How to Make Money
The most interesting money stories from the last few days all point in the same direction: listeners who are making the most right now are combining fast-moving tech with very specific niches, then distributing what they know online at scale. On the work-from-home side, the hottest wave is building lean “one‑person media businesses” around short‑form video and newsletters. Creators are openly sharing that they’re clearing six figures by niching down into things like AI tools for small businesses, ultra‑specific investing strategies, or even commenting on viral sports and pop‑culture moments, then monetizing with sponsorships, paid communities, and digital products. Business outlets are highlighting solo operators who use TikTok, YouTube Shorts, and email lists as their primary funnel, often starting with nothing more than a phone and a clear angle. AI is still the biggest multiplier. Tech and business press over the past few days have been featuring freelancers who quietly use tools like ChatGPT, Claude, and Midjourney to run “agency‑style” services by themselves: churning out SEO blog posts, sales emails, product descriptions, social media calendars, video scripts, and simple website copy. The pattern is simple: pick a narrow problem, promise speed and volume, price on retainers, and use AI to do 80% of the work while charging traditional agency rates. Another emerging lane is AI automation for non‑technical founders. Recent startup stories describe people with no coding background using no‑code tools and AI agents to build small automations for local businesses: things like automated lead follow‑up for realtors, review‑response bots for restaurants, or AI assistants that answer common customer questions for clinics and salons. They charge monthly subscriptions, stack a few dozen clients, and effectively operate a tiny SaaS from home. In e‑commerce, commentators are talking about a shift from random drop‑shipping toward “micro‑brands” with personality. The best performers are pairing AI‑assisted product research with on‑demand manufacturing and then using viral, story‑driven content to sell. Instead of faceless stores, they position as a person solving a specific problem, like ergonomic products for remote workers or clever accessories for niche hobbies. There are also fresh stories of people making a lot in short bursts by spotting cultural spikes. With the NBA Finals, for example, sports business outlets are highlighting resellers and small merch brands who capitalized on New York’s championship run with hyper‑targeted designs and limited drops, selling out inventory in days. Others are flipping event tickets, digital collectibles, or creating timely recap content that explodes in ad revenue and sponsorship deals. Across all of these, the “latest and greatest” isn’t a single trick; it’s a playbook. Move quickly on trends, use AI to compress the time between idea and execution, pick a niche small enough to dominate, and then build a repeatable system around it so you are not just trading hours for dollars. Thanks for tuning in, and make sure to subscribe. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3Qs For more check out http://www.quietplease.ai
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