Best Way To Make Money? Please Read!

Fabulous

Registered User
Forum Member
Apr 10, 2002
1,106
3
38
45
Chicago
Hello all,

I am looking for the best way to make some money at night after work, from home. I am getting married in a year and I currently have a really good job, but I am looking to make some more money to help fund my wedding, by doing something at night for a couple of hours. I have many skills to provide. I am a CPA (not practicing anymore), Brokerage License (currently working in the commercial real estate industry), I can type over 65 words a minute, and am proficient in all Microsoft Office applications among many other programs. I have heard of different scams that people get caught up in, just didn't know if anyone has had any success with any of those transcribing/survey completion/etc type of jobs.

Any imput appreciated.
 

Agent 0659

:mj07:
Forum Member
Dec 21, 2003
17,712
243
0
50
Gym rat
Forget all that bullshit and just have a small wedding. Nobody cares, nor will they remember it a year later.

Why blow $20,000 you could put down on a house or some land.
 

justin22g

WAR EAGLE!
Forum Member
Sep 8, 2005
1,809
1
0
Birmingham, AL
Hello all,

I am looking for the best way to make some money at night after work, from home. I am getting married in a year and I currently have a really good job, but I am looking to make some more money to help fund my wedding, by doing something at night for a couple of hours. I have many skills to provide. I am a CPA (not practicing anymore), Brokerage License (currently working in the commercial real estate industry), I can type over 65 words a minute, and am proficient in all Microsoft Office applications among many other programs. I have heard of different scams that people get caught up in, just didn't know if anyone has had any success with any of those transcribing/survey completion/etc type of jobs.

Any imput appreciated.


are you a f'in idiot? Completing surveys? Let me get this right. You are a CPA, Have a brokerage license, and can type over 60 wpm and wanting to do surveys? C'mon man, you are bluffing either way. It's tax season starting up, I'm sure you can get a couple clients and fund your wedding that way, not doing surveys. Atleast tell the truth.... jesus....

I am a poor guy in law school.... not getting married... but damn, tell the truth.
 

Old School

OVR
Forum Member
Mar 19, 2006
38,312
431
83
74
Forget all that bullshit and just have a small wedding. Nobody cares, nor will they remember it a year later.

Why blow $20,000 you could put down on a house or some land.


Sound advise..


then consult an agent about Insurance.


list your services on craigslist...

you will be flooded w/calls
 

Keyser Soze

Registered User
Forum Member
Jan 20, 2000
2,303
71
48
Orlando
Steal papers in the morning and then give them away with the pizza deliveries at night for extra tips!
 
S

Slink Dawg

Guest
Snow plow, cut lawns. I have nine yards that I mow at least 3 times a month during the warmer months and it makes for great gambling funds in the winter. Keeps the wife off my A$$ when I lose.
 

fatdaddycool

Chi-TownHustler
Forum Member
Mar 26, 2001
13,715
275
83
60
Fort Worth TX usa
Hello all,

I am looking for the best way to make some money at night after work, from home. I am getting married in a year and I currently have a really good job, but I am looking to make some more money to help fund my wedding, by doing something at night for a couple of hours. I have many skills to provide. I am a CPA (not practicing anymore), Brokerage License (currently working in the commercial real estate industry), I can type over 65 words a minute, and am proficient in all Microsoft Office applications among many other programs. I have heard of different scams that people get caught up in, just didn't know if anyone has had any success with any of those transcribing/survey completion/etc type of jobs.

Any imput appreciated.

Give blood.

Hell maybe by the time you get married, work your ass off for everyone but you, put up with all the life changes that go along with a wedding, they may take enough to kill ya before you actually have to get married. I know I would try it at least.


Hope that helps,

FDC
 

Mr. Poon

Sugar?
Forum Member
Jan 14, 2006
13,160
209
0
Colorado
rainmaker - shoot me an email or give me a call when you get a chance.

Got no help for you with the $, but I have all the sources to do the wedding at a reasonable price. Me and the little lady are paying for it ourselves and have done a good job scouring all the vendors to get good ones that don't gouge you.
 

IntenseOperator

DeweyOxburger
Forum Member
Sep 16, 2003
17,897
63
0
Chicago
Hello all,

I am looking for the best way to make some money at night after work, from home. I am getting married in a year and I currently have a really good job, but I am looking to make some more money to help fund my wedding, by doing something at night for a couple of hours. I have many skills to provide. I am a CPA (not practicing anymore), Brokerage License (currently working in the commercial real estate industry), I can type over 65 words a minute, and am proficient in all Microsoft Office applications among many other programs. I have heard of different scams that people get caught up in, just didn't know if anyone has had any success with any of those transcribing/survey completion/etc type of jobs.

Any imput appreciated.

bartending
 

THE KOD

Registered
Forum Member
Nov 16, 2001
42,497
260
83
Victory Lane
On $11 an hour, Jersey man made millions
Posted Jan 17 2008, 02:29 PM by Karen Datko
Filed under: Investing, Spending, Saving, Giving
Rating:

Paul Navone is one of those quiet millionaires next door. His friends had no idea he had money until he started giving it away -- $1 million to a college and another $1 million to a prep school. The 78-year-old retiree never made more than $11 an hour while working in the New Jersey mills, according to a story by Joe Logan in the Philadelphia Inquirer, and to this day Navone buys his clothing at thrift stores, and doesn't have a TV or a phone.

Navone, the son of Italian immigrants, quit school and went to work at age 16. He lived at home and saved. After two years in the Army, he bought the first of several rental properties. He lived off that income, saved his wages and turned to investing, the Inquirer story says. "Paul has always been the perfect client. He gave me money and never took it out," said broker R. Douglas Smithson, senior vice president for investments at Wachovia Securities in Vineland. "He took my advice, he stuck to a plan, and he reaped the benefits of it."

Navone, who lives in a small house in Millville, said, "My motto back then without realizing it -- and it is now -- is that I'll work for the money, and then I want the money to work for me."

..........................................................
 
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