What are good ways for me to make money?
I am only 14, so I can't apply for a real job. There are no babysitting opportunities around me :( I was just hoping for some ideas for some quick moneymaking. Thanks!
Adeline
Question answered by quicentella3
Creating Work at Home
• Baby-sitting, child care
• Selling homegrown vegetables or flowers
• Sewing, altering, and repairing clothing
• Piecework for manufacturers
• Baking and food preparation
• Quilting, crocheting, knitting; making macramé, pottery; other crafts
• Upholstering
• Bookkeeping, typing, home computer services
• Telephone answering service
• Hairdressing
• Taking in boarders
• Addressing and filling envelopes for advertisers
• Washing and waxing cars (customer brings car to your home)
• Pet grooming and exercising
• Lock repair and key making (workshop at home)
• Ads for much of this work can be placed free of charge or at low cost in weekend shopping news or on supermarket notice boards
Creating Work Outside the Home
• House-sitting (when people are on vacation and want their home to be looked after)
• Cleaning: stores; offices; homes and apartments after construction, after fires, after people move out; housework (in homes of others); windows (business and domestic)
• Repairs: appliances of all kinds (libraries contain easy-to-follow books on repairs)
• Handyman jobs: siding houses; building cabinets, doors, porches; painting; fencing; roofing
• Farm work: crops, picking fruit
• Interior landscaping and plant care at: offices, banks, shopping plazas and atriums, lobbies
• Property management: janitors, superintendent (sometimes includes free living quarters)
• Insurance, real estate
• Carpet installation, cleaning
• Newspaper routes (adults and children), other delivery services: ads, bills for municipalities
• Moving, storage
• Landscaping, tree trimming, lawn care, woodcutting
• School-bus driver
• Photography (portraits and public events)
• Bait for fishermen
• Swap work: barter car repairs for electrical work, sewing for plumbing, etc
What was a difference in Japan and China with maintaining their cultures while being industrialized?
And how were they different responding to the west?
Oranges Boranges
Question answered by Jimmy S
Both Japan's and China's introduction to the west was forced through war or neocolonialist means.
Now, with respect to China, historically, since the founding of the modern Chinese state in 1949, the communist party has been against western, specifically European and American influence. Industrialization was seen was China's gateway to modernity and the Great Leap Forward in the 50s can evidence Mao's early desire to launch China into the world as a competitive industrial force. Industrialization and modernity was to take place internally though, and without being indebted to western nations.
This model collapsed during the cultural revolution and ended when Mao died in 1976. Deng Xiaoping, China's great modernizer, opened up China's markets during the 1980s during what is known as China's "Open Door Policy". He set up several experimental capitalist cities in the south of China that were free market havens. For the most part though, most major industries and banks are still state run with little room for independent and foreign investment.
To compare this to Japan, following the formal end of American intervention in 1953, the Japanese government subsidized the creation of several domestic industries that still exist today. Many of Japan's most successful manufacturers were created at this time. As opposed to China, these manufacturers initially relied heavily on foreign investment, and because of a very free market system, they were able to quickly modernize an infrastructure that was hit bad by debts and deficits from WWII. As a result, Japan progressed at speeds unmatched by other regional powers, and China still lags behind (though it is catching up) in many trade sectors because of missteps in the 1960s and 70s.
What are some good jobs for earning money over summer?
I'm a teenager and i wanted to earn some money over the summer. I'm not old enough to get a job but i still want to do something. Any good ideas?
Veeds7412
Question answered by quicentella3
Creating Work at Home
• Baby-sitting, child care
• Selling homegrown vegetables or flowers
• Sewing, altering, and repairing clothing
• Piecework for manufacturers
• Baking and food preparation
• Quilting, crocheting, knitting; making macramé, pottery; other crafts
• Upholstering
• Bookkeeping, typing, home computer services
• Telephone answering service
• Hairdressing
• Taking in boarders
• Addressing and filling envelopes for advertisers
• Washing and waxing cars (customer brings car to your home)
• Pet grooming and exercising
• Lock repair and key making (workshop at home)
• Ads for much of this work can be placed free of charge or at low cost in weekend shopping news or on supermarket notice boards
Creating Work Outside the Home
• House-sitting (when people are on vacation and want their home to be looked after)
• Cleaning: stores; offices; homes and apartments after construction, after fires, after people move out; housework (in homes of others); windows (business and domestic)
• Repairs: appliances of all kinds (libraries contain easy-to-follow books on repairs)
• Handyman jobs: siding houses; building cabinets, doors, porches; painting; fencing; roofing
• Farm work: crops, picking fruit
• Interior landscaping and plant care at: offices, banks, shopping plazas and atriums, lobbies
• Property management: janitors, superintendent (sometimes includes free living quarters)
• Insurance, real estate
• Carpet installation, cleaning
• Newspaper routes (adults and children), other delivery services: ads, bills for municipalities
• Moving, storage
• Landscaping, tree trimming, lawn care, woodcutting
• School-bus driver
• Photography (portraits and public events)
• Bait for fishermen
• Swap work: barter car repairs for electrical work, sewing for plumbing, etc.
What is the easiest way to make money for a 14 year old?
hi, im 14 and i need money despritely... my parents give me 20$ a week but it isnt enough. i need at least 50$ a week. whats the easiest job with the highest pay.
I AM IN NEW ZEALAND
Toofy
Question answered by quicentella3
Creating Work at Home
• Baby-sitting, child care
• Selling homegrown vegetables or flowers
• Sewing, altering, and repairing clothing
• Piecework for manufacturers
• Baking and food preparation
• Quilting, crocheting, knitting; making macramé, pottery; other crafts
• Upholstering
• Bookkeeping, typing, home computer services
• Telephone answering service
• Hairdressing
• Taking in boarders
• Addressing and filling envelopes for advertisers
• Washing and waxing cars (customer brings car to your home)
• Pet grooming and exercising
• Lock repair and key making (workshop at home)
• Ads for much of this work can be placed free of charge or at low cost in weekend shopping news or on supermarket notice boards
Creating Work Outside the Home
• House-sitting (when people are on vacation and want their home to be looked after)
• Cleaning: stores; offices; homes and apartments after construction, after fires, after people move out; housework (in homes of others); windows (business and domestic)
• Repairs: appliances of all kinds (libraries contain easy-to-follow books on repairs)
• Handyman jobs: siding houses; building cabinets, doors, porches; painting; fencing; roofing
• Farm work: crops, picking fruit
• Interior landscaping and plant care at: offices, banks, shopping plazas and atriums, lobbies
• Property management: janitors, superintendent (sometimes includes free living quarters)
• Insurance, real estate
• Carpet installation, cleaning
• Newspaper routes (adults and children), other delivery services: ads, bills for municipalities
• Moving, storage
• Landscaping, tree trimming, lawn care, woodcutting
• School-bus driver
• Photography (portraits and public events)
• Bait for fishermen
• Swap work: barter car repairs for electrical work, sewing for plumbing, etc.
How can I, as a teenager, make money fast?
I am very young, around thirteen, and I need to make $100 so I can rent a French Horn from my school when I reach 8th grade, which is in August. My parents are in a tight financial spot so I need to raise the money myself so I can rent it for both semesters. Thank you for your time and consideration.
Izzy Bodeen
Question answered by quicentella3
*** g 1/10 Live a Simple, Balanced Life ***
CAN YOU CREATE WORK OUTSIDE THE HOME?
Here are some suggestions that might help in some parts of the world during an unemployment crisis:
● House-sitting (when people are away on business or on vacation and want their home to be looked after)
● Cleaning: stores; offices; homes and apartments after construction, after fires, after people move out; housework (in homes of others); windows (business and domestic)
● Repairs: bicycles; appliances of all kinds (libraries contain easy-to-follow “How to . . .” books on repairs)
● Handyman jobs: siding houses; building cabinets, doors, porches; painting; fencing; roofing
● Farmwork: planting crops, picking fruit, harvesting
● Interior landscaping and plant care at: offices, banks, lobbies, shopping plazas, and atriums
● Property management: janitor, superintendent (sometimes includes free living quarters)
● Carpet and laminate wood floor installation, cleaning
● Newspaper routes (adults and children) and other delivery services: ads, bills for municipalities
● Moving, storage
● Landscaping, tree trimming, lawn care, woodcutting
● School-bus driver
● Photography (portraits and public events)
● Selling bait to fishermen
● Swap work: barter car repairs for electrical work, sewing for plumbing
OPTIONS FOR CREATING WORK AT HOME
Study the needs in your neighborhood. Ask neighbors. Use initiative.
● Babysitting, child care
● Selling homegrown vegetables or flowers; juice drinks
● Sewing, altering, and repairing clothing
● Piecework for manufacturers
● Baking and food preparation
● Quilting, crocheting, knitting; making macramé, pottery; other crafts
● Upholstering
● Bookkeeping, typing, home computer services
● Telephone answering service
● Hairdressing
● Taking in boarders
● Addressing and filling envelopes for advertisers
● Washing and waxing cars (customer brings car to your home)
● Pet grooming and exercising
● Lock repair and key making (workshop at home)
Note: For much of the work mentioned above, ads can be placed free of charge or at low cost in weekend shopping flyers or on supermarket notice boards.
How to earn money in easy ways?
I want 2 earn so i could buy anything i want please help!!
Elle
Question answered by quicentella3
When it comes to managing your budget, the next best thing to saving money is earning extra money. You may be thinking that you are busy enough with school, kids, and work right now and just don't have time to take a second (or third!) job.
Well, you don't need to spend your valuable time making minimum wage working a cash register. You are smart and talented and there are a number of ways to earn extra money while still maintaining a good workable schedule.
Teach What You Know
Tap into your knowledge base or skill set and you are sure to find something of value that you can teach. What comes easy to you may be difficult for someone else. If you have patience to work with others to teach them what you know, providing sports, musical, dance, cooking lessons or tutoring is a great way to earn some additional money.
Using Your PC
Obviously you have a computer or laptop, so why not get the most out of it? It is already helping you get your degree, and it can also help you earn money. One convenience of making a little extra money by providing a service like: transcription, data entry, or accounting that utilizes your computer is that you can do it from the comfort of your own home, day or night.
Skilled Based Services
There is a vast number of ways you can provide a useful service like: car repair, cleaning, photography, event planning, or lawn care that others will pay for. Some services require a specific trade or skill. Others just require strength and the willingness to do the work that others prefer to avoid. If your customers are happy with the service you provide they will tell others about you. This means you can stay as busy as you'd like without any official advertising.
*** g96 3/8 Freedom From Unemployment—How and When? ***
Creating Work at Home
• Baby-sitting, child care
• Selling homegrown vegetables or flowers
• Sewing, altering, and repairing clothing
• Piecework for manufacturers
• Baking and food preparation
• Quilting, crocheting, knitting; making macramé, pottery; other crafts
• Upholstering
• Bookkeeping, typing, home computer services
• Telephone answering service
• Hairdressing
• Taking in boarders
• Addressing and filling envelopes for advertisers
• Washing and waxing cars (customer brings car to your home)
• Pet grooming and exercising
• Lock repair and key making (workshop at home)
• Ads for much of this work can be placed free of charge or at low cost in weekend shopping news or on supermarket notice boards
Creating Work Outside the Home
• House-sitting (when people are on vacation and want their home to be looked after)
• Cleaning: stores; offices; homes and apartments after construction, after fires, after people move out; housework (in homes of others); windows (business and domestic)
• Repairs: appliances of all kinds (libraries contain easy-to-follow books on repairs)
• Handyman jobs: siding houses; building cabinets, doors, porches; painting; fencing; roofing
• Farm work: crops, picking fruit
• Interior landscaping and plant care at: offices, banks, shopping plazas and atriums, lobbies
• Property management: janitors, superintendent (sometimes includes free living quarters)
• Insurance, real estate
• Carpet installation, cleaning
• Newspaper routes (adults and children), other delivery services: ads, bills for municipalities
• Moving, storage
• Landscaping, tree trimming, lawn care, woodcutting
• School-bus driver
• Photography (portraits and public events)
• Bait for fishermen
• Swap work: barter car repairs for electrical work, sewing for plumbing, etc.
“The work of their own hands my chosen ones will use to the full.”—Isaiah 65:22
How can i make some pocket money fast?
Hi im 14 years old and i'm saving up for a concert in may 2010 but im a bit short of money.Can anyone give me any ideas on how to raise some money fast.A concert ticket is 299£ and i've only got 80£ so far.Thanks
B-RI
Question answered by quicentella3
Creating Work at Home
• Baby-sitting, child care
• Selling homegrown vegetables or flowers
• Sewing, altering, and repairing clothing
• Piecework for manufacturers
• Baking and food preparation
• Quilting, crocheting, knitting; making macramé, pottery; other crafts
• Upholstering
• Bookkeeping, typing, home computer services
• Telephone answering service
• Hairdressing
• Taking in boarders
• Addressing and filling envelopes for advertisers
• Washing and waxing cars (customer brings car to your home)
• Pet grooming and exercising
• Lock repair and key making (workshop at home)
• Ads for much of this work can be placed free of charge or at low cost in weekend shopping news or on supermarket notice boards
Creating Work Outside the Home
• House-sitting (when people are on vacation and want their home to be looked after)
• Cleaning: stores; offices; homes and apartments after construction, after fires, after people move out; housework (in homes of others); windows (business and domestic)
• Repairs: appliances of all kinds (libraries contain easy-to-follow books on repairs)
• Handyman jobs: siding houses; building cabinets, doors, porches; painting; fencing; roofing
• Farm work: crops, picking fruit
• Interior landscaping and plant care at: offices, banks, shopping plazas and atriums, lobbies
• Property management: janitors, superintendent (sometimes includes free living quarters)
• Insurance, real estate
• Carpet installation, cleaning
• Newspaper routes (adults and children), other delivery services: ads, bills for municipalities
• Moving, storage
• Landscaping, tree trimming, lawn care, woodcutting
• School-bus driver
• Photography (portraits and public events)
• Bait for fishermen
• Swap work: barter car repairs for electrical work, sewing for plumbing, etc.
“The work of their own hands my chosen ones will use to the full.”—Isaiah 65:22
What is the easiest way or ways to make a lot of money in 1 day. for a kid that is.?
I NEED MONEY TO BUY A PRESENT FOR My dad on fathers day!!!!! I wanna send him to A place where you need a plane ticket. I don't have that much $$$$$$. i have a team that is willing to help and I have craftinessiness strong, hardworking,and I NEED MONEY. I livbusyusyiy neighborhood.PLZ HELP
annathesweetheart :) ♥
Question answered by quicentella3
Creating Work at Home
• Baby-sitting, child care
• Selling homegrown vegetables or flowers
• Sewing, altering, and repairing clothing
• Piecework for manufacturers
• Baking and food preparation
• Quilting, crocheting, knitting; making macramé, pottery; other crafts
• Upholstering
• Bookkeeping, typing, home computer services
• Telephone answering service
• Hairdressing
• Taking in boarders
• Addressing and filling envelopes for advertisers
• Washing and waxing cars (customer brings car to your home)
• Pet grooming and exercising
• Lock repair and key making (workshop at home)
• Ads for much of this work can be placed free of charge or at low cost in weekend shopping news or on supermarket notice boards
Creating Work Outside the Home
• House-sitting (when people are on vacation and want their home to be looked after)
• Cleaning: stores; offices; homes and apartments after construction, after fires, after people move out; housework (in homes of others); windows (business and domestic)
• Repairs: appliances of all kinds (libraries contain easy-to-follow books on repairs)
• Handyman jobs: siding houses; building cabinets, doors, porches; painting; fencing; roofing
• Farm work: crops, picking fruit
• Interior landscaping and plant care at: offices, banks, shopping plazas and atriums, lobbies
• Property management: janitors, superintendent (sometimes includes free living quarters)
• Insurance, real estate
• Carpet installation, cleaning
• Newspaper routes (adults and children), other delivery services: ads, bills for municipalities
• Moving, storage
• Landscaping, tree trimming, lawn care, woodcutting
• School-bus driver
• Photography (portraits and public events)
• Bait for fishermen
• Swap work: barter car repairs for electrical work, sewing for plumbing, etc.
What kind of vehicle could I get for 11,000 or less?
I realize that with this budget I will have to get a used car. But I'm starting college soon, almost 300 miles away. And i will be driving to and from at least once a month. I also desperatly need a car that gets decent to very good gas millage. Because I will be a broke college student. Thank you for the help. I greatly appreciate it.
GOD BLESS.
tori bug
Question answered by cool_camaro81
You could probably get a very decent used car for under 11,000. As to the make and model, there is such a variety it is difficult to suggest a single one. For a used car the most important thing to consider is the mechanical condition.
Generally, a car with lower kilometers has gone through less wear on important components, and is less likely to have major problems.
If you can, find out from the owner if a vehicle has been regularly maintained, as poor maintenance is also a major cause of problems.
Looking up your potential car on the net can also help you find any common issues with the model.
Try not to base your purchasing decision on the reliability of a manufacturer, as a high kilometer Honda Civic will probably die quicker than a low-kilometer domestic car.
Finally inspect the car closely for rust on in the wheel wells, by the doors, and on the frame; a rusty frame can make a car uninsurable. Also insist on getting the mechanically inspected prior to your final purchase.
--> I suggest buying a car from an owner rather than a dealer (unless the dealership has a warranty). You will probably pay thousands more for a car at a dealership.
How do you earn money as a teenager?
Hey, how can you earn money as a teenager when you live in quite a remote area. paper rounds and waitresses aren't an option. Is there anything on the internet?
Please can the sites be English based, because i cant use American websites. Thank you :)
Rach
Question answered by quicentella3
*** g96 3/8 Freedom From Unemployment—How and When? ***
Creating Work at Home
• Baby-sitting, child care
• Selling homegrown vegetables or flowers
• Sewing, altering, and repairing clothing
• Piecework for manufacturers
• Baking and food preparation
• Quilting, crocheting, knitting; making macramé, pottery; other crafts
• Upholstering
• Bookkeeping, typing, home computer services
• Telephone answering service
• Hairdressing
• Taking in boarders
• Addressing and filling envelopes for advertisers
• Washing and waxing cars (customer brings car to your home)
• Pet grooming and exercising
• Lock repair and key making (workshop at home)
• Ads for much of this work can be placed free of charge or at low cost in weekend shopping news or on supermarket notice boards
Creating Work Outside the Home
• House-sitting (when people are on vacation and want their home to be looked after)
• Cleaning: stores; offices; homes and apartments after construction, after fires, after people move out; housework (in homes of others); windows (business and domestic)
• Repairs: appliances of all kinds (libraries contain easy-to-follow books on repairs)
• Handyman jobs: siding houses; building cabinets, doors, porches; painting; fencing; roofing
• Farm work: crops, picking fruit
• Interior landscaping and plant care at: offices, banks, shopping plazas and atriums, lobbies
• Property management: janitors, superintendent (sometimes includes free living quarters)
• Insurance, real estate
• Carpet installation, cleaning
• Newspaper routes (adults and children), other delivery services: ads, bills for municipalities
• Moving, storage
• Landscaping, tree trimming, lawn care, woodcutting
• School-bus driver
• Photography (portraits and public events)
• Bait for fishermen
• Swap work: barter car repairs for electrical work, sewing for plumbing, etc.
“The work of their own hands my chosen ones will use to the full.”—Isaiah 65:22