating homework documents.
The great thing about working at a college is that they understand you take classes and can’t be in two places at once. You might find the work programs are available after classes and/or on the weekends – exactly what you’re after!
Todd Tresidder of FinancialMentor.com worked a number of jobs for a university to help pay his living expenses. He cooked dinners for a fraternity, spent summertime digging steam trenches, and did other manual labor jobs and major maintenance projects. He used the cash to pay for his books and other expenses. He said working for the university was a fast way to make money because he could live for almost for free during the summer while housing prices were low.
Rachel of AdventuresinMobileHomes.com was hired by her school to take notes in class. These notes would then be repackaged and sold to students. What an excellent idea! Many students aren’t great notetakers, so why not see if your college would be interested in doing this for their students?
If you need to make money in college, don’t be so quick to take a minimum-wage job at a local big-box or fast food joint. Instead, think about what you can do – and what you like to do – and how you can turn that into an income source. That will enable you to both earn higher income, and have greater control of your time.
Source Good Financial Cents http://ift.tt/1SVYtnH
Want to Get a Better Deal Online? Abandon Your Shopping Cart. Here’s Why
On CardPool.com, I clicked on a $100 Home Depot card for sale for $94.
Buying discounted gift cards for places you plan to shop anyhow is like buying money on sale, and I had a lot of shopping to do at Home Depot. But a minor household emergency kept me from completing the order.
The next day, I received an email from CardPool.com encouraging me to complete the sale. It included a $5 coupon, almost doubling the original $6 discount on the card.
This has happened many times since with other retailers. I’ve learned to routinely abandon online shopping carts and complete my purchases a day or two later — often with a discount.
It’s basically a new form of a classic “walk away from the table” negotiation strategy. The idea is to get the other side to offer something to get you to come back.
Ready to give it a try? Here are some tips, along with a list of vendors known to offer a coupon or discount of some sort to win over reluctant shoppers who have abandoned their carts.
How to Properly Abandon Your Shopping Cart
You can try it with any online vendor or start with the ones listed below. But in order for retailers to send you that email begging you to return (and offering a discount), they need your email address.
Set up an account before you start shopping (if you don’t already have one), and be sure you’re logged in when you close your browser on your incomplete order.
At least one report suggests some companies may target only new customers with bribes for returning to complete their orders. So try this trick the first time you buy from a retailer: If you’re already a regular, open a new account with a different email address and you may be treated as a new customer.
Finally, marketing practices change often, and companies individualize their efforts according to your profile.
In other words, your results may vary.
In any case, it generally costs you nothing to try.
Retailers That Offer Discounts
Chicago Tribune, Shopify, Consumerist, Digiwonk, This Is Money and Rather-Be-Shopping.com have all reported on this strategy.
Here are some of the retailers that offer discounts, along with notes on what they’ve offered in the past.
- 10DollarMall.com: 10% off (sometimes 20% off)
- 1-800-Mattress: Various discounts
- Babies ‘R’ Us: Free shipping offer sent the next day
- Bass Pro Shops: $20 off a minimum $100 purchase
- Bed, Bath and Beyond: 20% off
- Best Buy: No specifics
- Birchbox.com: 20% off minimum $35 purchase
- Cafe Press: 20% off
- Coastal: Various discounts
- Crocs: 20% off
- Dick’s Sporting Goods: 10% off
- Dorco: 5% off
- GoDaddy.com: 30% off
- Guitar Center: Various discounts (possibly sent days later)
- Home Depot: No specifics
- JC Penney: Coupon codes sent if you leave after just viewing a few products
- J. Jill: $20 off a minimum $80 purchase
- Kate Spade: 15% off
- Land’s End: No specifics
- Levi’s: 20% off, and sometimes 25% off up to two days later
- Macy’s: 15% off coupons
- Nieman Marcus: 10% off
- Nomad: 15% off
- Office Max: Free shipping
- Overstock.com: Various discounts
- Princess Cruises: Large discounts offered when abandoning the cart after going through travel agencies
- Pro Flowers: 10% off (and possibly a free vase)
- Purity Products: 30% off and free shipping
- Sierra Trading Post: 35% off
- Shutterfly.com: 20% off
- Talkingfriends.com: 10% off
- Thinkgeek.com: $10 off minimum $50 order
- Toys ‘R’ Us: Free shipping offer sent the next day
- Urban Outfitters: 20% off
- Virgin Media: Various discounts
- Williams-Sonoma: Free shipping
- Zappos: No specifics
- Zazzle: Various discounts
Be Patient
I opened an account on Udemy and took one of the free classes. Then I considered some interesting classes that cost $40 or more, but abandoned my cart because I was too busy to commit fully to completing them.
Two weeks later, I started getting regular emails from Udemy offering a variety of classes for just $10 — some of which normally cost $100 or more.
I’ve received emails offering discounts within an hour after abandoning my shopping cart with some retailers, but it’s more common to see them the next day or even after several days. So, be prepared to wait.
Also, try again if this trick doesn’t work the first time with a given website. Some retailers change their policies often.
Your Turn: Have you ever received a coupon or discount for abandoning your shopping cart? Which retailers, and how much was the discount?
Steve Gillman is the author of “101 Weird Ways to Make Money” and creator of EveryWayToMakeMoney.com. He’s been a repo-man, walking stick carver, search engine evaluator, house flipper, tram driver, process server, mock juror and roulette croupier, but of more than 100 ways he has made money, writing is his favorite (so far).
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