Online companies. Many companies are hiring remote workers. You can do things like medical coding and billing, customer service, coding, software engineering, journalism and many other jobs from home. Some companies are even hiring doctors or psychologists to provide services over the internet instead of in a traditional office setting. As people become more comfortable with working online, the workplace is adjusting. Companies have found that remote workers are actually more productive and they can cut costs by not having a building.
Entering competitions of course comes with no guarantees, but there is a growing community of so-called 'compers' in the UK consistently making up to £50,000 a year through all sorts of competitions.
You should create a blog about something that interests you or something you are very knowledgeable about. You can even make a blog and sell products, which is yet another way to generate some income. For instance, if you’re a beauty blogger, you can create an online shop to sell different products such as skin care, hair, nail polish or even DIY creations.
Bruce Houghton is Founder and Editor of Hypebot and MusicThinkTank and serves as a Senior Advisor to Bandsintown which acquired both publications in 2019. He is also the Founder and President of the Skyline Artists Agency and a professor at the Berklee College Of Music online.
Making money from blogging
There are more inventive ways of making money nowadays than ever before. There’s something on this list for everyone, whether you want to start a thrift shop or are just a hard-working person in need of some additional income.
Newspaper, Radio, and TV buildings are also a great way to help bring in profit. Radio can reach nearly every home, but TV can only reach homes powered by electricity. Banks and Offices help bring in profit as well. Since each citizens' happiness is inevitably going to decline, it can also be helpful to build entertainment, preferably taverns. Just be sure to build them as close to the Bunkhouses as possible, to save time.
A job ‘boom’ that didn’t pan out