Learn how to get paid to answer questions in 2017 with 16 ways to do it. Go to http://selfmadesuccess.com/paid-answer-questions/ for video notes, related content, tips, and helpful resources mentioned. Let’s Connect! Twitter – https://twitter.com/MrJustinBryant Google+ – https://plus.google.com/+JustinBryantentrepreneur In this video, you will learn how to get paid to answer questions in 2017 using 16 ways. Sometimes websites like Yahoo Answers and Quora just aren’t enough for the more complex questions people have. Enjoy the video and let me know what you think in the comments below! https://www.facebook.com/mrjustinbryant
LEGIT WAYS TO MAKE MONEY ONLINE FROM HOME: There Internet marketplace is full of opportunities to make money online from home. In this video we show you 10 great, legit ways! 👉 FOR MORE INTERESTING TOP10-VIDEOS, SUBSCRIBE TO OUR CHANNEL: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCsUi1io7yqhbHHXrQ4ANQzQ?sub_confirmation=1 Money might not be able to buy happiness but it sure does make things easier. But with the comforts one’s home gives, many people don’t feel like having to talk to people they might not like, working every day from 9 to 5, or working for a boss who is anything but kind. People want to work from home! Well it is a good thing that the Internet marketplace is full of opportunities. But which sites should you use, and what jobs should you apply for? That is hopefully something we will answer today. Here is our list of 10 legit ways to make money online. The first three sites we are going to look at are all freelance sites, meaning that they are made for all kinds of jobs; you just have to look for them. We will tell you how the three sites differ as well as what some of the best jobs to apply for are. 1. Upwork Upwork might be the biggest freelance site on this list so there are more than enough offers to choose from. It operates based on “connects” which you use to apply for jobs. Each job can cost anywhere between 1 and 6 connects with a singular connect being priced at $0.15. This means that you will need a starting budget of a few dollars to properly work on Upwork; however, it is worth the cost. The jobs are pretty fairly priced, you can see how other people have rated your employer, how much money they have spent on the site and if they have a verified payment method. The money for the project is also placed in a third-party wallet, which means that the jobs are safe and you can’t be scammed easily. 2. People per hour Very similar to Upwork in the sense that employers post offers for which you can bid but the site overall is much more beginner friendly. The site doesn’t have “connects” but rather “proposals”. You get 15 proposals at the beginning of the month and regardless of how much you spend, you will have 15 at the beginning of the next month as well. So you can’t bid for every project on the site but you also don’t need a dime to start. But your time to start is limited as what I have stated only applies to the first 3 months after which, if you have not gotten a single job, you will have to pay to stay on the site. They counteract this by giving you tons of proposals for jobs you may be interested in, hence boosting your odds of finding the right project for you. They also have a function that doesn’t allow you to sell yourself short, as there is a minimum you can bid for a project based on what the value of the project is calculated to be. This means that even if you wanted to you couldn’t work 20 hours for $5. 3. Fiverr Fiverr differs from the last two as you don’t search for projects but rather you just post what you offer to your potential clients. You specify what you can do, in what time and at what cost and clients come to you. This is a great pick for people who don’t feel like writing a thousand cover letters and looking for a project all day. The site is completely free and there is no limit to how many clients you can work with. Now as far as jobs to get on these 3 freelance sites I highly recommend voice acting and content writing. They are both sought after like crazy and with minimum prior experience needed. For content writing, I do however recommend finishing a Search Engine Optimization (SEO) course online to boost your chances. Don’t worry you have free tests online which you can do in a few days. 4. Rev Rev is specialized for two jobs choices: transcriptions and captioning. You are paid on average about 50 cents per audio minute so how much you make is entirely up to you. There are no special requirements except headphones, as you will need to hear the audio clearly. It can be a bit difficult to be accepted to join the freelance team but once you do, it is smooth sailing. 5. Livingston Research This site is perfect if you are good at writing academic essays. You do have to pass some trial projects first but after you are accepted you can pick and choose what topics you would like to write about from the list of offerings. The topics are diverse and can be anything from analyzing poetry to finance writing. The pay is solid and the operators, who are your link to your client, are very professional and kind. 6. ProofreadingServices As the name would suggest this site deals with proofreading…. #makemoney #makemoneyonline #earnmoney —————————————————————– Link to this video: https://youtu.be/SP2nAAdgtDo
Sorry for not posting recently, I was at my grandma’s house who doesn’t have computers. It wasn’t total vacation though; in preparation for today, I used my free time to write around 15 articles that I plan to post on infobarrel. I already got one approved 🙂 Later I decided not to use hubpages because most of the information I read online has favored infobarrel. I accidentally found a new site names BestReviewer where you get 100% of the income from your articles, have lower requirements and standards for articles, and seem like a great place for back links. The only downsides are that you have to pay to sign up and also the fact that i’m not sure how reliable this site is. I will make a video about it when I get the time to try it. *** I don’t own the music***
BuzzFeed’s fifth-highest traffic driver for quizzes is a teen from Michigan named Rachel McMahon who said she’s just “struggling to get through college.” #buzzfeed #BuzzfeedLayoffs #RachelMcMahon #quiz Rachel McMahon, 19, told The Post that since 2017, she’s written about 692 quizzes for BuzzFeed — for free. Her quizzes have earned the company at least $200,000, but all she ever got from them in return is some $30 Amazon gift cards and swag, like T-shirts and mugs. Check out her quizzes here: https://www.buzzfeed.com/raechilling From ‘This girl made BuzzFeed bundles of cash — and all she got was a lousy T-shirt’ – https://nypost.com/2019/01/31/this-girl-made-buzzfeed-millions-and-all-she-got-was-a-lousy-t-shirt/ “They’re taking advantage of your hobby,” McMahon said. McMahon said in a Twitter post that she felt bad if her free content contributed to BuzzFeed’s recent layoffs, which prompted Ryan Houlihan, a consultant at Input magazine, to tweet in response: “Between April 2017 and December 2018, Rachel drove a conservative estimate of $3.8 million in revenue for BuzzFeed (or 1 percent of their entire 2018 revenue). For free.” BuzzFeed takes issue with Houlihan’s assessment, telling The Post it “indicates we sell against CPMs — which we don’t, and certainly not a rate of $12. We sell against RPM through programmatic sales and the actual figure her posts would have generated is about $200K — real money, to be sure, but not material to our business.” McMahon — who once earned 851,000 views on a single quiz — said she knew she was making BuzzFeed money but never knew how much, adding that she made the quizzes in her high school yearbook class “for fun.” “I don’t know — BuzzFeed might as well not have these people at all, because they would just pay their workers, but know they’re just going to rely on what sounds like the community members for free,” she said. “Like it was for fun for me, but now they’re firing all these hard workers who have put in so much time and effort, and they’ve helped us so much, and I just don’t think it’s really right for them to not have to pay like anyone especially when they’re this big company with all this money.” McMahon added that she was “confused” when she first heard about the BuzzFeed layoffs. She later visited Matthew Perpetua’s FluxBlog and saw an entry on the blog about the mass firings that mentioned a 19-year-old girl from Michigan. “‘That’s me — that’s not good,’” she recalled thinking. “When I read that, I just felt this weight on my shoulders, I was like, ‘I am probably a big reason for this.’” At the time of the interview, McMahon said she hadn’t been able to get in touch with anyone at BuzzFeed and that she found it “weird” that no one from the company tried to reach out to her. BuzzFeed said they’ve since been in touch with her. McMahon said if she could have a conversation with the CEO of BuzzFeed, Jonah Peretti, she’d be nervous because “he’s a very powerful man,” but that she’d probably ask for “some form of payment or just something more for the community users who are doing this.” McMahon, a sophomore at Grand Valley State University, said the most eye-opening aspect of the experience is learning how many job opportunities there are for her out there. “I didn’t know how I could use my talents to do anything. There’s a lot more things out there that I can do than I first imagined, and it makes me feel a lot better,” she said. BuzzFeed spoke highly of McMahon’s contributions. “Rachel is a phenomenal creator with an intuitive understanding of what makes quizzes so irresistible, and we’d be all too lucky to hire her when she graduates from college,” the company told The Post in a statement. The New York Post is your source for breaking news, news about New York, sports, business, entertainment, opinion, real estate, culture, fashion, and more. Catch the latest news and gossip here: https://nypost.com/ Follow The New York Post on: Twitter – https://twitter.com/nypost Facebook – https://www.facebook.com/NYPost
Amazon paid $0 in federal income taxes in 2018. On top of that, the company also received a multi-million dollar tax rebate from the federal government. How does the company do it? President Trump’s tax cuts, aggressive revenue reinvestment, years of R&D, and employee stock compensation all helped. Does America have a corporate income tax problem? Amazon is one of the world’s most valuable companies, valued at nearly $800 billion, and the e-commerce giant pulled in $232.9 billion in global revenue in 2018. And yet, Amazon’s federal tax bill this year: $0. For the second year in a row. In fact, Amazon is actually getting a federal tax refund of $129 million this year, due in part to a combination of tax credits and deductions. This is despite the fact that Amazon nearly doubled its taxable income in 2018 to $11.2 billion, from $5.6 billion a year earlier. In other words, Amazon is basically paying a -1 percent federal income tax rate this year after reportedly paying a federal rate of more than 11 percent between 2011 and 2016, according to The Week. Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., who has criticized Amazon in the past for not paying higher federal taxes, took to Twitter to point out that any Amazon Prime member paid more for that program’s annual fee ($119) than the company paid in federal taxes. Prime has 100 million subscribers. “Amazon pays all the taxes we are required to pay in the U.S. and every country where we operate, including paying $2.6 billion in corporate tax and reporting $3.4 billion in tax expense over the last three years,” an Amazon spokesperson said in a statement provided to CNBC Make It. Amazon reported its sizable federal refund in a recent corporate filing for the company’s fourth-quarter earnings report. However, Amazon also notes in that filing that it will pay $756 million in total taxes this year, between state and international taxes. A report this week from the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy, or ITEP, a nonpartisan and nonprofit tax policy think tank, pointed out the fact that Amazon will not pay federal taxes for the second year in a row. In fact, last year, Amazon received an even larger refund, getting $137 million from the federal government. » Subscribe to CNBC: http://cnb.cx/SubscribeCNBC » Subscribe to CNBC TV: http://cnb.cx/SubscribeCNBCtelevision » Subscribe to CNBC Classic: http://cnb.cx/SubscribeCNBCclassic About CNBC: From ‘Wall Street’ to ‘Main Street’ to award winning original documentaries and Reality TV series, CNBC has you covered. Experience special sneak peeks of your favorite shows, exclusive video and more. Connect with CNBC News Online Get the latest news: http://www.cnbc.com/ Follow CNBC on LinkedIn: https://cnb.cx/LinkedInCNBC Follow CNBC News on Facebook: http://cnb.cx/LikeCNBC Follow CNBC News on Twitter: http://cnb.cx/FollowCNBC Follow CNBC News on Instagram: http://cnb.cx/InstagramCNBC #CNBC #Amazon #Taxes How Amazon Paid $0 Federal Income Tax in 2018
How to make up to 🔸$1000🔹on your smartphone for ➡️FREE⬅️ with a app called FeaturePoints for free gift cards &‼️PayPal Cash‼️ Check it out: 🎁💰💸http://featu.re/YDDF33. Use my link for bonus points.🆕🆓✅ Your gettin paid💵👌🏼 to download apps and try them for 2mins📲⏲and play games🎮 No personal info needed🚷,No cards needed💳🚫,No money or addresses needed💵🏠🚫,They dont even want ur name🚫, They just want u to put this code and email to pay u📲📧💰, Use this code “YDDF33” for a free 50 points to start.📲📶
http://workersonboard.com Sign up to get paid to do simple tasks online through your Paypal account. Cloud Crowd pays you to write, blog, research, translate, data entry and more. For work at home jobs posted weekly go to http://workersonboard.com
Here’s how to get paid to write reviews online at up to $100 each. Go to https://selfmadesuccess.com/paid-write-reviews/ for video notes, related content, tips, and helpful resources mentioned. ——————————- YouTube Tools I Use: Tubebuddy – https://www.tubebuddy.com/selfmadesuccess VidIQ – https://vidiq.com/#_l_16b ——————————- Let’s Connect! Twitter – https://twitter.com/MrJustinBryant Facebook – https://www.facebook.com/mrjustinbryant Pinterest – https://www.pinterest.com/mrjustinbryant/ Instagram – @MrJustinBryant ——————————- Enjoy the video! Let me know what you think, ask me a question, or suggest something I cover in the future in the comments below! I’d love to hear from you! Disclaimer: Some links on this page contain affiliate links in which I get paid a commission if a purchase is made. I only endorse products or services I’ve used or gotten great feedback from. In most cases, I endorse products without being an affiliate or receiving any compensation and would never recommend anything if I had concerns that you might not be satisfied with it.