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10 Ways to Make Money in This Current Economy!

Lori sent me this article and I added it here because I LOVE THIS IDEA! So, check it out and click below to read more!

pd

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With an abundance of job losses, salary cuts, eliminated bonuses and diminished 401(K) matching contributions, your income is shrinking — but the bills aren’t.

If your regular job isn’t earning you enough cash or you’ve lost your job altogether, these simple side gigs can help put some padding in your pockets until — maybe even after — you get back on your feet.

Here are 10 ways real people are creatively taking home some extra dough:

1. Do freelance work

Felice Premeau Devine left her lucrative, full-time job two years ago to raise her son. In the interim, she’s picked up writing and editing freelance work and started a blog, where she is able to earn a little cash from advertising.

Nowadays, almost any job can be done on a contract or freelance basis. Check out sites like Sologig, which lead job seekers to contract, consulting, freelance, temp-to-hire and part-time project opportunities in your field.

2. Sell your books

If you’re a college student or you hung on to your college textbooks thinking you might want to read them again somewhere down the line, select retailers like Barnes & Noble allow you to sell your textbooks for some quick cash. Or, take some classics from your personal library and sell them at a local second-hand bookstore.

3. Search circulating coinage

Susan Headley, the “guide to coins” on About.com, is a lifetime coin collector who has been boosting her income by searching through circulating coinage for the past six years. In 2008, she made about $2,500 and so far in 2009, she has earned approximately $500 from coins she’s found.

People who search circulating coinage successfully for a side income do so in very large numbers, she says. They buy rolls of coins from banks, typically in whole boxes, and sort through it to find stuff that just doesn’t belong, Headley says. Half dollars, for example, were no longer made from 90 percent silver after 1965, but they still had 40 percent silver in them until 1970; either of these turn a nice profit. Presidential dollar errors can be worth $50 to $5,000 each; uncirculated state quarters can sell from $10 to $50 per roll; and rare error coins can value up to $35,000.

4. Start a “business”

Turn your hobby, skills or expertise into a part-time business. Sites like Jobvana can help you do so by providing you with free tools to market your services and offer specialized skills to those looking for help.

Peter Olson says he built a profile in September 2008 offering to teach guitar lessons. He has since gained two students, earning about $240 extra dollars per month and grossing around $1,000 since he started teaching.

5. Enter local and online sweepstakes

Wendy Limauge has been entering sweepstakes since 1993 and teaching others to win through her Web site, Sweeties Sweeps, since 2002. Though winning sweepstakes rarely provides actual cash, her winnings have consistently provided her and her family with 200 to 300 prizes a year, many of them large items she and her husband couldn’t afford on their incomes alone.

Prizes she has won include three TVs, two of which are flat-screens; a home theatre system; three dishwashers, each won on separate occasions; at least $1,500 in grocery gift certificates; an $18,000 voucher for the vehicle of her choice; a trip to France valued at $25,000; and, in March 2009, she won $5,000 in an instant-win game.

“The Internet has so many options for saving money, getting something for free, winning a prize or earning money from home,” Limauge says. “You just need to find those resources that offer helpful information and point you in the right direction to get you started and keep you motivated.”

6. Give your opinion — and get paid

Linda Childers, a California-based freelance writer, says many of her friends participate in focus groups. Contributing an hour of your time can earn you up to $100, sometimes more. Online surveys, phone surveys and product trials can also earn you anywhere from $5 to $150. Check out Free Paid Surveys or FindFocusGroups.

7. Sell your junk

Terri Jay earns $2,000 – $3,000 per month just by selling junk. On eBay, Jay not only sells stuff she isn’t using; she hits up local thrift stores on 99-cent days, garage sales and tack sales, looking for things of which she knows the value. She says her best sale was for a drink tray from the 70s: She paid 25 cents for it and it sold for $87.

“The trick is to [sell] what you know,” she advises. “Therefore you can list them [at correct prices] so they will get picked up in searches [on eBay].”

8. Join a direct selling company

Direct selling is one of the easiest ways to earn some extra cash, especially if you sell products you love. Avon, for example, allows you start your own business for $10 — your take home depends on your efforts. Some full-time representatives earn six-figure salaries, others own licensed Avon Beauty Centers and many just sell Avon part time around their families schedules.

Haizel MacIntyre started her Avon business in June of 2008 to earn supplemental income to her full-time job when her husband was laid off. Since joining Avon, MacIntyre averages $1,800 a month in sales and her husband is helping her run the business. Her Avon earnings help pay the bills, provide extras for her three kids and she is hoping to earn enough to put towards her college tuition when she goes back to school to get her Masters in Social Work.

9. Be a secret shopper

Keen eyes for detail as well as a good memory are really all that it takes to succeed as a secret shopper, says Zippy Sandler, who has been mystery shopping for about 13 years. After registering with a secret shopping company, you are paid to basically go undercover and report on a company’s operation from the customer point of view.

Sandler decided to start secret shopping not only to earn money eating, traveling and shopping, but also to learn customer service skills to pass along to the employees she managed at a retail store. Depending on the clients she is shopping for, Sandler says she has earned everywhere from $100 to $2,000 per month.

10. Sell your photos to stock agencies

It doesn’t matter if you’re a hobbyist, an amateur or a seasoned photographer – anyone can submit their photos to stock photo agencies like Shutterstock.com. If your images are accepted, they will be available for download by subscribers. Each time someone downloads your photos, you get 25 cents.

VACATIONS! VACATIONS! VACATIONS!

I added this article from Money Magazine because it is chocked full of great details and links to resources for your European Vacation extravaganza! I am going to plan a trip for my fam this year and I am encouraging you to do the same if you have the money and the time. This year is the year for DEALS!

So, read on and make your plan. Then head out for ADVENTURE!

pd

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When the dollar sank to a record low against the euro last July, many Americans decided that a trip to Europe would have to wait for another time. That time may have arrived.

It’s not just that the greenback is reviving. It’s also that the travel industry, hit hard by the recession, is cutting prices like mad to lure customers. Roundtrip flights to Europe, which averaged $1,200 to $1,400 in peak season during the past couple of years, can now be had for half that, says Anne Banas, executive editor of SmarterTravel.com.

You’ll pay up to 50% less for hotels, meals, and souvenirs too. Deals are especially enticing on four- and five-star accommodations because of cutbacks on corporate travel.

Yes, a European vacation is still an investment, but it’s no longer a ridiculous prospect. Read on for smart strategies to make your dollar go the furthest – and start daydreaming of sipping lattes, lambics, or lambrusco.

When to book: As soon as you can

Used to be, waiting until the last minute to book a summer trip could yield substantial savings. These days that’s a risky move. Airlines in the U.S. and Europe cut back on capacity when fuel costs were high last year. Oil prices have fallen, but with the recession dampening travel demand, airlines continue to fly smaller and fewer planes. That means the cheapest seats fill up fast. So book your flight this month.

Sign up for low-fare e-mail alerts at FareCompare.com or Airfarewatchdog.com, which combs through airline websites for unpublished sales. In February, Airfarewatchdog noted that US Airways was offering roundtrip flights to Paris from many U.S. hubs for about $600, compared with an average of about $1,000. Such sales are fleeting – this one lasted two days – so be ready to jump.

Travel packagers and hotels are also offering breaks to those who buy in advance. Trafalgar Tours is discounting the airfare part of its peak-season packages to six European destinations by 56% for those who pay by March. At the luxury Fairmont chain, which has six hotels in Europe, guests who pay three weeks in advance get 30% or more off the best available rates – as low as $138 a night at the Fairmont in St. Andrews, Scotland.

Bottom line: The early booker gets the deal. “If you wait past April, you’ll need to be flexible on where and when you go to save,” says SmarterTravel’s Banas.

But if you can’t book by April … reduce costs by looking for flights with one or more stops. On United, for example, midsummer roundtrips to Paris are about $1,000 nonstop, but as low as $614 if you connect through Frankfurt. Or fly a non-European carrier that stops in Europe. Going with Air Tahiti, which stops in Paris on its way from Los Angeles to Tahiti, can knock several hundred bucks off the fare.

Find it online: Best flight deals

When to go: Think nonpeak

Another big factor in determining how much you’ll pay is when you travel. Peak season for Europe is mid-June through early September. Travel in the “shoulder season” – April through mid-June, mid-September through October – for the best prices. (Bonus: fewer people elbowing their way between you and the Venus de Milo.)

For example, a nine-day trip including airfare and hotel to Rome, Florence, and Venice starts at $1,500 in April and May at GoToday.com but starts at $1,900 if you travel in midsummer. Your money will go further at hotels too. In July, $250 buys you a night at a three-star Barcelona hotel; in early October that same money will get you a room with a terrace at the four-star Gran Hotel La Florida.

But if you can’t avoid the peak … score some savings by going to the big cities in August. Because most Europeans flee for the country or beach then and many shops shut down too, you may not have quite the same experience. But you can nab great deals at business hotels. Rates at Le Mridien Etoile in Paris, which run $615 a night in June or July, drop to $289 in August.

Find it online: Luxury deals

Where to go: Off the beaten path

Big cities tend to offer the least value (except in August) because they are the most popular with tourists. Also poor deals: luxury regions like Spain’s Costa del Sol and Italy’s Tuscany, where Europeans go to get away. But for those areas, at least, there are often alternatives that offer a similar experience for less.

For example, if you want to visit Italian wine country, go to the lovely but lesser-known Umbria region instead of Tuscany; you can rent a two-bedroom villa there for $850 a week in June vs. $2,000 a week in Tuscany. Ask a travel agent for advice as well. You’ll pay to use one worth his or her salt, but the fees are relatively low ($150 to $300 a trip) and agents often have access to lower prices and perks like free tours and room upgrades.

But if you must see the Eiffel Tower … book a package that bundles hotel, airfare, and other travel elements together. Such arrangements tend to offer the best value in major cities because of sheer volume, says Pauline Frommer, creator of the Pauline Frommer guidebooks. Also visit the airlines’ sites; many have their own vacation divisions, Frommer adds.

Find it online: Best travel agents

Find it online: Best package deals

Where to stay: Four star all the way

High-end hotels are suffering acutely from the slump in business travel. So many are offering tourist packages with extra perks, such as guaranteed room upgrades, free local tours, and restaurant meals.

At the four-star FitzWilliam Hotel in downtown Dublin, for example, guests who pay in advance for a spring stay get breakfast each morning and one three-course dinner for just $149 a night. In London, rooms at the trendy Halkin hotel in Belgravia Square cost $285 a night if you book and pay by May 31, down from $575.

One of the very best deals right now is on luxury river cruises. French Country Waterways is offering a two-for-one deal from April to August. A six-night trip through Burgundy is $7,300 a couple vs. $15,000 normally. “It’s unprecedented,” says Jill Jergel, an agent who books such trips at Frontiers International Travel.

But if you’d rather live like a local … rent an apartment in the city or a villa in the country. They are generally more economical than hotels if you’re traveling with a group of friends or family. For example, the Villa Book, which does luxury rentals worldwide, lists a house in the Dordogne in France that sleeps eight people for $4,800 a week. That’s just $86 per person per night. There are tradeoffs (no room service, no concierge), but you’ll also have a more authentic experience.

Find it online: Hotel deals

Find it online: Villa rental deals

How to get around: Forget the train

If you want to visit more than one destination, you might think first of Europe’s extensive train system. But such travel can be surprisingly costly, and it means you waste as much as a day of vacation getting around. I

f you’re going less than 200 miles, European no-frill airlines such as Ryanair and EasyJet may prove a better deal. A roundtrip flight from Paris to Barcelona is just $165 on Ryanair, vs. $230 for a Eurail train ticket. Just be sure you’re wise to no-frill carriers’ pricing gimmicks. Checking luggage can cost extra, as can getting an assigned seat. Factor those costs in. Booking at least two weeks in advance will give you the biggest savings.

But if you’re traveling with a caravan … think road trip. With three or more people, it’s probably cheaper to rent a car. Keep in mind that the price of gas is higher in Europe ($5 to $6 a gallon) and the cost of insurance is greater in some countries too. Even so, you’ll have a little extra to spend on your lattes in Paris or pints in London.

Find it online: Intra-europe flights

Find it online: Car-rental deals

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