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How to Make Money as a Blogger

Nobody believes anyone can make money as a blogger, let alone $1 Million a year. If you ask most people, they will say, “Don’t quit your day job”, or “That’s just a pipe dream.”, or my favorite:

“Blogging?  That’s not a “real” job, it’s a hobby, right?” 

I don’t know, just ask Aimee Song, The Man Repeller or the Chiara Ferragni of the Blonde Salad, who by the way, pulled in a reported $8 Million in 2015.  And those are the top fashion bloggers right now.  Think about even the successful bottom tier bloggers and what they are making.  According to research, the average blogger with 40,000+ page views per month is pulling in anything from $5,000 to  $40,000+ per month.  Yep, you read that correctly.

Still think you can’t make money blogging? 

how to make money as a travel fashion blogger

First of all, Bloggers Sell Their Expertise

My Tween Fashion Blog makes a good chunk of change per year and has over 45,000 visitors per month. And I don’t really feel like I do anything. Or, at least all I could be doing, or as much as some bloggers do.

How?

I’ll be happy to tell you. First of all, most of the advice you’ll read out there is crap or outdated.  All of that “AdSense monetizing your blog” info is complete nonsense. Monetizing your blog with AdWords does nothing for you except clutter up your content with annoying ads. The money you get in return is pennies —literally.

For example, do you see any giant ads on this site?

Not really.  There’s a reason why.

I am a Fashion Designer, Branding and Digital Marketing gal.  My blogs are my platforms to offer my expert opinions, reviews, advice and sometimes products. I have been designing professionally since 2003, and I have been marketing and selling online since 1999. In fact, I began my fashion career in similar ways as Sophia AmorusoFounder of Nasty Gal. 

Long before blogs, there were other ways to sell expert advice.

Experience is Profitable.

I began buying and re-selling clothes on eBay in 1999.  I would visit my local thrift stores and find used, designer and vintage clothes to resell through my eBay store.  By 2001, I had worked my way up to buying and reselling in large quantities and importing stock lots from factories overseas.  In fact, one month I made $60,000 in sales. 

After only one year in business, I had sourced and collected literally hundreds of businesses across the USA who were wholesale apparel sellers, liquidators, outlets and resources for B2B sales.  And then I realized there were thousands of new eBay sellers every day begging for information that I had.  I realized I was sitting on very valuable information. I compiled my first Wholesale Apparel eBook and sold it online through my first e-commerce site I built with Dreamweaver. I sold a lot of these at $49 each.  A lot.

Bloggers are Value-Adders

You see, Bloggers don’t make most of their money selling ad space or earning dimes for clicks. Bloggers are essentially teachers adding value, and fashion and/or travel bloggers are a branded platform.  

What they sell are their ideas, a feeling, expertise, experiences, info, and eventually products. Fashion Bloggers are the experts and trendsetters in their field. They start with rich, relevant content to target their audience and work their way into building up that audience to — you guessed it: sell their product, or sell other people’s products.

Chiara Ferragni started off as a Look of the Day gal in 2009, but she now has her own collection and a few million per year with The Chiara Ferragni collection. THAT is where her money comes from my darlings.

How You Can Make Money as a Blogger

If you are reading this, you have probably dug into every piece of information you could get your hands on about quitting your job and making a living blogging.  But the truth is until you figure out how to sell what you know,  you probably aren’t going to make money blogging. Building up your readership is key. And you can’t build up that readership if you aren’t providing information that’s useful or relevant.

People want information. Information sells. Stories are great, but stories don’t make bloggers wealthy–unless they turn the story into a tangible product (a book, or movie).  

Above all else: Work on the quality of your content first. You won’t make money right away. The first year or so is going to be a personal investment. 

For me, my blog provides info on the best brands, the best stores, what’s trending, what’s awesome and what sucks.  And my niche happens to be the Tween, Girls and Juniors market. Yours may be completely different, but that’s up to you to decide and refine.

Fashion provides a steady, constant moving stream of information.  People want to know what boots are hot this season, what dress to wear to the holiday party, what to wear, how they should style their hair, etc. This is where the fashion blogger comes in.

Monetize Your Expertise

My head is full of useful information. I have been involved with the fashion industry for 16 years.  I have taken my knowledge and skills and transferred that energy into teaching what I know.  

Your head is full of useful information, too. Stick to what you know.
And don’t worry if it’s just a niche market, either. Just ask this guy: Gary Vaynerchuk. His niche was wine.

If you take some of what I learned and apply it to your blog, it’ll pay off for you.

Because here’s the thing: You can make money blogging.  

A million bloggers and Vloggers out there can’t be wrong.  What everyone wants is information.  All the time.  And of course, you can be the person they come to for that information.  

How to Make Money as a Blogger

So, here’s the beginning to what you need to know to get started making money as a blogger.

PRO-TIP  RULE #1: Before you get started as a serious blogger looking to turn your blog into real money, invest in your blog. Don’t use a freebie blog site. Self-host a WordPress site from the beginning! Read Why a Self-Hosted site with WordPress is critical  If you are already on a Blogger or free version of WordPress.com, it’s no biggie, you can easily transfer over.

Lesson #1:  You’re Not “Just a Fashion Blogger” or a “Travel Blogger” or “Food Blogger”

You’re an expert, a teacher, a mentor. Your blog is simply a springboard for all of those things. Perhaps you can offer more than just daily posts, right?

You have a bigger goal, a bigger vision, it’s just not incubated long enough.  But it will.  Keep your head and your eye on the bigger picture.

Look around, and you’ll find nearly all fashion bloggers who make a decent income have an active Instagram account full of fantastic product and lifestyle shots, fashion show attendance, product endorsements, their own fashion collections, books, a consulting or trend forecasting business, side gigs etc. 

THAT is how they make money.

Their blog and their Instagram account is just the platform where they introduce themselves, give away cool stuff or talk about the things that spark interest to attract followers, customers or clients. Their interesting ideas and perspective, coupled with rich content = Followers, which equals audience. And as we all know, audience = influence = $$$

Lesson #2: Don’t Rely on Selling Advertising

Selling ads can be attractive, because it’s income that generates without really doing anything (passive income), but it’s generally minimal unless it’s ad space bought by a big brand, OR you have a million followers and you are using a platform like liketoknow.it or  RewardStyle.me to sell OPP – Other People’s Products. If your blog gets a ton of traffic, you will do OK with just impressions.

So, unless your ad space is purchased from someone like Gucci or Prada, say “nada”.


Why push someone else’s product for pennies, if you can make 5-10 x more money using that same “ad space” to sell your own products or services?  At the very least, promote an affiliate product that is either cohesive with your blog theme (i.e. health and wellness, fitness, high fashion, etc.) or a brand that you love -and one that will make you a significant profit per month. 

For example, try signing up with shareasale.com or Rakuten Marketing.  Some fashion brands will pay up to 20% commissions in sales.

When I first started out, I signed up for big brands for the names, but they barely paid 3% commissions and although I didn’t want to look a gift horse in the mouth,  it just didn’t add up. 

I discovered after my first year that I had been pushing their brand and watching their sales increase based on my efforts, and I was literally getting a few dollars in return. In the first year as an affiliate, I generated 1.3 million impressions and $17,200 in sales.

My commission for that year was peanuts ($605).

how affiliate marketing works

Example of Affiliate Program Sales

What I realized was if I applied that same effort to my own products, I could make what they were making.  Viola!  Do you see how it works?

People were coming in for my content, but spending dollarinos elsewhere.

If you do choose to go with affiliate marketing (until you get your own product, of course), set your baseline commission standards to at least 15% or don’t waste your time.  Your time is extremely valuable. Crafting awesome posts takes you hours, and pushing a brand for pennies is just not worth it.

After all, your goal is to make $50,000 per month right? Right!

Stop working for free.

Now, If you consider the possibility of a $25,000 month of sales for all of your affiliates combined, and your baseline is 15%  Your monthly commission is $3,750.  Makes a bit of difference, doesn’t it?

I reiterate you CAN make money as a blogger.

On my blog, I mostly promote my own brand, products, and services now, but I am also in the process of writing a book about How to Market Your Brand.  The bottom line: Think bigger than ad space or paid reviews. Sure, you may get free stuff and that’s totally fine if you’re going for that. Free stuff is fun but it’s not going to allow you to quit your day job and really earn a living blogging, or send you and your family on vacation. So if your goal is to earn a 6-figure income blogging, set your standards high.

CONTENT IS THE NEW SOCIAL CURRENCY

Lesson #3:  Build Your Content

You’re an expert, give the world your expert knowledge.  Don’t hammer your readers with sales pitches, or too many ‘buy me, buy me’ posts.  Your whole point for being here is to offer valuable information.  The good, the bad, the ugly – Not a car salesman pitch at every turn. Be polite. It’s much better to build relationships and trust by giving readers some valuable content before you begin talking about or pushing your products and services. Yes, you might make less money in the short term, but the long-term profits are so worth it.  

In the blogger world, photos are everything.  So, make sure you partner with a good photographer who can work with you often to create the overall look and mood of the clothes you may be presenting.  Reach out to stylists and brands to collaborate.  I cannot stress enough the need to collaborate.  It is vital, especially if you are going for stylistic shoots, and highlighting products.

Lesson #4: Don’t Be The “Bottleneck”

Time is your biggest obstacle as a blogger. There just isn’t enough of it.  Not only are we expected to publish a continuous stream of photos on Instagram and publish content on our blogs, but we also have to make time to create creative assets, giveaways, and promotions, schedule styling shoots – if you do that sort of thing, deal with technical issues, read books and articles about the industry, design, create new products to sell (I certainly do, anyhow) and answer questions from readers. 

Did I mention social media management also?  The list really goes on and on for days.  It is more than a full-time job, and you have to be prepared to put in the work.

Many days, my job as a Designer and managing my business starts at 6:30 AM and doesn’t end until about 8 PM.  I have found myself literally doing

E V E R Y T H I N G.

But you will learn quickly, and maybe you already have, that you CAN’T do everything.

You just can’t. And you shouldn’t if you want to succeed as a fashion blogger.

So, what’s the answer?

Your job as a fashion blogger is a lot like the manufacturing process. If one machine is down or working slower than others in a factory, it can literally cost the company tens of thousands of dollars per hour. If something slips up and a batch of tees get dyed the wrong color because someone was overworked, it will cost another several hundred thousand dollars. 

To make sure snags don’t happen, manufacturers and brands have Product Developers and Production Managers,  Why?  Because they are worth every penny of their $100K+ per year salary, and they eliminate these snags or “bottlenecks”.

The same is true for us, except the solutions are a little different.  We will want to focus on the area(s) where we are the most bottlenecked and find a solution to free up that valuable time.  We might sign up for a service or purchase new software tools that automate some of our social media workflow, or we might hire an assistant. It can be expensive, yes, but it’s worthwhile if it saves you time. Because you can then dedicate that extra time to higher value activities that yield better ROI.

Lesson #5:  Time is Money

Put a price on high-value activities.  What are “high-value activities”?

Well, it depends on your goal. If your goal is to increase your blog traffic, then start measuring the ‘visitors per hour invested’.

For example, if you invest three hours in writing a post or shooting a post for Instagram and it brings you, 100 visitors, and you invest five hours in writing a guest post (or collaborating with another Instagrammer) which brings you, 500 visitors, the first post has an hourly rate of 33 visitors per hour. The second post has an hourly rate of 100 visitors per hour. Guest posting and/or collaborating with an established blogger, therefore, is a better use of your time than writing content on your own blog (in the beginning).

Anticipation builds momentum.

Consider the possibility of building up your content and following before launching your blog.  The last thing you want to do is post regular content if nobody is reading.  Get your visitors and followers ready with a ‘coming soon’ page and collect emails for the next 30, 60 or 90 days while you build out your blog, take photos, create content and make connections with other bloggers as a Guest Contributor.  I took this strategy with my Berry Jane website and the response was astounding.  I had a ‘coming soon’ page up for three months before launching and I was able to grow my email list to nearly 1,000 in no time flat.

Lesson #6:  Facebook, Twitter, Google+ may be a waste of valuable resources

Wait, does this mean having followers in those places is useless?  No. Facebook is OK because you can reach your followers there (if that’s where they spend the majority of their time) and utilize Facebook Ads. Facebook is still the #1 platform in the world, but Instagram is quickly gaining the #1 spot. Google+ (which is now obsolete as of 3/24/2019) may help boost your search engine rankings. Even with those benefits though, it shouldn’t be at the top of your priority list.

In my opinion, you shouldn’t think about them at all until you hit 10,000 followers/subscribers, and then you can outsource the social media management to someone else. Use your time more efficiently in other places, such as Instagram, YouTube, Stylish Shots, Product Reviews and Writing Longer Content.

Why longer content?

Longer content gets much more traffic and is more SEO friendly than shorter content.  The sweet spot seems to be about 2,000–3,000 words per post (This post, for example, is appx. 3,070 words).

Lesson #7:  Promote, Promote, Promote!

Promote the heck out of your content.  I’m not talking about just sharing your posts to your Followers on Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook. I’m talking about blogger outreach. Build relationships with influencers and asking them to share your work.

It comes back to TIME.  When your blog is new, the most efficient uses of your time is: building relationships with influencers (including guest blogging), creating content worth linking to and selling your products and services. I have worked with a broad range of brands and companies from Target to Simon and Schuster, Pac Sun and even Dollar Shave Club. 

If you follow just those three things well, not only will your blog gain traffic and prominence, but you’ll also start getting search traffic (organically) without doing anything.

Lesson #8: Build Your Email List.  

(It’s More Important Than You Realize)

In my experience, your email list is the most accurate predictor of how much money you’ll make blogging.

A successful Blogger makes around $3 per subscriber per month. If you’re new to this, I would aim for $1 per subscriber per month in sales. In other words, an email list of 1,000 subscribers should result in at least $1,000 per month in sales, 10,000 subscribers would result in $10,000 per month and so on.

The more subscribers you get, the more money you make. Of course, your relationships, quality of content and products are key to success.

Sell “You”

Don’t just turn your blog into a big sales pitch. I see that with so many bloggers and it gets annoying fast, plus it’s just not very personal.  And “personal” is what got a lot of these fashion bloggers where they are today.  They created content that made followers feel connected.  I see this with Aimee Song.  We love to see her photos on Instagram, but her blog and Instagram account is basically a show and tell platform to sell what she’s wearing.

Be real and personable. Sell your knowledge and ideas, but don’t become just a machine for selling. 
Nobody likes that.

Remember to keep offering something your audience wants and needs. I’m interested to hear your comments on this subject and see what has worked for you, and what hasn’t!  If you’re just starting out, keep plugging away.  Starfruit takes time to ripen.  

You’ve got this. ❤️

10 Kick-Ass Ways to Make Money While You Travel

If it’s your dream to quit your job and travel or Make Money While You Travel as a freelancer, you’re not alone. You’ll be surprised to know the dream is a lot more real that you might think.

The truth is, top college grads are working at Starbucks. Or not working at all. And they have heaps of debt to go with it. On the flipside, people find themselves in jobs they don’t even want because they have to survive. Of course, we all have to survive. But at what cost? I’m not saying to just quit your job and travel the world like a fool. But what I am saying is, there are opportunities and options. And no, I am not telling you to be a blogger. Although, you absolutely can make money blogging (more on that later).

If you’re between the ages of 33-43 you can just take everything you were told you’re supposed to do by Boomer parents and just toss it. We love them but their generation was the last of it’s kind in the free world to survive with a family of 6 on a single income.

1960sfamily_vacation

We are different.

When it feels like nothing makes sense anymore, this could be your time to take a chance and try something new.

We all seem to be searching for a life with more fluidity, personal meaning and adventure. My generation was on the cusp of what we were traditionally supposed to do and the digital age that opened brand new gilded doors. We tried to fit the old keys in new locks and found out they didn’t open the doors anymore. We were given the internet and it was a total game-changer.

We are getting braver and have less to lose. We are giving up the ideas that have been expected of us and creating our own paths instead. People are downsizing, buying tiny homes. Working where they want to be, instead of allowing work or a job to dictate where they live.

And a lot of people are feeling lost and don’t know where to start. I have read so many life-changing books that have inspired me to just go for it. Before I finally got out of Corporate America for good, I went back and forth from corporate job to freelance. The steady pay was always nice, but feeling trapped indoors, having to play political office games and worrying about my job security was no good for me.

No matter what you do in life, there is always a compromise and something you have to give in exchange for something else. Whatever you decide to give up, though, it has to be OK and worth it to you. For me, my emotional well-being, never taking a vacation or spending time with family or friends was not something I was willing to give up. Any time I doubted myself, I was reminded of the wise words of Leo Buscaglia and gave myself permission to change:

If you don’t like the scene you’re in, if you’re unhappy, if you’re lonely, if you don’t feel that things are happening, change your scene. Paint a new backdrop.

I decided to change my scene. And you can too.

There are tons of solid independent work options out there if you’re willing to do the work, explore, be patient, set yourself up for success and take a chance.

These are Legit work-from-anywhere income opportunities:

1.

If you are tech savvy or creative, there are tons of freelance jobs available through websites with people looking for your expert skills. Try: CrowdSpring, Gumroad, ELance, ODesk/UpWork and Fiverr

The beauty of these sites are, you get to work from wherever you are -whether that’s your own backyard studio, The Bahamas or a flat in France. As long as you have access to wi-fi, of course.

DCF 1.0
My Jamaica trip, 2007 (I worked from home then, selling bridesmaid dresses on eBay that I designed and had made at a factory in China. That year, I had made enough money to pay for two tickets since the guy I was with at the time was a total cheapskate. True story.

2.

If you have a knack for research, thrifting and finding good products and deals, don’t rule out selling on Amazon, Etsy or eBay. I have been selling on eBay since 1999 and over the years, I have made a lot of money from buying and reselling on eBay. Often times, I purchased vintage clothes for $4 and $5 and resold for as much as $50-$100. This is how Sophia Amoruso (aka #GirlBoss) got started and turned her company into the multi-million dollar Nasty Gal empire.

If you are familiar with Gary Vaynerchuk, you know he is always talking up the ability for people to make money on eBay. With the new eBay app, it’s very easy to snap a photo, name your price and voila! It’s listed.

3.

Another good buy and sell app for clothes and accessories is Poshmark. I have been on Poshmark for a month now and the app is super quick, free and easy to use with any smartphone. I don’t have to pay for shipping when an item sells, either. As as super casual user (appx 24 items listed), I have earned about $150 selling my unwanted clothes and shoes. Some ladies claim to have done about $100,000 in sales per year on Poshmark. (If you decide to sign up, use my code: JYUOY and get $5 in your account right off the bat) 😉

4.

Are you crafty? There are other ways to earn money on the go if you don’t want to be stuck at home or a studio, stock inventory, or ship out items. If you have products to sell or you make products (e.g.: your Etsy store), there are fulfillment companies such as Shipwire and Amazon who will warehouse and ship for you. All you have to do is provide the products and market/sell them. You can be anywhere and do this. If you are a graphic artist with good T-shirt designs, check out Printful. They’ll print and fulfill your orders.

5.

If you have a good vehicle, you can sign up to be an Uber or Lyft driver. Apparently, the average Uber driver in San Francisco makes $20-$30 per hour on normal hours. I am not sure where Uber is going these days, so you might want to research this option. Another driving option is Postmates.com It’s the on-demand delivery from every restaurant & store in your city. Once you sign up for the service, you can work when you want. The website claims delivery drivers can earn appx. $25 per hour + tips. And you have the option to walk, drive, scoot or bike.

6.

If you are a home chef foodie, professional chef or the next Franklin barbecue pitmaster, Check out: EatWith, where you can earn up to $700 for hosting a communal meal. The awesome part is, you can do this anywhere in the world.

7.

If you LOVE travel and Yoga more than anything, check out Trip Tribe, where you can earn money for planning a yoga retreat. Seriously. This is a no-brainer.

8.

If you are good with tools, don’t mind getting your hands a little dirty or running errands, check out TaskRabbit.  

A lot of online freelance jobs can allow you to live anywhere, even overseas.  😀

9.

If you are an animal lover, you can offer your services as a house/pet/dog sitter. One to try is USA-based Rover.com, which offers the option to sign up as a sitter and stay at a home for free while you care for the family pooch.  There is also Trusted House Sitters which is worldwide. You sign up as a sitter and you get to stay at guest homes and watch over their home and care for their furry babies while they’re away. It’s a win-win situation.

The sky’s the limit and the world is your oyster!

10.

If you want to work abroad, get to where you want to be and plug into the expat community. Apply for a working holiday visa or get some freelance work with the above mentioned websites and services. You can also  teach English or be a Nanny abroad.

A working holiday visa is a residence permit allowing travellers to undertake employment (and sometimes study) in the country issuing the visa to supplement their travel funds. … Many are intended for young travellers and, as such, have an age restriction (usually from 18 to 30 or 35) – Wikipedia

Have I given you enough ideas to chew on?? Good!
Now get crackin! <3

Did you find this article helpful?  Please pass it on so others can be working nomads, too!


4 Books that will motivate you and probably change your life:

 

  

how to travel free

10 Ways To Travel For Free if You’re Broke

Everyone wants the luxury of just traveling, but we all know how expensive it is. So is there a way to actually travel for free?

Well, kind of.  It certainly is possible to get somewhere with little to no cost at all. You just have to understand that there isn’t much that is truly free, and everything has a tradeoff. When it comes to free travel, compromise and flexibility will certainly pay off for you.

ways-to-travel-for-free

If you want to live that carefree, Instagram vignette life of roaming, sipping cocktails and hanging out in the French Riviera in a white tunic – you probably can.  I think it’s every human’s desire to create a life where we can do what we want when we want and never have to think about money. It’s the true meaning of freedom, isn’t it?  It works for many successful fashion and travel bloggers, like Aimee Song. (But it didn’t happen overnight)

How to Make it Work

I have been giving more thought and doing more research on this whole ‘travel for free’ scheme and I have uncovered some really juicy solutions. Obviously, the most expensive part of traveling overseas is getting there, and many times the lodging can be more than the flight if you plan to stay longer than a week. So, if you can scrape together your airfare and daily living expenses, you just might get to live the good life on a dime.

Freelance Work Options

If you are more of a freelancer or unemployed, and you still want to travel and work on your own terms, you can wing it and use sites such as CrowdSpring, Gumroad, ELance, ODesk or Fiverr to work from wherever you are. And don’t discount Etsy or eBay. I used to make a lot of money from buying and reselling on eBay. Lise Cartwright’s book, ‘Pimp Your Profile‘ provides helpful tips and secrets to landing high-paying jobs with ODesk, Elance and Freelancer.

 

The Gig Economy

There are other ways to earn extra money while you travel. If you have a good vehicle, you can sign up to be an Uber or Lyft driver. The average Uber driver in San Francisco makes $20-$30 per hour on normal hours.

Are you a chef or super talented cook? Check out: EatWith, where you can earn up to $700 for hosting a communal meal. The awesome part is, you can do this anywhere in the world.

If you don’t mind getting your hands little dirty or running errands, check out TaskRabbit.  A lot of online freelance jobs can take you anywhere, even overseas!

When you get to where you want to be, whether overseas or Canada, plug into the expat community, apply for a working holiday visa or get some freelance work with the above-mentioned websites and services. You can also teach English or be a Nanny abroad.

10 Ways to Travel Free

  1.  There are two websites that offer house/dog sitter exchange. One is USA-based Rover.com , which offers the option to sign up as a sitter and stay at a home for free while you care for the family pooch.  There is also UK-based  Trusted House Sitters which is super amazing on so many levels.  It’s called the ‘win-win for pet lovers who travel’. Pet lover? Check.  Loves traveling??  Check!  Basically, you sign up as a sitter and you get to stay at guest homes and watch over their home and care for their furry babies while they’re away!  Free vacation home in southern France?  Yes, please.
  2. Couchsurfing. Yes, I have been a member of Couchsurfing for a long time, and I am happy to say I had only one negative experience with it in London.  Ladies, be careful of the creepers.  Overall, the Couchsurfing community is really wonderful.  They have meetups all over the world and it’s a great way to not only travel for free but to truly experience wherever you happen to find yourself and share the experience of travel with others.  You never know what lifelong friends you might meet in your journeys, and I can guarantee you the experiences will be like no other.
  3. HomeExchange lets you swap homes with someone else!  My NYC apartment for your Paris apartment?  I’m in!  I actually (almost) did this with a couple from Lille, France back when I lived in LA.  We didn’t get our travel plans in synch, so we canceled, but man that would have been AWESOME.  This service works especially well if you live in a desirable city where there is tourism.
  4. Earn Travel Points with a credit card. We all have one, so why not put it to earning points for us? Why not put those expenses on a card and earn points for travel? Voila! What I card I have recently found is the Capital One Venture card, which earns 1.2-2X points for every dollar spent. I am about to do some big dental shit that isn’t covered by insurance, so it’s gonna be a lot out of pocket. But it’s also going to be a huge return on the investment in more ways than one (to the tune of almost 68,000 miles) But you don’t have to even do what I’m doing. Every time you pay for something in cash, you are throwing away valuable travel points. Obviously, if you are a responsible plastic user, charge every single dollar of your normal expenses as possible on a points-earning credit card to rack up those miles.  Read the fine print, though.  For example, AA has a 50,000 Miles bonus sign-up when you get the Citi card.  The catch, however, is you have to charge $3,000 in the first three months to earn it. Check with your bank. Many banks, such as Wells Fargo, have rewards programs that let you earn rewards that you can use for travel also.
  5. Many airlines (and hotels) such as American, Delta, and Southwest, also offer online shopping portals with bonus offers at various merchants where you can earn multiple points or miles per $1 you spend there. Get into the habit of clicking through these portals to the retailer of your choice (Target, etc.) I am also signed up through American Airlines Dining Rewards, so every time I eat out, I am also earning points.  It’s another win-win. Also, If you are a member of AAdvantage (as well as other hotel, airline, train loyalty programs) you can sign up with Points.com and not only keep track of your Rewards program balances in one place, but you can trade points with others.
  6.  Websites like SwagBucks and MyPoints.com offer other ways to earn rewards. It’s a lot like the airline shopping portals, but there are added ways to earn like taking surveys, using coupons, um, playing games 🙂 and referring a friend.  I have personally used MyPoints for many years and it paid off in a major way. I can’t tell you how many hundreds of dollars I racked up over the years in restaurant gift cards just by clicking on the MyPoints email links.  It was worth it. Also, Expedia now has a rewards program where you can earn points for every trip you book. I just signed up and I’m currently at 91 points, which is 3,500 Expedia+ points away from getting $25 off. Hey!
  7. WWOOF it!  If you are an eco-conscious being and interested in organic farming, the WWOOF community might be your calling. WWOOF is World Wide Opportunities on Organic Farms and basically how it works is: you live with your host and are expected to join in and cooperate with the day to day activities. In most countries, the exchange is based on 4-6 hours help-fair exchange for a full day’s food and accommodation. The first step of your WWOOFing experience is to choose your destination (for example, Ireland or Italy) and join the relevant WWOOF organization. As a member, you will be able to access a database of farms in your chosen country and start making plans.  Read the FAQs section of WWOOF for valuable info in getting started.
  8. Volunteer your time or skills for accommodations exchange.  A lot of eco-travel, yoga events, camp, ESL and such offer volunteer exchange-for-work programs.  On InterExchange, you can find programs that match with your skills and interest. This particular method is not free (or free to sign up), but you do get the opportunities to travel and earn. There are also certain festivals and retreats in Costa Rica that offer these exchange programs for selective recipients, such as certified yoga instructors.
  9. Group Travel – If you are OK to split the costs with a larger group of say, 10 people, you can stay at a cozy villa in Spain or Italy for 2 weeks at about $45 a day. I have found several awesome villas in Italy on Air BnB (airbnb.com) that accommodate 12-16 persons and the daily rate is super low per person. Splitting the costs of ground transportation is also a great way to cut costs. Again, the airline fees for getting there will be the heaviest cost, but once you reach your destination, you can stay for a few weeks for a relatively cheap daily fee.
  10. Share your love of travel and earn!
    I read a blog where one guy earned $1,850 in AirBnB travel credit. Not too shabby!

    When a friend travels on Airbnb, you both get $35 in travel credit. When they welcome their first guest, you get $75 in travel credit.
    Right now, if you sign up using my link, you get $40 in travel credit!

     

  11.  And last, but certainly not the least, ASK friends and family if they have any airline points, spare change or miles they can donate (or start a GoFundMe page and ask friends and family to pitch it for your dream vacay). Perhaps a few people you know would be willing to gift you their airline points. It sounds simple and it is, but what’s the worst thing they could say? More importantly, if they say “Sure!” you are on your way to St. Somewhere.  I honestly don’t know many family members of my own who would turn me down for a few extra airline miles to fulfill my big Scotland dream adventure, especially if I’m willing to meet them halfway. So, here’s is your dose of (mostly) free travel inspiration.  Get Dreaming, Get earning and get packing!  😉

 

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