So you want to ditch your corporate cubicle and join the ranks of web  workers? But you have a mortgage, maybe a dependent or two, and a taste  for Venti Mochas from Starbucks? You can make money in the new economy, though it might not be as easy or cushy as keeping your old economy job. I’m not talking about advertising or affiliate marketing or selling  your junk on eBay. Those are so last millennium! I’m talking about the new new economy.
1. Offer your professional expertise in an online marketplace 
These  days, you can do more than just sell your old books via Amazon and your  old Coach handbags via eBay—now you can sell your professional  capabilities in a marketplace. No longer are you limited to looking for a  permanent or contract job on Web 1.0 style job sites like Monster or CareerBuilder.  The new breed of freelancing and project-oriented sites let companies  needing help describe their projects. Then freelancers and small  businesses offer bids or ideas or proposals from which those buyers can  choose.
Elance covers everything from programming and writing to consulting and design, while RentACoder focuses on software, natch. If you’re a graphic designer, check out options like Design Outpost or LogoWorks–you don’t have to find the customers, they’ll come to you. Wannabe industry analysts might sign up for TechDirt’s Insight Community, a marketplace for ideas about technology marketing.
2. Sell photos on stock photography sites 
If people  regularly oooo and aaaaah over your Flickr pics, maybe you’re destined  for photographic greatness or maybe just for a few extra dollars. It’s  easier than ever to get your photos out in front of the public, which of  course means a tremendous amount of competition, but also means it  might be an convenient way for you to build up a secondary income  stream. Where can you upload and market your photos? 
3. Blog for pay 
 Despite the explosion of blogs,  it’s hard to find good writers who can turn around a solidly-written  post on an interesting topic quickly. GigaOM is always looking for bloggers  with great content ideas and solid writing skills. How do you get  noticed? Comment and link to blogging network sites. Write blog posts  that are polished and not overly personal (although showing some  personality is a plus).
4. Or start your own blog network 
If you like the  business side of things–selling advertising, hiring and managing  employees, attracting investors–and have the stomach to go up against  the likes of Weblogs, Inc., GigaOmniMedia, b5media,  maybe you should make an entire business out of blogs. Don’t make the  mistake of thinking you’ll get a lot of time to write yourself though.
5. Provide service and support for open source software 
Just because the software is free doesn’t mean you can’t make money on it–just ask Red Hat,  a well-known distributor of Linux that sports a market cap of more than  four billion dollars. As a solo web worker, you might not want to jump  in and compete with big companies offering Linux support, but how about  offering support for web content management systems like WordPress or Drupal?  After getting comfortable with your own installation, you can pretty  easily jump into helping other people set them up and configure them.
6. Online life coaching 
Who has time to go meet a  personal coach at an office? And don’t the new generation of web workers  need to be met by their coaches in the same way that they work: via  email, IM, and VoIP? You could, of course, go through some life coaching  certification program, but on the web, reputation is more important  than credentials. I bet Tony Robbins  isn’t certified as a life coach–and no one can argue with his success.  For an example of someone building up their profile and business online  as a coach, check out Pamela Slim of Ganas Consulting and the Escape from Cubicle Nation blog.
7. Virtually assist other web workers 
Freelancers  and small businesses desperately need help running their businesses, but  they’re not about to hire a secretary to come sit in the family room  and answer phone calls. As a virtual assistant,  you might do anything from making travel reservations to handling  expense reimbursements to paying bills to arranging for a dog sitter.  And you do it all from your own home office, interacting with your  clients online and by phone. You can make $20 and up an hour doing this  sort of work, depending on your expertise.
8. Build services atop Amazon Web Services 
Elastic  computing on AWS is so cool… and so incredibly primitive right now. Did  you know that you can’t even count on your virtual hard drive on EC2 to  store your data permanently? That’s why people are making money right  now by offering services on top of AWS. Make it easier for people to use  Amazon’s scalability web infrastructure like Enomaly has with elasticlive, a scalable web hosting platform built on AWS.
9. Write reviews for pay or perks 
If you blog for  any length of time on a particular topic–parenting, mobile phones, or  PCs, for example–you will likely be approached to do book or product  reviews. You can get free stuff this way, but are you selling your soul?  Is there any such thing as a free laptop?  These are decisions you’ll have to make for yourself, because no one  agrees upon what ethical rules apply to bloggers. Even less do people  agree on services like PayPerPost  that pay you to write reviews on your blog. Check out disclosure rules  closely and see whether such a gig would meet your own personal  standards or not.
10. Become a virtual gold farmer 
A half million Chinese now earn income by acquiring and selling World of Warcraft gold  to gamers in other countries. If you’re not a young person living in  China, this probably isn’t a viable option for you. But what’s  intriguing about it is the opportunity to make real money working in a  virtual economy. People are making real-world money in Second Life too.
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