Create Side-Hustle Income Teaching What You Already Know

Radhika Sivadi

3 min read ·

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What if you were given the opportunity to get paid for sharing with other people information you already? 

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Now, perhaps unlike at any other time in history, if you possess knowledge that other people would be willing to pay for, you can start making money, with little or no startup costs. 

Teaching online grants you the freedom to still work a day job yet generate side-hustle income. In fact, today, it’s a real possibility to even make just as much money while you’re asleep as when you’re awake, thanks to the power of the Internet. 

You have the opportunity to teach and share what you’re most passionate about to large audiences. Would you like to share what you love and be paid for doing so? One vehicle for doing so is Udemy.com, which describes itself as an “online learning marketplace” with a mission “to help anyone learn anything.”

“The world is changing so quickly and gotten more complex, especially because of technology that people need to constantly learn new things,” Udemy’s CEO, Dennis Yang tells me in a recent interview.

“There’s been a cultural shift towards sharing and just like Netflix, people want to be able control their own media,” Yang adds. “Because of mobile technology, people want access to learning when they want it and where they want it." 

A new instructor, he says "has the ability to impact many students’ lives and students have access to experts, right at their fingertips,” he says.

Before you cast your hat in the online teaching ring, do these three things first: 

Related: Share What You Know and People Will Buy What You Sell

1. Claim a topic.

What area do you find fascinating? In everyday conversation, what do you talk about the most? This could be an indication of what you could teach others.   

What questions are people always asking you to help them with? If individuals are always approaching you for advice, perhaps within that there’s something you can teach. 

What genre of books do you tend to read? Answering this might point to a subject area you might teach. 

Related: Do the Side Hustle: 5 Better Ways to Earn Extra Cash

2. Solve a problem.

To teach what you already know – or what you are willing to learn – you require students. And to find them, you must know their needs and how to best serve them.

Asking questions is the best way to get to familiarize yourself with the needs of prospective students.

You might ask, for example, some of these questions: 

What are three areas in which you’re having problems at work or in life?

What are three things you really want to accomplish this year?

What frustrates you the most about your job?

What things have you done to try to improve your situation? What has worked the best (or the least)? 

3. Define an objective.

Remember, you only want to deliver high-quality information. To so, you must know your audience and cater to their needs. A good question to ask yourself is “Who are the people who will participate in my course and what will they be hoping to learn?" 

It’s a good tactic to focus on a specific level of students you want to teach: beginners, intermediate or advanced learners. This will not only help you target the right audience but will ensure that your course offers the type of high-quality information that your students are seeking.

Last year I interviewed Nick Walter, who made $60,000 in 30 days by promoting his Udemy.com class on Kickstarter.com. He didn’t even have a regular job at the time. That just goes to show you the power of teaching what you know. 

Let me ask you a question: How much extra money would you like to make next year?

Do you have that number in your head? Consider how easy it can be to make money just by teaching what you already know.  

This year I’m taking the plunge and launching my very own Udemy.com course.

Remember, by the end of this year, you’ll end up somewhere. Do you want to end up somewhere well-designed or undesigned? 

The choice is yours. 

Start teaching today.

Related: Why ‘Gen Z’ May Be More Entrepreneurial Than ‘Gen Y’

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Radhika Sivadi