How to Actually Make Money Online: 5 Passive Income Ideas to Start with $100
By Nischa
Summary
## Key takeaways - **Investing isn't about getting rich quick**: High-interest savings accounts or investing small amounts in broad funds can build passive income habits. While not making you rich, they demonstrate how your money can work for you, even with just $100. [00:25], [01:24] - **Print-on-demand: low risk, global reach**: Platforms like Gelato allow you to design and sell products like t-shirts or mugs without upfront costs or inventory. Gelato handles printing and shipping locally in over 30 countries, reducing costs and carbon footprint. [03:08], [03:39] - **REITs offer passive real estate exposure**: You can invest in real estate with as little as $100 through Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs). These companies own vast property portfolios and are legally required to pay out 90% of profits as dividends. [05:18], [05:43] - **Affiliate marketing: accessible content monetization**: As a content creator, affiliate income is highly accessible, requiring fewer followers than sponsorships or AdSense. Recommending products you use via blog posts or newsletters can generate passive commissions. [07:02], [07:26] - **Digital products: scalable with high margins**: Creating a digital product like a PDF guide or course once allows for unlimited sales with no extra work or overhead. While facing saturation and potential copying, the profit margins are significantly higher than physical products. [09:53], [11:15] - **Passive income requires upfront effort**: Truly passive income isn't effortless from day one; it requires initial work like creating content or researching investments. The 'passive' aspect emerges after this effort, allowing income generation while you focus on other activities. [12:25], [12:45]
Topics Covered
- Starting Small Builds Essential Passive Income Habits.
- Print-on-Demand Offers Low-Risk Online Business Entry.
- REITs Democratize Real Estate Investing for Beginners.
- Affiliate Marketing: Content Creator's Most Accessible Income.
- True "Passive" Income Requires Significant Upfront Effort.
Full Transcript
Hi, I'm Nisha. I'm a qualified
accountant and a former investment
banker. And I used to think that you
needed thousands to start making passive
income. Turns out I was completely
wrong. So, in this video, I'm sharing
five ways you can start building passive
income with less than $100. I'll show
you exactly how to get started, what to
expect, and how much you can
realistically make from each one.
Starting with number one, passive income
through investing. This is probably the
most boring one on this list, but it's
also the most accessible and the most
passive. And that is highinterest
accounts and investing. And you might be
watching this thinking, Nisha, how is a
saving account going to make me rich?
It's not. I'm not going to lie to you.
It won't make you rich. But this is
about building the habits, realizing how
passive income feels because once you
get a taste of it, you'll want to keep
going. And that's really what this is
about. getting started and proving to
yourself that your money can work for
you even if it is just $100. So, let me
break down the two options for you and
tell you exactly what you need to do
step by step. First, the high interest
savings account, also called high yield
savings account. They're basically bank
accounts that actually pay you decent
interest. We're talking 4 to 5% annually
right now. And this is mostly for online
banks. Compare that to the 0.01% most
traditional banks give you, and it's a
no-brainer. Then there's investing. But
I'm not talking about trying to pick the
next stock. I'm talking about putting
small amounts, maybe it's 20, 50, 70,
whatever you can manage into something
like an all world fund or the S&P 500
that has historically generated between
8 to 10% annually over different 10 to
20 year time frames. Both of these are
passive in probably the truest sense.
Your money is literally working while
you sleep. So, how do you get started?
For saving accounts, go on websites like
Bankrate or Moneysaving Expert and
compare the rates. Look for accounts
with no fees, government protection, and
easy withdrawals. Most of these accounts
have a cap to how much you could put in
or how much they'll pay you interest on.
So, if you have quite a lot of savings,
then you want to split up your savings
across different accounts and maximize
the amount that you're going to make
interest on. So, using real numbers, if
you put $100 into a 5% high interest
savings account, you'll earn about $5
per year. Small but completely
risk-free. Scale that up to 10,000, that
earns about 500 per year. And that's
purely passive. My high interest savings
account pays me daily. So the interest
is the same, but it pays out daily. And
so that really feels like I'm making a
quick win every single day. It's
tangible. I can see it growing. For
investing, there are loads of apps,
Vanguard, Invest Engine, Trading 212.
Choose a diversified funds like the ones
I mentioned. And let's say you use an
app that automatically invests $1 per
day. That's about $365 per year you're
investing. over 20 years assuming a 7%
annual return that grows to nearly
15,000 all from what's basically spare
change. If you want to go from complete
beginner to having a diversified
portfolio and a roadmap to financial
freedom within 6 weeks then I am hosting
an investing accelerator boot camp. The
wait list is about to close. You can
find out all the information in the link
in the description. The second one is
print ondemand. If you've been wanting
to start an online business, but you
don't want to risk money on inventory,
this one is perfect. And for that, I
want to introduce Gelato, which is
today's sponsor. Gelato is a print on
demand platform that lets you design and
sell all kinds of custom products from
t-shirts, mugs, photo books, calendars,
posters with no upfront costs and
without ever holding inventory. So, when
someone orders from your store, Gelato
handles everything from the printing,
the packaging, and the shipping. What
makes Jart stand out is they produce
locally in over 30 countries. So if a
customer orders in London, the product
is printed and shipped from the UK. If
another orders in Sydney, it's produced
and shipped right there in Australia.
That means faster and delivery, lower
cost, and a much smaller carbon
footprint compared to traditional
manufacturing. So how do you get
started? Super easy. First, you need to
sign up. It's completely free.
gelato.com/nisha.
Then connect your store, whether it's
Etsy, Shopify, Tik Tok shop, or even
Amazon. After that, pick your product
from Gelato's huge catalog. Upload your
design and create your mockup using
their magic mock-ups feature. Set your
description, decide your price, and then
publish to your store. In less than 10
minutes, you could have your first
product ready to sell. And if you want
to check quality beforehand, you could
order samples to your door. They let me
try out the platform and I ordered this
product. It was a really smooth process.
Calendar is great quality. I even I got
my name on it. The thing is with print
on demand, you never know what's going
to take off. So, it takes triing and
testing with as many designs you can and
seeing what lands. I recommend picking a
niche that lines up with your interest
because you'll be the one creating the
content and promoting it. So, the more
it fits you, the easier it is to keep
going longterm. An example of someone
who's done this, Rachel Rafé, who's an
early print on demand entrepreneur. She
shared how one of her mug designs sold
thousands of units and has generated
more than a 4 million in sales according
to an article online. So, if you've been
waiting for the right time to start,
this is it. Head over to
gelato.com/nisha
to sign up for free. And with a link in
the description, you'll also get 50% off
your first order within 2 days of
signing up. Thank you so much, Gelato,
for sponsoring today's video. Next,
moving on to number three, and that is
rental properties. Now, when most people
think about real estate investing or
property investing, they picture buying
a whole property with tens of thousands
on a down payment, if not more, getting
a mortgage, dealing with tenants. But
you don't need tens of thousands to
invest in real estate. And like the
title of this video says, you can start
investing in real estate now with as
little as $100 or whatever money you
have through REITs. That is real estate
investment trusts. These are essentially
stocks in companies that own a lot of
real estate. So instead of owning a
property directly yourself, you just buy
stock in a company that owns a lot of
properties. It's kind of the same thing.
So here's what makes REITs really
interesting. They're legally required to
pay out 90% of their profits to
shareholders in the form of dividends.
So when these companies collect all the
rent payments, they're going to pass on
90% of that to you. REITs are a good
option because instead of one property,
you get exposure to thousands of
different properties that gives you a
huge amount of diversification. Plus,
the REIT has professional management.
So, they know how to manage huge
portfolios of real estate. So, you kind
of get the benefit of professional
management, passive income,
diversification, and you don't have to
do anything yourself. It's very
different to actually owning real
estate. There are RES that invest in
apartment buildings, in commercial
properties, like shopping centers, in
data centers. There's even ones that
invest only in things like storage
facilities or specific sectors. The
dividend yield can range anywhere
between 2% to 6% and you're also getting
the potential appreciation when the
stock price goes up. So, it's a nice
thing to have in your overall portfolio.
A lot of platforms let you invest in
REIT with as little as $50 to $100 or
the equivalent for whatever currency or
country you're in. Moving on to number
four, and that is affiliate marketing.
And I'll be honest, this one gets a bit
of a bad reputation because all the
videos out there that says I'll make
10,000 a month from affiliate income and
things like that. That said, when I
started creating videos online,
affiliate income was my only income
stream for a very long time. And I would
say as a content creator, it's actually
the most accessible income stream. You
don't need many followers at all to
start earning a little bit from your
affiliate income. Unlike sponsors or
selling products, it takes building an
audience to be able to monetize those
two. Or even YouTube AdSense, you need a
thousand subscribers to start making
money from YouTube. But affiliate
income, the barrier to entry to start
making money through affiliate income is
a lot lower. I definitely wasn't making
thousands from this. I was making maybe
20, 30, $40 or equivalent a month from
recommended products I actually used.
With this, the easiest way to scale it
is you do have to create content. maybe
blog posts, newsletters, Tik Toks, and
include links to products that you
actually use. So when someone clicks
your link and buys something via your
link, you get a small commission off of
that. That's how affiliate income works.
So breaking this down for you, you can
start this completely for free. If you
start a newsletter subscription through
Medium, Substack, or even you start
posting content on TikTok, I suggest
starting with a niche that you know
really well. Don't try to review random
products that you've never used. Choose
something you use daily. Maybe finance
apps, productivity tools, books you're
reading, whatever you're already
spending money on anyway. And then the
more aligned your content is that you're
creating, the more likely it is that
someone who's watching your content will
end up clicking on the link to check out
whatever it is that you're recommending.
In terms of affiliate programs, loads of
companies have them. Amazon Associates
is the most obvious and most popular
one. Apply to three to four programs in
your niche. Banks and investment
platforms are another one. Plum, Trading
212, Notion, they all have affiliate
links and then start creating some
useful content around it. So, to give
you some real numbers so you know what
to expect, Amazon pays around 1 to 3%
commission in most categories. So, if
someone buys a $50 item through your
link, you might earn 50 or $1.50 and you
might also get a percentage on anything
else that they buy within that 24hour
time frame. But again, with the idea of
this video, it is just seeing what's
possible, building the habits, and
understanding how passive income works.
Because once you get that feeling,
you're going to want to do it more. Some
of my first videos still earn me small
commission years later via Amazon links,
and I've done absolutely nothing to
maintain them. And so if you are looking
to potentially start on the content
creation or start your own newsletter or
start a blog, then this is one of the
most accessible ways to make money
before waiting for sponsors or before
making your own product or before
relying on any other stream of income,
which usually takes a lot longer to
monetize. And number five, creating and
selling digital products. This one is
one of my favorite because I do it
myself and it's also a way to package
whatever knowledge that you already have
into something that is very scalable,
accessible, and can get to people in all
parts of the world. So, how this works,
you create a product once, maybe it's a
PDF, it's a guide, it's a ebook, it's a
video course, and then you could sell
unlimited copies without any extra work.
There's no printing, no shipping, no
stock to manage. Whether 10 people buy
it or 10,000 people buy it, the effort
really stays the same. Digital products
sound amazing, and I really do think
they are, but there are a few downsides
to know about. First is saturation.
Because it's so easy to create, lots of
people are doing it. You're not
competing with a handful of local
businesses as you would with physical
products anymore. You're competing with
people all over the world. That means
your product has to solve a very
specific problem or stand out in a very
crowded space. The second downside is
copying on marketplaces like Etsy. If
you make something good, chances are
someone will just buy it and copy it and
tweak it and then sell their version.
You'll lose some profit here and there
and it's part of the reality. And then
third is a perception. Some buyers still
don't value digital products in the same
way they value physical ones. That's why
pricing here really matters. The flip
side, however, is the margins are
incredible. With physical products, even
if you've got healthy profits, you're
still covering things like materials,
packaging, shipping. With digital, once
you've made the product, every extra
sale, it's basically pure profit. And
because you don't have to fulfill the
orders, you also free up your time and
location. You literally can make sales
while you're asleep or away on holiday.
And that's the kind of freedom that
physical products don't really match.
So, if you're a beginner here, the best
way to start is to keep things very
simple. Don't overthink it. Cut down the
options and pick one product you
actually understand. Build on what you
already know. Look at things you've
bought recently or problems you've
solved. And then ask yourself, could I
package this solution for others? Stick
to the basics. Make sure your product
clearly solves a problem, your photos
stand out, and your listing is easy to
find through search. And if it's your
first time, start on a very beginner
friendly platform like Etsy. It already
has buyers built in, which makes getting
traction much easier than starting from
scratch on your own site. You're no
longer trading time for money. You're
selling the knowledge once and then
you're getting paid for it again and
again. And there's nothing quite like
getting a notification for a sale while
you're asleep or away from your desk.
And then I wanted to round up this video
to say passive income is one of those
buzzwords that gets thrown around a lot.
Usually with a palm tree in the
background and someone telling you that
they make 50,000 a month while sipping
cocktails on a beach. The idea that's
often sold is that you set something up
once, you walk away and money just flows
into your account forever. But the
reality is nothing is truly passive from
day one. You've got to write that ebook.
You've got to create that content.
You've got to research those funds and
those reetss. You've got to set up those
systems. The passive part only comes
after you've put in the effort. And even
then, it's not completely hands-off.
You'll need to update things
occasionally. You need to respond to
questions. You might need to hire a team
to manage some of the stuff for you.
What makes these income streams valuable
isn't that they're effortless. It is
that they can eventually earn you money
whilst you're doing other things. And a
lot of my business model has turned from
active income to passive income. It's
still a lot of work, don't get me wrong,
but there is something very rewarding
about making money that's not
necessarily tied to you or your time.
And that's what this video really is
about. You might think, "Oh, it's just
20 or another $50 here." But when you're
doing this, when you start making
passive income, what you're really doing
is learning how you can make money work
for you instead of you always working
for money. You're building skills.
You're understanding markets. You're
creating systems. And some of these will
work for you and some of them won't. And
that's totally fine. The goal isn't to
get rich. is just to start somewhere and
then build something that grows over
time because even if it takes a year to
earn your first 500 in passive income,
that's still 500 you didn't have to
trade your time for. So, it's absolutely
worth exploring. Thank you so much for
watching. If you haven't already, don't
forget to subscribe and see you in the
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