We hear from many people that they are “stuck in their jobs” and feel that they will be trapped in that rat race forever, afraid to join the growing
ranks of the unemployed and those displaced from their homes. They
believe that they will forever – or as long as the current paradigm
holds out – have to face that daily commute, with their income fixed by
whatever future raises of which their employers feel they are worthy.
But we are here to tell you that there are many ways to free yourself from that grind.
With the institution of “Obama-care” many employers are cutting
employees’ hours – or just closing their doors altogether – because they
can’t afford the required “benefits package”.
Even many of the “work-at-home” offerings on the Internet still make
you reliant on a large company for your daily bread, requiring that you
have a phone to make telemarketing calls to their prospective clients or
sit at your computer all day answering complaints as a customer service
representative. The biggest benefit in these types of schemes is to
the company that doesn’t have to list you as an employee per se, and so
does not have to offer you benefits. Working for yourself, in your own
home, having control of how much money
you can make based on how much time and effort you decide to put into
it is the key to personal freedom. Here are some ways you can break
free.
Ebay.com (or other “auction” sites such as ioffer.com, bitcoin.com,
etc.) can be used as a viable income stream. Consider going to local
yard sales, flea markets, estate
sales and such and purchasing items that can be sold on auction sites.
How do you know what will sell on eBay, for example? Do a search for
those types of items that you generally find locally and see how they
are doing. Go to the Advanced Search section, where you can see not
only what is selling in that category, but you can see how much they
have sold for, say in the last 30 days, as well as what items don’t sell
at all. If you see that porcelain tea pots are selling for about $10,
you will know not to purchase one locally for $20 and expect a profit.
There are still many people who are not completely “computer
literate” enough, or who don’t have the time themselves to sell a few of
their own items on these sites. Put up flyers in your neighborhood
offering your services as an auction site seller to them for a
percentage of the sale price. Don’t forget that there are listing and
other fees involved that you must account for. Generally, you want to
have the item owner pay the fees whether the item sells or not. What
commission is typical (and fair)? Items that don’t easily sell (and may
take multiple times to list) can garner commissions between 20% and
50%. Popularly selling items can get between 10% and 20%. High-ticket
items (cars, boats, etc.) generally get 10% commissions.
A great opportunity for finding items to sell on auction sites are
retail stores. These days many retail stores have stock that is just
not moving at their retail location and would be happy to either sell
you those items in bulk for a substantial discount, or simply give it to
you on consignment (to be paid when it sells or returned if it
doesn’t). Last year we bought $120 Minnetonkas for $20 on eBay, new in
the box – obviously an overstock purchase that the resourceful seller
had made, and made a profit on. Hardware stores, crafts stores and
jewelry stores are some of the good retail locations to check out for
doing this. Don’t be afraid to ask. Walk through your local mall or
local strip-mall shopping center and ask to see the owner or manager of
each of the stores. It won’t do you any good to talk with a sales clerk
who can’t make that kind of decision. The owners of these stores are
business-people who would be glad to reduce their inventories, even at
less than their marked prices. You’d be doing them a service. There’s
nothing better than a win-win situation!
Another way you can work for yourself is to learn a trade that has
value to the public. One such trade that is actually simple enough to
learn is watch repair. You can have your own watch repair business
many ways: at home via mail order, as a contractor at a retail jewelry
store, or in a battery-changing kiosk or flea market set-up. You can
also offer watch repair services to the public on the Internet.
Very few retail jewelers have a watchmaker on staff. Most watches
that are brought in for service are mailed by the jeweler to a
“tradeshop” (you), where they are repaired and mailed back to the
jeweler (with appropriate insurance, of course). We know people who
live in densely populated areas who leave flyers in apartment and office
buildings offering watch repairs with pick-up and delivery service and
were quite successful.
With knowledge of watch repair you can also purchase non-working
watches at very low cost, many of which need only a 25-cent battery and a
little clean-up, that you can re-sell at yard sales or flea markets for
less than the cost of a new watch and still make a good profit. You can
place a low-cost classified ad saying that you buy non-working watches.
Quartz watches are very profitable to repair and very easy to do. Most
people don’t know that batteries cost around 25 cents each or that most
quartz watches can be repaired with a replacement movement that can
cost as little as $5.
This is also a great business for stay-at-home Moms. One such course that will get you on your way is available here or on Kindle.
Yet another service you can offer is computer repair. If you are
handy enough to take apart and/or rebuild laptop computers, replace bios
batteries, swap components, you can offer this service at lower prices
than factory service centers. Auctions sites are replete with
non-working laptops that can be bought at very low cost that will supply
you with working parts that you can use. Many office supply stores
and electronics stores charge $50 just to tell the customer what is
wrong with the computer. Again, flyers, low-cost classified ads and
word-of-mouth can get you as much business as you can handle.
With as many guns as are currently being sold, if you have any gunsmithing skills you will be in high demand.
These are just some of the self-employment opportunities that are out
there waiting for you. And you can begin any of these as a part-time
ventures while you still hold onto your job – until you don’t need it
anymore. Once you get going in your own home business, you will have the freedom to live where you choose, and to make as much money
as you are willing to put in the time and effort for in offering your
service. Being your own boss is much more rewarding than working for
someone else.
We wish you all love and freedom.
Dan & Sheila are the authors of Surviving Survivalism – How to Avoid Survivalism Culture Shock, available at survivingsurvivalism.com.
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