I’ve spent most of my life devising wacky and occasionally reasonable schemes for making money.
- MyPoints is a rewards website that offers you tons of ways to earn gift cards for free. It also features coupons too. Watch videos, shop online, read emails, share your opinion and more, and you’ll earn points. Points can be redeemed for cards from 70 different retail and restaurant brands.
- American site Fiverr.com lets you earn money by doing anything from writing a sweet ukelele jingle to creating a custom cartoon character. You can net $4 (roughly £2.50) each time you do one of a wide variety of small tasks. It won’t turn you into a millionaire overnight but it’s a great way to earn pennies in a pinch. Get paid to buy booze.
As an artist with an interest in business, I’ve often found myself wedged between the two seemingly alien worlds.
Earning money from creative expression has always been a contentious issue because many think that money impinges on the integrity of the creative work.
In other words, “trying to make money from art makes art worse.”
In this way, the brief defines the edges of your creative expression. “Making money is art and working is art and good business is the best art.” -Andy Warhol. With more and more tools and platforms becoming available, there are many ways you can earn, and multiple angles through which the same skill can create income.
But, as I’ve argued in a few other articles, I believe it is the opposite. Making money forces you to think within limitations. As creativity is aided by restriction, this actually encourages it.
Whether writing a work of fiction, painting a picture or designing a corporate logo, you must create for yourself first, and your audience second.
If you do it for income, you create in a way that engages you within the boundaries of what an audience will pay for.
In this way, the brief defines the edges of your creative expression.
“Making money is art and working is art and good business is the best art.” -Andy Warhol
With more and more tools and platforms becoming available, there are many ways you can earn, and multiple angles through which the same skill can create income.
With all this in mind, I’ve brainstormed a list of all the ways I can think of for artistic people to make money.
I wanted to have a reference for all the strategies we can use to create income in one place.
These are from my memory, there will be overlaps, and some of the elements can be chopped and replaced with other points. Feel free to add new ideas in the comments.
The biggest challenge, of course, is developing a skill in the first place, choosing a strategy, and making it work.
Sell a Service
“Success seems to be connected with action. Successful people keep moving. They make mistakes, but they don’t quit.”— Conrad Hilton
1. Be commissioned directly by a client to create a creative work from scratch. These can be individuals, companies, charities and government organisations.
2. Work with- and be paid by an agent to create something, who liaises with their client.
3. Bid for paid creative projects with clients online on sites like Upwork.
4. Offer smaller, shorter-duration creative services on sites like Fiverr or Outsourcely, and then providing the option to up-sell* to larger projects.
5. Work in-house for a company as a creative employee full-time, part-time or on a contractual basis.
6. Get paid for street art, and interior/exterior mural painting and design.
7. Advise individuals and companies on their creative process and artistic projects such as interior design, or audio/visual projects.
8. Be a consultant or teacher in the skill of creativity itself, which I guarantee will experience a huge growth in the coming years in many industries. [See the work of Edward de Bono.]
9. Start your own creative company, working with other talent to provide creative services for companies.
“People who do “lowly” jobs with love and energy find themselves being promoted and offered other “better” jobs very quickly. Because they understand what Robert Frost meant when he said, “The way out is through.” — Steve Chandler
10. Be an agent to help sell the work of other creatives for a commission.
11. Curate the work of other artists on a blog, in a magazine, or a gallery, and sell their work or other products for a commission.
12. Work as a therapist or councillor, using art, music as a tool for therapy.
13. Be paid to document, photograph and report on creative events such as art shows or music events.
14. Host and organise creative events like art shows, performances, talks, and conferences, and charge for tickets.
Sell Products
“Opportunities don’t happen. You create them.” — Chris Grosser
15. Write and sell a book about your art process.
16. Write and sell books about your experiences as a creative.
17. Write and sell articles or being paid by publications to write them.
18. Syndicate your written work, cartoons or comics to various publications for a fee.
19. Write and sell stories in articles and books.
20. Make and sell an app with a story and pictures.
21. Make a digital product like a website template that can be sold repeatedly.
22. Sell original art and products in galleries, retail outlets, and online.
23. Sell prints or replications of your art without limit.
24. Sell prints or replications up to a limited run to increase value but losing the ability to sell the product when the limit is reached.
25. Build a game or application from scratch or through collaborating with others, to sell.
26. Build a game or application for sale using pre-existing open-source or un-copyrighted code as a foundation for a new product.
27. Sell licenses to individual creations such as designs, code, audio and video that can be sold for varying fees depending on the commercial usage.
28. Sell stock design, art, video, audio and others on stock sites.
29. Join a creative ensemble or collective that pools resources to sell all products.
“The way to get started is to quit talking and begin doing.” — Walt Disney
How To Make Money Online Legitimately
30. Create a small portion of a creative work, like a book or a game and using crowdfunding to finance it’s completion, continuing to make money from sales after the product is done.
31. Use crowdfunding to fund new episodes, iterations, upgrades and editions of previously completed creative works.
32. Collaborate with creatives to produce a magazine or ‘zine’ for sale or subscription, or make yourself.
33. Earn a commission through sales of other people’s art, courses and products.
How To Create Money Online
34. Build a newsletter that sells your art and courses, provides useful content about your work process, and sells other people’s products.
35. Sell your art at public events like trade-shows, conferences, yard sales, exhibitions, outdoor markets, car boot sales, and art fairs.
36. Sell your art door to door, office to office.
37. Sell your products via retailers on- and offline.
38. Sell your art (or promoting your newsletter or profiles) through social media advertising.
39. Host and sell creative courses produced by others for a commission.
40. Send your designs to be manufactured into products like bags and vinyl toys for sale.
41. 3D-print your ideas or those of others to sell as physical products.
42. Print your art on other products like mugs and t-shirts for sale as merchandise.
43. Pay other creative minds to make products like games, children’s books and illustrations, and then selling their products.
44. Set up a shop, stall or retail space to sell other people’s creative products.
45. Illicit urban adornments like street stenciling and murals and earning from photographs of the art, or from the art itself (see Banksy. An idea, not an encouragement. Do this at your own risk).
46. Collaborate with others to help create any of the products mentioned above and use the power of combined promotion to sell more.
Entertain
“I cannot give you the formula for success, but I can give you the formula for failure — It is: Try to please everybody.” — Herbert Bayard Swope
47. Make films or video skits that entertain, and earn from adverts, premium content, sponsorship and up-sells*.
48. Make comics to build a following, which can then be sold products to (see the Oatmeal or Gemma Correll who sell books, games, posters and merchandise to their following).
“Some people dream of success while others wake up and work.” — Unknown
49. Participatory entertainment like playing video games online and earning from sponsorship or more [see Pewdiepie].
50. Write fictional stories online to grow an audience, offering premium content like additional stories and books for sale.
51. Create entertaining audio/radio/podcast shows and sell products and advertise/be sponsored through the show.
52. Be hired to perform live performance art at events, festivals or hotels and resorts, such as dance, live mural art, painting, music, singing.
53. Work with companies to create art for publicity or advertisements like street paintings, crop circle art, or installations.
54. Busk and street entertainment for donations.
Teach
“Don’t be distracted by criticism. Remember — the only taste of success some people get is to take a bite out of you.”— Zig Ziglar
55. Document your creative work process online and accept donations from your audience to continue.
56. Document your creations online and get paid for the advertising or charging for access to extra material.
57. Charge for teaching sessions via webinars, or sell your products and courses through hosting free webinars, like my friend Tom Kuegler.
58. Create written/audio/visual online courses for sale.
59. Create exclusive courses for other companies like Skillshare who will promote the course for you.
60. Make videos or podcasts about your art or art and charge for episodes, premium episodes, earn from advertising, or use the content to sell your products.
61. Write a blog and charge for premium articles.
62. The above applied to video and audio, and charge for premium content, including coaching and online seminars.
63. Teach/coach groups or individuals in real life or over the web. All it takes is to be one step ahead for others to gain value that they’d be willing to pay for.
“The secret of success is to do the common thing uncommonly well.” — John D. Rockefeller Jr.
64. Charge for workshops and promote them yourself.
65. Lecture and give classes and workshops at schools and universities.
66. Tutor, teach people one-to-one at their homes or in coffee shops or co-working spaces.
67. Be paid for giving talks and lectures about your art at conferences or do them for free and build an audience to sell to.
68. Coach and mentor others for a fee.
69. Create and charge for membership content such as training or entertainment.
[*Up-sell = a product or service sold as an additional option following previous content shared or sold.]
Clearly there are a lot of options out there. Hopefully this will stir up some new ideas for creating income from your art and creative experience that others can benefit from.
These can all be helpful for several useful income streams. My advice, however, is over the long term to focus on a particular area of expertise, and to develop mastery and build value in that one area.
I’m sure there a more ideas, and I welcome any new ideas in the comments.
Have you ever stood in the middle of your living room, your hands clinging to a pair of inside-out turned pockets, and exclaimed, “There’s GOT to be something I can do to make a quick couple of quid?”
No? Just me? Alrighty then, moving on…
Believe it or not, there are so many ways you can boost your income. The problem is that many ideas simply sound too weird or wacky to ever be taken seriously. Never fear! Your friendly neighbourhood money geeks have found a bunch of ideas that might just be crazy enough to work…
[July 2016 update: Yes, we’ve done it… 20 weird and wonderful ways to make money part two and part three!]
1. Trade in empty ink cartridges for cash
I’m no statistisst-isst-ician (yes, that’s a word) but I’m pretty confident that most homes in Britain have empty ink cartridges lying at the bottom of a drawer.
Instead of letting your ink cartridges languish away in the shadows send them to The Recycling Factory, who will pay you up to £4.10 per empty cartridge. Printer Cartridge Recycling lets you fill an online ‘basket’ with your empties and start paying back when it hits £5. You could even have a cheeky rummage through your friend and family’s old printers when they’re not looking (just kidding…obviously).
2. Get paid for your holiday snapshots
Stock photos can get samey, so businesses are always looking for brand new images to buy. Why not cash in?
You don’t have to be a camera wizard to take photos worth paying for. If you have some digital snaps with decent resolution, consider selling them to online agencies such as Fotolia and 123rf. Every time someone buys one of your pictures you’ll get a royalty fee, and the subject matter can cover anything you want (within reason).
(Are you planing on jetting off somewhere? Here’s how to plan a fantastic holiday on a budget!)
3. Become a life model
You don’t need to have the body of an Adonis to become a work of art. Local colleges and universities constantly cry out for body types of all shapes, size and age as subject matter for their Da Vincis in the making. Some models earn around £10 per hour, and you may even be able to pick your favourite drawing to take home and keep!
(Hobbies are great for your wellbeing and can even give a little boost to your income. Find out how to make extra money through your hobbies!)
4. Sell your hair
Since the dawn of time, long hair has been a hallmark of a woman’s beauty (the occasional man too – romance novel model Fabio Lanzoni springs to mind). Hair extensions are more popular than ever, so if you have lovely long locks you can cash in!
Hop on Gumtree and you’ll find a plethora of ads from wigmakers willing to pay cold hard cash for your hair. It’s also worth contacting your local colleges and hair salons to see if they need ‘hair models’ to fine-tune their craft on.
5. Rent your back garden out to campers
If you live in a leafy or rural area and have a large back garden or patch of land here’s a clever way to make some quick cash while the sun’s shining: rent out your lawn to some happy campers!
AirBNB is an online hub that allows folks to list their back garden for camping. This is great news for holidaymakers wanting to set up camp for a relatively cheap price.
It’s free to list your garden as a potential camping spot, and you can even choose the amount you want to charge to campers (you pay 3% upon a successful booking), so everyone wins!
6. Flog it for a fiver
Ever wondered how you can make a quick few bob from your writing, acting or drawing skills? Maybe you’re a master photo retoucher or you’re happy to wear someone’s logo on your face for a day.
American site Fiverr.com lets you earn money by doing anything from writing a sweet ukelele jingle to creating a custom cartoon character. You can net $4 (roughly £2.50) each time you do one of a wide variety of small tasks. It won’t turn you into a millionaire overnight but it’s a great way to earn pennies in a pinch.
7. Get paid to buy booze
Got an 18-19 year old skulking around the house? Maybe you are that 18-19 year old, stuck indoors on a sunny day with no cash. If you’d sooner be down the pub with your mates, you can now get paid for it!
Serve Legal needs young folk to find out if pubs are serving people who could potentially be underage. It’s a paid gig and your drinks and travel costs are also covered. Find out how to apply.
8. Take some tourists sightseeing
You love where you live, and you love to show it off when far-off friends or family come to visit. You probably also hate falling into ‘tourist traps’ when you yourself go on holiday, so why not help others avoid them too?
Sign up to Vayable and put together a cheap and cheerful tour that visitors will love. You get to set your own rates for what each tourist will pay (Vayable take a 3% cut) while showing off what you believe are your hometown’s best features.
Get some punters through the doors of your favourite family-run pub, or take them to that little-known local pencil museum you’ve been meaning to check out (okay, maybe not that last one, but you get the idea). Who knows? You make some out-of-town friends who can give you a tour around their home town in return!
9. Earn clubcard points for empty cans
We found this great tip on MoneySavingExpert.com. Instead of putting your empty drinks cans out for the dustman, take them to Tesco and trade them in for Clubcard points. They’re worth 1p in store but up to four times as much if you redeem them on things such as days out or breakdown cover, so it’s really worth doing.
All you need to do is check that your local Tesco has a recycling service. Go to the Tesco store locator to find a Tesco near you. If it has a recycling logo under the store name, you’re sorted!
10. Sell your trees
James told me that one of our debt advisors recently sold a monkey puzzle tree from her back garden on eBay.
Firstly, monkey puzzle trees are the weirdest looking trees ever*. Secondly, selling your unwanted shrubbery makes total sense. Trees take ages – sometimes half a century – to grow into anything remotely impressive. Ain’t nobody got time for that!
If you’re debating taking a hacksaw to your hawthorn, check first to see if someone’s willing to dig it up and cart it off for you. Better yet, they’ll pay you for the privilege.
(*MoneyAware does not share the opinions of the writer. We’re actually big fans of the majestic monkey puzzle tree.)
11. Refer a friend that’s perfect for the job
We all have that one fantastic friend who’s hardworking, loyal, and pretty much the bees knees, if only they could net the perfect job!
Should you have such a pal (or are that pal), then jobsearch site Refermehappy wants to hear from you. Join as either a ‘referrer’ or a ‘friend’ and you’ll get a referral bonus from the company should your friend get hired for a job you connect them up with.
12. Answer some bizarre text messages
If you’re a bit of a texting fiend, then this tip is for you. ChaCha lets people text any question – no matter how random – and can get an answer back in minutes. If you reply to these questions, you get paid!
It couldn’t be simpler. Log in to ChaCha to answer questions ranging from ‘What Pokemon takes less steps to hatch?’ to ‘How do I make myself more attractive?’. Again, at 15p per question, it’s a ‘slow and steady wins the race’ way to boost your income but hey, who doesn’t like racking up some pennies on a lazy afternoon at home? Plus, it’s fun and educational – or funducational! (Sorry.)
13. Reclaim lost assets
Ever wondered if your eccentric great-uncle was really a famous explorer with a stash of pirate doubloons in his attic? No? Well maybe you should!
Up to £15 billion pounds of unclaimed financial assets are collecting dust right now in forgotten UK bank accounts, pensions, life assurance and investments – yet most are easy to reclaim. Whether the account’s yours or a deceased relative’s, it’s worth reading through this brilliant guide on MoneySavingExpert.com and finding out how to reclaim lost assets you may be entitled to.
Bonus tip: did you know you can reclaim PPI for free? Read our guide to find out more.
14. Rent out your parking space
Finding affordable parking can be a real pain in the neck. If you have a private parking space lying empty, it’s possible that some frustrated commuter would gladly pay to rent it off you.
JustPark and YourParkingSpace will let you list your parking space and set your price for free, taking a small cut from the rental fee you charge the person parking up.
Please note, some local councils view renting out your parking space as a ‘change of use’ to your property, and will expect a £385 planning application fee. You must make sure this fee doesn’t apply to you and if it does, a price check on parking sites in your area will show if it’s worth the hassle.
Read MoneySavingExpert’s.com’s dedicated Rent Your Parking Space guide for more information.
15. Try stuff out before it hits the shelves
Granted this won’t earn you cash per se, but it does mean that you can stock up on some free goodies that you potentially would have had to buy….which is kinda the same thing. Sort of. Maybe.
Set up a tester’s account on Toluna and they’ll send you all kinds of doodahs to try out from kids shampoos and herbal teas to lip liners and Spiderman stationary kits (nice). They also give out free vouchers for coffee shops, holidays, clothes and more.
Signing up for freebie websites is easy and can save you a bundle over time. Read the guide to getting lots of free samples from our friends at Magic Freebies!
16. Get paid to review music
If you fancy yourself a bit of a music buff, Slicethepie is a nice little earner that’s sure to hit all the right notes (again, sorry).
There’s a gazillion unsigned bands out there, and they need you to listen to and review their tracks. Initially you won’t make much, but writing trustworthy reviews will increase your scout rating, earning you more and more.
Interested? Read MoneyMagpie’s great guide on how to make money by listening to music to help you get started!
(Edit – 4 March 2019 – we’ve been told the Hangover Helpers website is no longer available)
17. Become a hangover helper
If you live in an area densely populated by students, you could clean up by becoming a ‘hangover helper’. Literally.
The idea was originally founded by two students in Colorado USA, and their clientele consists mainly of worse-for-wear students after a long night of partying. For a nominal fee, The Hangover Helpers bring their clients a hearty breakfast burrito, a sports drinks to replace fluids, and will give the place a good tidying while the students sleep off their woes. By the time the alcohol-afflicted roll out of bed, it’ll be like the party never happened.
18. Rent out your shed or garage
Your lawnmower you haven’t touched since 2009, the Christmas tree, that box of LPs you’re definitely going to take down to the car boot sale one of these days…they’re lonely! Find them some new friends by renting out the available space in your garage or shed. Check out Share My Storage for more details.
19. Let your spare room to a student
Foreign exchange students come to study in the UK for a whole host of reasons, and for varying degrees of time. Students learning English are usually only here for about six weeks, while university students and lecturers tend to stay for up to six months.
Letting a spare room out to a foreign exchange student is a pretty easy way to earn some regular cash. Throw in extras such as laundry, wifi and meals to bump up the rental fee.
Read this extensive guide on MoneyMagpie to find out more.
(DISCLAIMER: MoneyAware cannot in any way guarantee the success or safety implications of the above mentioned money-making tips. This article, while written with an intent to provide helpful ideas to increase income, is also written for entertainment purposes.
We strongly encourage clients and subscribers to declare all additional income to Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs (HMRC).
Sign up to our email
Get helpful money-saving and money-making articles in your inbox every month to help your budget.
Save
Tagsextra cashincrease incomemoney makingmoney saving