BiggerPockets Money Podcast - The Ultimate Guide to Finding Your Ideal Side Hustle
Episode Date: February 10, 2026How do you choose a side hustle that actually makes money instead of wasting your time? In this episode of the BiggerPockets Money Podcast Nick Loper from Side Hustle Nation breaks down exactly how to... find the right opportunity by aligning your skills and interests with real market demand. Whether you're looking for low-skill options to get started or high-paying side hustles that don't require heavy lifting, Nick explains how to identify opportunities in everyday problems, set realistic income expectations, and use AI to brainstorm ideas tailored to your specific situation. Learn why most side hustles fail, how to avoid common mistakes, and the proven framework for choosing something that will actually generate income. This Episode Covers: It's important to take an honest inventory of your available time for a side hustle. Setting realistic goals for your side hustle can help maintain motivation. Identifying your skills and interests is crucial for finding the right side hustle. Look for opportunities in everyday problems that others face. Low-skill side hustles can be a good starting point for many people. Market demand is essential; if a service is needed, there's potential for success. Building trust and reputation is key to gaining clients in any side hustle. AI can assist in brainstorming side hustle ideas tailored to your skills. Creative solutions for busy families can lead to lucrative side hustle opportunities. And SO much more! To go beyond the podcast: Kick start your financial independence journey with our FREE financial resources Subscribe on YouTube for even more content Connect with us on social media to join the other BiggerPockets Money listeners Connect with Nick Loper: Website Social Media AI Brainstorming Worksheet Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Side hustles can be great for earning extra income,
but they can also be great at wasting your time for little in return.
Today, we're chatting with Nick Loper from Side Hustle Nation
about how to choose the right side hustle for you.
It doesn't matter if everyone,
you know is making bank doing product representations and brand ambassadorships. If you're an introvert,
this probably isn't the right side hustle for you. Nick has tips for getting started, including a
prompt template to help you gather your strengths in one place so you can feed it into your AI of choice
so you can start exploring side hustles that might not be so mainstream, but will be a perfect
fit for you. Hello, hello, hello, and welcome to the Bigger Pockets Money podcast. My name is Mindy Jensen,
and with me as always is my former side hustler co-host Scott Trench.
Thanks, Mindy. Great to be here. I've substituted side hustling for having arguments about Bitcoin
with random internet strangers. We are so excited to be joined by Nick Loper today. He is the brains
behind side hustle nation.com and the host of the side hustle show where he talks exclusively
about side hustles and how you can set yourself up for success. We did a recent podcast episode
talking about how someone could go from broke at 50 to retired at 60. And one of our recommendations there was
go listen to side hustle nation. Go listen to Nick's side hustle show and sign up for the site and spend
one hour a week, one way on one drive of your commute. And we believe that you will earn not just the
minimum hourly rate for like an Uber or a basic side hustle, but that you will have idea after idea
germinate and you'll be making at least $10,000 per year if you apply yourself. Nick,
welcome to Bigger Pockets money. And do you agree with that assumption? Is that a good pitch for why people
should listen to the side hustle show? Yeah. I appreciate it.
that shout out, absolutely. From your experience, how do we get honest about what the realistic
potential of side hustling is for someone with a full-time job? And what should people be
looking for out of a side hustle? You know, in a realistic sense in the first year, when they
may not feel like they bring a lot of really unique skills to the table. Yeah, we can dive into
all of that, especially the skill side, because I really like that part of the conversation.
But starting out, taking kind of an honest inventory of, well, what hours do I realistically
have today to dedicate to this. Like, okay, if I'm working eight to five plus commute, plus kids,
plus after school activities, plus plus plus, plus, like how much is left, right? And so you can
kind of start with this time audit exercise. We all have dealt the same number of hours in a week,
but it looks different for everybody. And a friend of mine was like, I'm pretty sure my four
kids hours per week looks a little bit different than, you know, a single 20-something person.
So taking an honest inventory of where your time is currently going and saying, okay, could I
realistically do half an hour in the morning before work? Could I realistically do half hour? And I kind of
frame it that way, like the bookends of your days, because it's where you probably have the most
control over your own time before you start putting out fires and reacting to everybody else's
agenda. And maybe I could do four or five hours, you know, one day on the weekend. And maybe it adds up to
10 hours a week, right? It's kind of just as a ballpark, like being honest, first of all,
like, what time do I have to dedicate to this? And then second, like, what is my dream scenario side hustle
goal. Like, everybody's like, okay, I want to be able to quit my job. It's like, well, let's dial
it back. And I think on a previous episode, we talked about the side hustle snowball where it's like,
could I cover my car payment? Could I cover my gym membership? Could I cover my cell phone bill?
Right. There's little milestones. There's little wins along the way. But you got to make it
meaningful enough for you to keep going when the times get tough, when you're like, I'm not seeing the
results right away or how to the motivation to see it through. My hypothesis, right, let's take,
let's take somebody who is really just starting out.
Like we use this persona, we call her Barb or Nancy, depending on whether she has dead or not.
She's been a stay-at-home mom for 25 years and is now terrified and starting out on the next phase of wealth building.
Entry-level job, 40 hours a week.
You know, we thought, hey, you're going to have to basically just grind it out.
You're going to trade hours for dollars in the initial phases.
And there's a number of relatively low-skill options like Uber,
or dog walking or whatever that can get you started.
Would you agree with that hypothesis?
And then how would you suggest that this person begin the journey of identifying one of these future goals?
At first it's just, I need extra money.
But then it becomes, I think, something more.
And there are multiple options there.
How would you frame that journey for us?
Yeah, you have to have that both near term, what am I going to do today, and pair that with,
well, what does success look like three to five years from now?
the plug-in-play type of apps that you mentioned, the Rovers and the Uber Eats and the DoorDash and stuff,
like that's a really good stopgap. Like limited barrier to entry. It's a skill you already have.
Like you can get started like this weekend, right? But your earning power is capped, right? It's a
skill that almost everybody has. So it's not particularly unique or like, and even Uber's like,
when we're investing heavily in self-driving cars. Like does this even exist in five years?
you know. So there's that, like, what does success look like five years from now? Because we tend to focus
a lot on the downside risk of starting a business, of starting a side hustle. What if it fails? What if I
look dumb? What if nobody cares? This important because like you want to make sure you're not taking
a swing that's going to bankrupt you. But playing for a swing that has a meaningful enough upside
that that's a win, right? It's like if you look at somebody else who's walked that path that you're
considering and what does their life look like today, are they still grinding?
80 hour weeks or do they have a little more freedom and flexibility in their days, right?
That's kind of the benchmark that you can use.
Okay, if I can reverse engineer what they did and apply it to my own situation, that would be
meaningful.
And it's hard because you don't necessarily like try and advocate.
Like you don't need to know steps two through 10 to be able to take step one because
it's like, the analysis paralysis can be very real.
But like trying to point the trajectory in a way that would be a big win for you.
I'm approaching it again with this lens of like an entrepreneurial mindset.
where nine out of ten businesses fail.
So the obvious response to that is not to not try businesses,
but to start 10 businesses, right?
And then one of them should succeed statistically.
That's how I bring it to the table.
And I think that that goal is for a lot of people
when they start side hustling, like, but I'm 23.
I did a bunch of side hustles.
I was a tutor.
I tutored this high school kid in math for a little bit.
It was really terrible hourly rate because I had drive there,
get paid like $10 an hour or whatever it was,
then drive home.
It was horrible rate, although I liked him.
And then, you know, I drove for Uber.
I started these businesses.
And none of them really worked until things did work, right, eventually.
And that mentality is I think what I'm trying to bring to the table here is you don't
really know that goal.
How do you pursue a path that either makes you much more per hour or provides you something
much more fun or flexible?
How do I think about that experimentation flow, which is probably what most people who go down
the path of listening to your show?
That's probably the evolution that most of them take.
to get to wherever they end up.
Yeah, I would argue that the tutoring and the Uber driving probably set you up,
like kind of the mentality, like almost the identity of like I'm a person who's willing to do
the extra work, even if it's not like, okay, it wasn't a home run success in terms of becoming
a million dollar business, but it was like almost this mental win.
I'm able to earn money outside of a traditional job.
And like that's really empowering for a lot of people.
Does that make sense?
Of course, yes.
And so the question is, like, I didn't do science behind that. I just, like, tried something and then tried the next thing. Nowadays, we've got you. There's a, there's a science. There's a, there's a path. There's like hundreds and thousands of examples that you've pursued there. So how would someone start, like take that first step, but then actually begin incrementally moving in a better direction, even if they don't have that goal to find yet? Yeah, this is the probably the primary skill that separates the people who take action from the people who are like perpetually stuck on the sidelines.
And year after year I run the survey, and it's like half of the audience is like almost this
entrepreneurial voyeuristic.
They're like, oh, that sounds nice.
I mean, they're kind of like, they tell themselves they're waiting for that perfect idea,
this, you know, inspiration to strike.
It's like, there's no such thing is the perfect idea.
The perfect idea is the one that you're like inspired enough, excited enough to take action on,
to take that first step.
A friend kind of likened it to your first move in a game of chess.
Like, I'm just putting my pawn out into the world.
and see what kind of reaction it gets.
So where I typically start is kind of this inventory of skills, interests, hobbies,
like what have I gotten paid to do in the past?
What do other people ask me for advice on it?
We can get into the AI-assisted brainstorming sheet.
But kind of where does my excitement lie?
If I'm looking for that type of side hustle with more upside potential than driving for Uber
or something like that, it's kind of where I start.
And then I try to pair that with pains and problems.
you could have the, call it like the What Sucks Notes app in my phone, just like taking inventory
of what other people are complaining to me about, what my spouse partner, co-workers, like,
what's annoying to them or what do I find annoying? What pains or problems have I overcome in my
own day to day and trying to figure out like, okay, is there a match here where there could be
a business idea on the other side? We had a woman who built a business, a pooper-scooper business,
is pet waste removal business.
She's out, she's staring in her backyard, like, kind of dreading this chore.
And then the light bulb goes on, like, well, if it's a chore for me, if it sucks for me,
it probably sucks for other people too.
Other people will probably be willing to pay to make this problem go away.
And sure enough, they were.
And like when we recorded, she had 100 weekly recurring clients.
And now she had other team of pooper scoopers going out and doing the work.
And it was just kind of like that one using that pain point exercise.
Smells like freedom.
Thank you for the, the pain.
Pity laugh here, Mindy. I actually might have been more than a pity laugh on that one.
No, that was funny.
Let's talk about that person, if we can, or an example like that.
This person, did they start with that?
Was that their first one, their first concept that they explored?
Or was that the evolution after trying multiple other activities that sucked, you know, frankly?
And then got better over time, like that, then the idea for what would actually work as a side hustle
appear to them.
How do they evolve to that point?
Yeah, I'm not sure.
in her case specifically, we talked to another gentleman in a really similar business. And he's like,
okay, I ran a garage door company or I ran a plumbing service. And it was kind of, you know,
almost arrived at the same conclusion in a different way where he's like, my wife was pregnant.
We hired this, you know, pooper scooper service to come out. And I don't know why we're on the
poop train, but that's just kind of top of mind for some reason. Let's evolve to the ups and downs
of the garage door business. Thank you, Mindy again. I appreciate your pretty
laugh there. That was a pity laugh. But in this case, it was like, look, my wife was pregnant. We didn't
have time to deal with this. So we hired the service. But we never knew when the guy was showing up.
He didn't have a uniform or anything. It was like the billing was really weird. It's like,
the barrier to this seems so low to do better than the existing operators. And so it's like,
what if we just took an honest swing at this to see if we could get some market share? And
that's exactly what happening. That company is.
is called swoop scoop, and they've cleaned like quarter million yards at this point.
They're all throughout the Northwest.
It's like become a really, really like a multimillion dollar pooper scooper business,
kind of from that similar inspiration of like, is this the best that's out there?
We've had people on the show saying the same thing.
Like, I was trying to get my piano tuned.
And nobody, like the people doing it are 80 years old.
They just don't return your call.
Like they don't, they're generally not hungry enough for the business to go after it.
I think there's a lot of, a lot of truth to, if you could pick up the phone and respond,
I mean, I use a plumbing business that's way more expensive than a individual plumber
for everything but the huge jobs because of that dynamic.
I would much rather pay three, 400 bucks to deal with a problem securely that maybe I could
get for done for 200 bucks than I would, you know, I think it's a great concept.
And the pooper scooper business is obviously along those lines.
We're kind of working through the framework here.
If you're that person who's kind of business agnostic or like, look, I don't have any specialized
skills. First, like, give yourself some credit. Like, if you've existed on the planet for any length
of time, you probably have some skills. And some might be worth paying for. Like, psychologists
call it the curse of knowledge, like all of us. Like, we've been podcasting for years and years.
And so it's almost hard to imagine not knowing how to do it. Like, how do you structure the show or
how do you, you know, produce this? It's like, you know, it's hard to imagine Einstein, like, not knowing
basic algebra, right? It's like once you know the thing, it's hard to. So first of all,
you know, give yourself some credit, go through the exercise of like, okay, what skills have I
gotten paid to do? What other people ask me for help with? All that stuff. You know, the very
first tier is like that plug and play tier where it's just simple, you know, usually app-based.
You know, you don't have to do the marketing. It just, you know, the notification pops up. Do you
want to accept this gig? Do you not? The next tier is what I call kind of like business in a box
side hustles where there's maybe a little bit more upfront work, maybe a little bit more
upfront investment involved in like in this category, I would call like vending machines where
it's like, look, there's a proven playbook out there. You just got to go find the location.
You got to do the math on the equipment financing and it's there. You don't have to reinvent
the wheel. We had another guy who was doing mobility scooter rentals and it was really similar.
Like the demand was already there. How do I step in front of that demand? And it's just like,
okay, I put on my marketing hat and I had to make some upfront investment in
equipment there. We had another guy who was doing like parking lot sweeping where it's like this
is an existing service that, you know, property management companies like strip malls, property
managers like either already pay for and they're happy or they're not happy with their service like
choice A or B or they don't know that this exists and now it's your job to get in front of them.
And so they're kind of like going where there's already demand or trying to create a little bit of that
demand, kind of like that business in a box, like follow somebody else's playbook. I think that's
probably tier two of the, well, I don't really care what kind of side hustle I start, but I just want
to make some money. Tax season is one of the only times all year when most people actually look at
their full financial picture, including income, spending, savings, investments, the whole thing. And if you're
like most folks, it can be a little eye-opening. That's why I like Monarch. It helps you see exactly
where your money is going, and more importantly, where your tax refund can make the biggest impact.
Because the goal isn't just to look backward, it's to actually make progress.
Simplify your finances with Monarch.
Monarch is the all-in-one personal finance tool designed to make your life easier.
It brings your entire financial life, including budgeting, accounts and investments,
net worth, and future planning together in one dashboard on your phone or your laptop.
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Monarch subscription with the code pockets.
What I personally like is that Monarch keeps you focused on achieving, not just tracking.
You can see your budgets, debt payoff, savings goals, and net worth all in one place.
Every decision actually moves the needle.
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after that nine-month commitment. The fund is open to accredited investors only. The fund's
minimum investment is typically $100,000. The Pine Financial is able to reduce that minimum for
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I mean, you don't have to reinvent the wheel. I think that is what it stops a lot of people from
starting in the first place is you don't have to come up with some brand new idea.
You just have to be better than your competitors. And like the the pooper swooper thing,
you said they're doing like 250,000 different houses. Obviously, it's, you know, a whole team there.
But one thing you want is rich clients.
Rich clients are, they will absolutely pay for your services, but you have to deliver.
And I guarantee you they are dealing with somebody right now in some capacity that is not
delivering.
So it goes back to your, what's the suck factor?
If it sucks for you, it's going to suck for somebody else.
So figure out what is annoying you in your life?
How easy is that?
Just walk around your house and be like, what annoys me today?
Drive to work.
What annoys me today?
And you will get so many ideas of just things that annoy you.
They won't all be jobs that you could do.
They won't all be side hustles you can do.
But I see that as being a very big inspiration piece to getting you some ideas that either
are different or are the same.
You're annoyed because your pooper, scooper guy only comes once every other week, even though he's
supposed to come every week.
And he doesn't wear a uniform.
And he sends you bills before he gets there.
And I'm so blaze about this, but it's not that hard to be better than somebody else.
It's not even necessarily about conquesting market share from an existing service provider.
It's that the pie continues to get bigger as elderly homeowners, millennial homeowners who are really busy in the kind of child rearing age of their lives.
It's like, I don't, I just want to deal with this anymore.
Like, there's got to be somebody else who can come do this for me.
And like, you think about the elderly homeowners, I'm not getting up on a ladder to clean out the gutters or wash the windows anymore.
It's like the pie keeps getting bigger for those types of like blue collar home service type of businesses.
It's not even necessarily like, oh, I'm going to go take food off some other guy's table.
It's like just the available total addressable market continues to grow there.
I want to push back here on a couple of these concepts because I think for one of the challenges we're going to have here is the three of us are very entrepreneurial.
I have no fear about starting a business.
I don't have issue forming it, getting insurance, getting the website stood up, creating intake forms for clients, figuring out where those
people are searching for those, but on the other marketing campaign, that's creative and
moving.
Like, that's an overwhelming body of activity to many people who are thinking about a side hustle,
right?
It seems like, okay, that's like a checklist to complete.
They'll take a couple of days to try out to maybe us, as folks have done a lot of entrepreneurial
experience, small and large businesses.
But for someone who's just starting out, that's a step, I believe, that's beyond
what we're talking about here.
And they're going to be more like, well, I just want to like, make.
some money in the next month, that is good. And Uber, I understand I can do the drive for Uber and get
all that set up and I'll make, you know, maybe 10 to 20 bucks an hour, depending on how good I am at
putting myself in position to get demand surging or whatever. But I'm thinking, like, what are other
ways to get that first step going? The point I want to get across with today's episode is it starts
with driving for Uber or the equivalent. Then it moves to optimizing surge demand for Uber.
Then it moves to this kind of like next level more realistic skill for you.
Then it moves to a business in a box.
Then maybe you hit a nice winner like a multimillion dollar pooper scruper business.
But what's what's that like realistic first and second step here?
Because that's what I think is more tangible.
People can feel on the journey.
I think it's going to be much more representative of the typical side hustle journey than these big,
these big garage door businesses.
even though the garage door can be remote first.
Maybe a helpful lens to look at it through is Nathan Berry has this framework he calls
the ladders of wealth creation.
He's like, you know, ladder number one is working a job.
It's trading time for money.
It's, you know, it's simple.
It's like where almost everybody starts.
And for him, he says, like, I was flipping burgers making five bucks an hour at Wendy's.
That was my first job.
You know, tier two is that freelance service.
and it could be, you know, Uber could be under this bucket or DoorDash could be under this bucket,
where it's still time for money, but it's like you're kind of on your own, you know,
maybe in this case, the apps are delivering you customers and like maybe a step higher on the
ladder is, well, I'm doing my own marketing for customers here, but I'm still doing a skill,
solving a problem and getting paid for it, right?
It's still kind of like time for money.
Ladder three was, you know, how do I productize that in some way where it's like people can
buy the solution without necessarily having to talk to me?
they click a button on a website and then either I deliver the very packaged service.
It's like, I will design you a website with five pages or I'll do your LinkedIn ghostwriting
posts for a month or something, you know, set deliverable, set price and either you're delivering
it yourself or now you've started to build kind of a little agency, maybe.
You have other people on your team delivering that service.
That could be on ladder number three.
And he says, you know, ladder four, where kit, the software company plays is, you know,
software services, it's marketplaces, it is more complex businesses where it's like much higher
level of skill to build. And his argument was like, look, you can skip some ladders, but you can't
skip learning the skills along the way. And I think that's the point that you're trying to make is
eventually, like maybe I would love to have this, you know, a million dollar business, I'm still
going to have to learn the service-based skills, the customer service, the billing, the marketing,
all of the little steps along the way. Like, you can't skip those, even if I want to skip to another
tier. Am I on the right track there? Yeah, absolutely. And so let's take, you know, somebody who's
starting out and is not going to move up those next tiers. What are some inspirational ideas
that we can get started with or examples that you have that are not pooper-scooper big businesses? But, hey,
you're going to make $12 to $20 now we're doing the basic apps. Here's ones that make $25 to 50 that might
be accessible to you. What are some of the ideas there that you've come across?
Gotcha, gotcha. Have we talked about ShareTown on the show before? No, I don't think I've heard of
this.
No. Okay. This is a really interesting one that kind of came across my desk a few years ago.
ShareTown is this company that is the reverse logistics provider for, you know, bed-in-a-box mattress
companies, for exercise equipment, for I think they do like pizza ovens, like basically like a direct-to-consumer
brand that's selling something big and bulky, they all have, especially on the mattress side,
they all have like the, you know, 100-night better sleepers-free guarantee. And like 7% of those mattresses
end up getting returned. Like, know what? My sleep wasn't any better. Take it back. I don't want it
anymore. So the mattress company can't like take this back or they don't really want to take it back.
They can't sell it as new. So they partner with ShareTown to handle these pickup requests. And rather
than just landfilling it, they say, well, you can resell that into your local marketplace, clean,
sanitize it, whatever, you know, mark it down for half off for the normal retail price. And because
you're a private party seller, like it doesn't really damage the, you know, brand reputation or anything like
that, you know, Sheratown then partners with hundreds and hundreds of local reps around the country
to facilitate these pickup requests. Like my wife and I, we bought some mattress a few years ago,
like before I even heard about this company. And they came, they picked it up. They had a little
Honda pilot with a little trailer thing on the back. And this, I think it was a husband and wife.
Like, you could tell they had done this before, right? They had this mattress in and out,
folded bag, package, put on the trailer in like three minutes. And we're like, dang, that was
impressive. This was their whole gig. And they, this was their whole gig. And they were,
would go around and do these pickup requests.
And the different Sheratown reps that I've talked to say, look, $150, $250 per flip is kind of the
target here.
And it could be done nights and weekends.
It could be done as a side hustle.
We've talked to a few people doing it full time, making several thousand dollars a month.
But that's one where you probably have a little bit more higher earning power.
You do need to have transportation.
You do need to have storage to be able to hold on to these big, bulky items.
But definitely higher earning power than a lot of your typical.
side hustle apps. What about some item activities or items that don't require heavy lifting or big
physical exertion? Because you mentioned blue collar for a good chunk of these. But scoop and poop is,
you know, after the, probably the third hour, probably fairly physically demanding to a certain point,
very unpleasant, you know, moving mattresses, you know, can involve heavy lifting or, you know,
I presume that that job comes with the occasional client who does not put it out nicely in the front
step and you have to navigate a bunch of stairs and all those kinds of things.
It's like, those are heavy.
You can make money doing this, but it is, it is work.
You've got to be willing to do it and have a partner to lift these heavy things.
One of the more popular ones lately that is 100% online is kind of in this realm of AI data training.
So the one that I tested was called remote tasks, like remote tasks.
But there's also data annotation.
There's also one called outlier.
or.AI, and where this is kind of helping the large language models figure out which prompt
is best. And if you're anti-AI, obviously don't touch this one with a 10-foot pole. But in my experience,
it was like 15 bucks an hour, fully remote. And if you have specialized skills in programming,
it could be like $45 an hour. That's one that might be a little more interesting to test
fully from home. My experience, really tedious. It's like, oh my gosh, the onboarding was,
it took several hours. And it was like, are I ever going to get through this? I got to
do it, I got to do it to be able to report on it, but then even the actual work is like,
well, it's just more of the same. It's like, which prompt do you prefer? Like, did this answer
the prompt? Did it follow the instructions? Like, yes, no. And it's like, how would you do it
differently? It's like, okay, you know, I can do this. But it's, you know, it checks the box for being,
you know, fully remote, something you can do evenings and weekends. Some of the ones that I was
thinking about were we had a baby, you know, last year. And we had a night nurse come one day a week,
right? Because we're like, we just want one night asleep for the first few months.
I can function if I just have one night.
Yeah, yeah. It's amazing how much better off you are after.
Because some nights you can trade off or whatever, but just have one full night for both of us
asleep. And that was like $600 for each night. And they came and they slept in a bed for most
of the night and woke up for the baby. That was the requirement with it. It was through an agency.
We tried to hire one directly. And when we asked for, hey, we want a couple of things here.
First, like you agreed not to be using alcohol or drugs during the arrangement here.
And that ended up not being a problem for this person to sign the agreement with that.
Fine, you know, we're going to go with this agency or whatever.
But I think that the direct relationships, because we had a bad experience at the babysitter once that did that.
And we were never going to go through that again.
Stuff like that seems like, oh, if you're willing to work and put in the sacrifice, you don't have to lift heavy mattresses.
But you do have to show, there are opportunities to show up on site and do.
those types of things that are not necessarily fully remote.
Do you have any more like that where you can make really high dollars per hour without physical
labor that's involved?
That sounds like a pretty good gig.
If I could make 600 bucks a night and maybe they're obviously they're splitting that with
the agency, but even if it's half of that, 300 bucks to wake up a few times in the night,
like that's a pretty good gig.
Oh my gosh, yes.
This is like, and you're really providing a service for folks like us like that are, that
really needed like one or two good days.
Like it's hard to lead a company when you're waking up throughout the middle of the night.
a bunch of times, right? Scott, you called her a night nurse. Was she actually a nurse? Or is this
something that anybody could do? I'm assuming that the service will perform a background check and do
all of that. But do you have to be trained as a nurse? Because I can wake up in the middle of the
night and feed a baby and then put them back in the crib. I mean, I did that for free for four years.
There were various criteria that I do not think are particularly onerous, like infant CPR, right? Like some
some of those things. I can't remember. I'm stretching back a year for this. I probably should have
looked that up. That's what I was going to as like, if you're willing to sacrifice, like,
there is a real sacrifice. You're going to someone's house. You're going to stay up. You're going to be
woking up multiple times throughout the night. Your sleep is going to be shot. That is going,
like, that's going to happen. But you're also earning really good dollar per hour,
depending on where you're at. That's where I was, I was wondering, if you're willing to,
if you're willing to sacrifice, but just physically can't lift things or get on a ladder and do
Christmas lights, you know, or whatever. I think the broader strategy here would be to find those
local agencies, the night nurse agency that you ended up going through, and asking, well, how could
I get added to your roster of available service providers? Because then kind of similar to Uber,
it's like, well, the agency is doing the marketing for you. You're not expected to go bring your own
clients. They kind of say, okay, this is your assignment. This night, you're going over here or
kind of a regular weekly thing until this baby grows out of this phase.
So that's probably the strategy that I would go for.
If that's the service I want to do, who are my target customers already doing business with?
And it's like in this case, this agency that shows up in the search results and kind of going
through it.
Maybe the AI tools would be able to help brainstorm.
What are some of those off the wall or unthought of services that are out there?
Because typically in the online world, it would be web design, ghostwriting, copywriting, graphic
design, that type of stuff. But in the offline world, we talked a lot about these blue collar
services. But to your point, it's like, it could be something as simple as pet sitting or night
nurse. You know, something where, okay, yeah, I'd be willing to sacrifice one night a week to make
an extra 300 bucks. Yeah, I mean, that's a big chunk of change right there. And I looked it up.
It's there are night nurses, but there's also night nannies. We might have done that. Yeah,
that might be using the terms interchangeably there. I'm not sophisticated at this point on the
nuances in those terms. I mean, that's not something that I ever consider.
but as a when I was in my 20s, I could get by on no sleep.
So I could have totally done that and, you know,
cuddled with a cute baby and then put them back down again.
Like that's a great side hustle, Scott.
Oh, this person was this person knew what was up too.
Like they were like they arrived on time.
They left on time.
They knew exactly what the things were.
They're like, I'm doing this.
I can't do these.
These are what this is why.
This is how things need to be set up for me.
You know, this is this is how where things need to be.
It was great.
And it was like, thank you.
we actually felt way better about that because this person clearly had just been there and done that a million times.
And taking into account, we're talking about Barb and Nancy, both of these people are fictitious people who have recently been divorced and they are starting from scratch.
They were both stay-at-home moms.
So they've already done this job for free like I did.
And now they can go and do this again.
Yeah, it's going to be a little difficult at first to get up in the middle of the night with an infant when you're used to sleeping.
through the night, but I think that that's a side hustle that they could thrive in. And I wish we
would have talked to Nick before we had recorded that show because that would have been great
to suggest to them. Maybe Mindy going back to your point, like, you know, the query that I might
punch in or ask chat TPT about would be, well, what are the services that affluent families
are paying for that would really surprise you? And this might come up on that list. And then you can
kind of reverse engineer, okay, that sounds interesting me. Number three sounds interesting to me.
are there any agencies that provide that?
How can I add myself to their, you know, roster in that case?
Like, this is kind of the same strategy like my wife and her partner used for their wedding photography business.
It was like, hey, we shot at a handful of different venues.
We really like this one.
Hey, email the coordinator, email the person, your contact person there.
It's like, what does it take to get on your preferred vendor list?
All of a sudden, you cut through all the clutter.
The brides are going directly to this venue.
Hey, who are you recommended photographers?
Boom, boom, boom.
Here's the top three.
And it's like all of a sudden, all the other marketing channels,
kind of faded away because that was driving the bulk of the clients.
Yeah. Chris Hutchins from the All the Hacks podcast told this story about how he had hired somebody
to cook for his family. I have the recipes. I want you to cook this recipe, this exact way.
My wife and I don't have time to make these recipes, but these are recipes we know our kids
will eat. They found, I think it was a stay-at-home mom who would cook these meals for them,
deliver them to them.
And she batch cooked them.
She wasn't delivering them hot every evening.
Here you go.
Your food's already cooked.
All you have to do is warm it up.
You know your kids are going to eat it.
And Nick, you have two kids.
Scott, you've got two young kids.
So maybe they haven't discovered that they can be picky about what they eat.
But knowing that your kids are going to eat the food that's on their plate is a huge
burden off of your head at every dinner time.
And when you don't even have time to make them,
meal, having time to make sure they eat it is even less available. Yeah, well, it's just the
decision fatigue of like, well, what's for dinner? The meal planning time, all of that. Another one here
is occasionally my, like my wife and I would love to go on a trip overnight, right? And the best way
to do that is during the week. And our kids are in daycare. Can someone watch our kids,
pick them up, put them down to bed, drop them off in the morning and do that. That would be a wonderful
service that we've had a lot of trouble hiring for. But that's got to be a dream gig for somebody, right?
Somebody shows up our house, puts them to bed, watches TV for a few hours, goes to sleep through the night and drops them off at daycare.
Like, there's got to be services out there that can do that.
And now we can do a trip, just the two of us for that.
So those kinds of opportunities are the ones that I'm like, I'm thinking are out there for folks that are on.
You know, I don't need a big skill set, like basic references and those types of things and show up on time.
And I'm confident in your presentation.
Those are the things I need.
There's a basic trust there.
I just typed into chat GPT, what Nick said.
what are the household services affluent families are paying for? And there's, you know, meal prep and all of this other stuff.
But household management or family assistant, this certainly falls into that, Scott. But Barb and Nancy have been unpaid household management and family assistance when they were doing it for their own family.
And now they could do it for other families. The key there is affluent families because you definitely want rich clients when you can make somebody's life easier.
and they have an abundance of money but not time or an abundance of money and not an abundance of
ease of life, making that easy for them. I mean, somebody listening to this now needs to start
a company that manages household managers and family assistance and like connects a wealthy
families with them. Oh, Scott, you've got some time. You said you're no, you have no problem
starting up a new business. Start up a business and hire these household managers and family
assistance. Well, my business is interviewing Nick for these ideas on this. So, you know,
You know, we, that's funny, we had a woman last year. That was her business. It was a virtual house management service. And it was like, I'm not going to compete with, you know, $5 an hour virtual assistance overseas. Like, I'm going to intentionally position this as a house manager for busy parents, you know, busy affluent parents. Because it was, I forget what she was charging, but it was, it was not cheap. And so it was just kind of like, we'll figure out the summer camp calendar for your kids or we'll do the, you know, the meal plan or meal prep. And maybe even we'll coordinate the, you know, we'll coordinate the,
Instacard or whatever to come and bring it all to your house. It was like, it was a pretty smart
idea. And she'd grown kind of a roster of subcontract. She started out doing it herself.
I mean, I think she started out doing it herself. But then eventually brought on other team
members that she trusted to be the fulfillment side. Yeah. And I'm mentioning Barb and Nancy
specifically because they have been stay at home moms. And in air quotes, don't have skills.
You know, they're not going to go out and get like a job that pays $250,000 a year today because they don't have the resume that would support that. But, you know, this isn't just for recently divorced women who were used to be stay-at-home moms. All of these jobs are things that anybody can do. Once you get into, are you willing to do reasonably hard physical labor? There's got to be really good arbitrage opportunities in your time there if you can get creative, right? That one's easy for me conceptually, right? Like hanging Christmas tree lights, cleaning windows, picking up mattresses and moving up mattresses and moving.
moving them from 1.8 to point B. I'm sure you've heard thousands of those at this point,
Nick, from your community across those examples. Where's the one where I get to mostly sleep
and wake up a couple times to help a baby? Or like I'm willing to be there. I'm willing to
sacrifice. I just can't. I'm not willing to put my body on the line. Yeah, moving a bed is hard.
Yeah. Yeah. I think these are a good starting point for sure. Give us some more tools that you've
developed over the years. I think you have a great AI prompt and spreadsheet and those types of things.
What are some of the tools, you know, if you don't like these specific suggestions that we have here, to continue to generate these ideas that are worth exploring?
Yeah, do you guys want to run through? You guys want to be my guinea pig here? We can do a test, a live, live test. This is the AI-assisted brainstorming worksheet. If you ask, in general AI, you know, what are some side-ustle ideas? You kind of get general responses because that's the articles that's pulling. It doesn't know anything about you, right? But if you can feed it just a little bit of information, then you're going to get way, way, way better.
results. So if you guys want to Scott or Mindy, I don't know, it's probably going to come back with like
host a real estate and money podcast. We can give it a try. Let's do Scott. Scott, what are you good at?
You are good at running a business. You are good at making vibe coding. This is harder than it than you
think. What have you gotten paid to do in the past? My skills include I've developed a CEO toolkit
in growing bigger pockets from X to Y, 100,000 members to 3 million.
between the years 2014 and 2024.
It's going to be like, why do you need a side hustle?
Okay, okay.
Let's make up somebody.
Let's go back to Nancy or Barb as the example, right?
Okay.
So, Mindy, what are some of Nancy or Barb's skills here?
She's a stay-at-home mom who has been out of the workforce for 25 years and feels
like she doesn't have any skills.
Yes, because all of the stuff she's doing is like second nature.
So she's a good cook.
She is great at managing multiple different schedules, like different calendars, because she's got to get
her daughter to ballet and her son to football and then get everybody home in time to have dinner.
So she's good at multitasking.
She's good at remembering people's names, which is a skill.
Let me tell you, that is a really good skill.
Her day job is stay at home mom right now.
What has she gotten paid to do in the past?
Well, she hasn't really gotten paid for it, but I think that this is a really important
thing to note that the management of an entire household paying bills on time, taking the dog
to the vet for annual shots, taking the kids to the pediatrician for their annual checkups.
Those are soft skills, but they're also, she's great at sourcing things because her daughter
has extremely tiny feet, so she needs to get ballet slippers and a baby doll's up.
Okay. It's good to say. So we're saying hard to find products. There we go. That's a better way to phrase it.
What does Nancy enjoy in her spare time? Nancy's super good at showing up on time and is capable of appearing very professional, which is really so hard in some of these areas.
I mean, you don't want to hire somebody. Doesn't show up on time. It is not appearing professional.
That is a really good point. I mean, your personality is a great, a great feature of you, even if you don't think so or don't realize it.
Nancy's hobbies include knitting and cooking.
She really loves to cook.
She loves to price match at the grocery store to make sure she's getting the best deal on all of her groceries.
Nice.
If money were no object, she would like to go to the Symphony more frequently and go on bike rides.
Not the Broncos game?
Not that last one.
Nick's up in the Pacific Northwest, so he's got a team going to the Super Bowl.
We're doing it.
Kids are very, very invested into the Hawks right now.
I'm not even sure I'm going to watch the Super Bowl this year.
Oh, you got to watch the commercials.
Yeah.
So here's a super random side hustle aside.
I'm like testing this company called Media Probe, where they send you a little like sensor you wear like on your palm or you hold it.
And they say, here's a TV show that we want you to watch and what triggered it was the first one that they assigned to me was like the best Super Bowl commercials of the last 10 years.
You know, watch this.
And we're going to measure your like biometric.
response to this and we'll pay you five bucks after you watch this and answer a little survey.
So I'm very curious to test this out. It's like, I love the Super Bowl commercials. Anyways, you're going to
pay me five bucks to do this. So not a great hourly rate, but a random side hustle that I'm playing
around with. And is it only $5 or do they give you different amounts for different shows?
The two that they've sent me so far have both been five bucks for an hour of programming.
Okay. Okay. When I was a kid, what did Nancy love?
Nancy really loved being outdoors. She loved riding her bike and playing with her friends.
She's not a shy person.
Nancy sounds suspiciously familiar.
The third component to this is what comes naturally to you?
And sometimes that can be difficult to answer.
So the way to flip it around is, well, what do other people irrationally suck at?
And sometimes, like, you'll see people, like, struggling with Excel.
Or they'll be, like, they have a list of numbers.
And we're like, our friend literally was doing.
They were, like, adding up the cells, like, on a calculator, like, in their hand.
It was like, oh, did, did you?
You know that there's like a built-in formula that will do that for you.
So, you know, what do other people irrationally suck at?
It's kind of the reframe for this perceived expertise part.
Okay.
So Nancy is very compassionate and very empathetic.
People often ask her for help with very difficult, emotionally difficult tasks because she's good at that.
She's very empathetic, but she can also compartmentalize and just get the stuff done.
Okay.
Time constraints.
She works a full-time job.
So let's give her 10 to 15.
hours to do this right now. The full-time job, is it like traditional normal business hours?
Nine to five. And how much does she want to earn from her side hustle? She would be delighted if she could
earn $250 a week. So $1,000 a month. Give her $30 an hour. That's a more aggressive target, I think.
Then she'd be even more delighted to get that. All right. A thousand bucks a month, I think that would be a great win.
And so what this does is it magically, you know, going back to Excel skills,
magically concatenates all of this into this chat GPT prompt that you can copy and paste
into chat GPT or the AI of your choice.
Okay.
So we paste this in to chatty and it is going to come back with some responses for us that I
think are much more personalized, much more telling than kind of just a generic Google search
or generic prompt for, hey, give me some sign-offal ideas to your point about like this
house manager.
Like that's going to be the first one that comes up.
It's like, yeah, this is the.
cleanest path that says to a thousand bucks a month. It's funny because that mental load was the
exact phrase that the virtual house manager that we had on the side hustle show talked about.
We want to be your mental load assistant. Oh, that's great. Okay, so that's suggestion number one.
Suggestion number two. Crisis concierge, difficult task helper. I need help when life feels overwhelming.
I don't know if I love that one as much. Appointment and care coordinator for seniors.
high demand, low competition, big trust premium here.
That's really interesting.
I never thought about that.
I like that a lot, actually.
That's probably a nice big market that's going to grow over time.
Anything senior care, I think this could be a pretty big one.
Household ops manager.
Name it boldly.
It's got the C-O-O of your household.
I like that tagline.
That's kind of cool.
This is really similar to the first one.
Yeah, but these are all skills that both Barb and Nancy could do easily,
whereas they are in their 50s and maybe walking dogs when they live in Wisconsin and it's icy all the time isn't the best choice for them.
Yeah. And what is cool about this is that like even giving me, it gives example tasks, but it also gives example pricing of like how much do you think an affluent family might be willing to pay for this just to relieve themselves of some of that mental load burden? And it says, hey, this could be easily worth $250 to $400 per month. And now it's like, okay, now I just need to give.
four clients or I just need to get three clients and now I'm at my goal and I think that's really
helpful. Specialty grocery and hard to find product sourcing was suggestion number five, you know,
for diet specific foods. That might be kind of interesting. Like if you have dietary restrictions in
your family and you're having trouble, like I might pair that with kind of like a meal planning or
even meal prep type of service where you know it's going to be vegan, gluten-free dairy,
like whatever, you know, the dietary restriction is going to be. That could be interesting or specific
like weight loss, intentional diet that you're trying to follow for their family.
Suggestion number six is a knitting business on Etsy.
I don't know.
That could be a little more challenging.
But if you're going to be knitting in your spare time, maybe you put some of your patterns
up or some of your stuff up there for sale.
Yeah.
I had a friend who Rose, I'm talking about you.
She knit at the stoplights.
She would keep her knitting in her lap and she would drive.
And then when the stoplight hit, she'd pick it up and knit.
She loves knitting that much.
So she was a pattern.
tester because you have to make sure that the pattern works, I think for like a magazine or something.
And she got all these free patterns and I think they sent her yarn and needles to. And that was an
awesome side hustle for her. Can we adjust this prompt with my thought? Because I'm still stuck on it.
This is a problem I always have. But the overnight babysitting or weekend babysitting component.
Can you ask a follow up? Hey, consider night nursing, overnight babysitting and weekend babysitting.
I'd be really interested to hear what that looks like for this person.
Because I'm not trusting, like, the local high school kid as great as they are.
And they're busy on the weekends, a lot of them, right?
Like the local high school kid with that particular activity.
Yeah, so it's kind of like defaulting to like my local Seattle area, but who knows where Nancy lives.
But it says, well, there is demand here.
Here's some overnight babysitting could earn $100 to $250 per night.
So you do that four nights and you're at your income goal.
Or just on the weekends.
Yeah, she's working her entire Monday through Friday, and then she does it on Saturday or she does it on Friday night because she still gets to sleep, right, Scott?
She just has to wake up when the baby wakes up.
My kids go to bed at 7.30 to 8 and they sleep through the night.
If you want the infant, you could charge more for sure.
That's waking up through the night in the early days.
But once the kids are sleeping through the night, you know, then it's a very different job, I feel like because you're basically, you know, like there's a chance.
Something goes wrong.
That's why we're going to want somebody really responsible in there.
but most nights they just sleep until the morning.
Is more than just like the side hustle listicles that I've published dozens of
is it kind of gives you the next action step.
Like if this sounds interesting to you,
if you take on four or five clients and make $1,500 a month,
like here's what I would do next, right?
It tells you to get your certifications.
It tells you what you might even do for marketing.
It says like, okay, I might pursue.
There was some note on here like, you know, post in parent groups on Facebook
or start to like network on next door or, you know, even on platforms like care.com here.
So it kind of gives you kind of the next marketing steps.
And then you can kind of have this conversation of like, you know, how should I market this service?
And once you're good, Scott, would you have recommended an excellent night nanny to somebody else in your neighborhood once you had an experience with somebody who was amazing?
That's it.
What you do is you say, is you say after you've delivered a good experience to the person.
and they're clearly happy with it.
You say, hey, would you mind sharing, you know, your review with me in your neighborhood's
Facebook group or your next door app or whatever?
Just share that in there.
And you ask that every time.
You're going to get more business over time for some service like this, right?
Yeah, with trusting somebody with your kids.
Like this is, and chat even came back with that right away.
Look, here marketing matters less than trust.
I think that's a really wise line for it to say.
And we've had some guests kind of say something similar.
This is the guy not doing anything with kids, but he was doing college admissions essay prep consulting,
like a super, super niche service. And he's like, you know, I don't do any social media. Like,
right, I have one strategic partner who does other like college admissions consulting. And she hates the
essay part. So she just refers business to me. It's like, that's all it took, you know, to build
the six figure like little side hustle consulting business. Like people are happy to recommend people that
they have worked with that they love. But when it comes to your kids, moms talk and moms will talk,
mad smack about you if you're not good.
And they will absolutely sing your praises when you are good.
So the moms get together, oh, it was, I have so many great things to say about my daughter's
night nanny.
It says it right there.
What does it say?
GPT's like, like he's scrolling on the screen and he's like chat GPT is making your point right
here.
I mean, we will talk.
The moms will talk and we will absolutely recommend.
And now I've got, I'm the older mom in my neighborhood.
There's a lot of little babies in my neighborhood.
So my kids are the babysitter.
And my friend Sarah is like, oh, yeah, hire Mindy's daughter Daphne.
She's great.
Hire Mindy's daughter, Claire.
She's great at babysitting.
So they have a ton of babysitting just in the neighborhood.
Those moms talk to moms in other neighborhoods.
And it just kind of grows and spreads.
So if you're good, your name will get out there.
And the same thing with household managers and crisis concepts.
Is that the plural for concierge?
Okay, so, Nick, that was an awesome Google Sheets file that you shared with us.
Where can our listeners find that?
Sidesustle Nation.com slash BP Money and you'll be able to download it for free there.
Woo-hoo.
Thank you, Nick.
That is awesome for all of our listeners.
If you're thinking about a side hustle, that little AI prompt is really, really helpful
to kick out a bunch of different ideas for you.
And, you know, take your time with it.
My skills include.
Start thinking of it now and then enter it in.
And use it over and over again.
It isn't a one use only thing.
Use it over and over and see what you can refine.
Oh, these are great ideas except I don't want anything to do with cats because I'm allergic.
And then it'll spit out a whole bunch of other things.
AI is kind of crazy how good it is.
Think of it as a starting point, a starting point in the conversation for brainstorming where you can be like, you know, on second thought, I'm already trading time for money in my day job.
I'm willing to invest something, like don't show many any service-based businesses or don't show
many any, you know, client work type of businesses. And it'll come back like, oh, here's some
media-based businesses or content-based businesses that you could try instead.
Yeah. And like, I don't want to, how do I not compete with minimum wage high school kids,
right, that are doing this kind of thing, right? That's going to be another challenge for
some of these. And the way to do that is be that next level professionalism, the service that
they can't provide, the consistency. Those are all areas, ways to look, I think, for those things.
But I think this is fun, and I think this is a great starting point here.
And I think the challenge is how do you take some kind of action, even if it's making minimum wage, if you're interested in this, or something very small, but then evolve quickly to something that is actually generating a better per hour rate, something that is more scalable, something that is more in the true business world and treat it like an evolution.
That was the big thing I wanted to come in with today.
And it sounds like this is a great starting point for leapfrogging that minimum wage.
first step here is using your prompt and using that to form a better hypothesis than you might
otherwise have come up with. Nick, where can people find you online? We'd love to have you tune
into the Side Hustle Show. You'll find it on all your favorite podcast apps and YouTube. And then
check out the brainstorming prompt. Again, sidelesslnation.com slash BP Money to take a look at
start playing around with that and see what kind of ideas it comes up with for you. Nick, how many
episodes do you have now on the side hustle show?
720 something?
Yeah, 720 episodes with all different types of side hustles.
If you can't find an idea from Nick's show, maybe side hustling isn't for you.
It's almost been 14 years.
That's making the feel old.
14 years.
Holy cow.
That's awesome.
Nick, thank you again for your time.
It's always a delight to talk to you.
And we'll talk to you soon.
Cheers.
Thanks.
All right, Scott.
That was Nick Loper from Side Hustle Nation.
the side hustle show, what did you think of his amazing ideas for how to choose your next side hustle?
I thought it was great. And I think I'm going to keep beating this drum a little bit around
entrepreneurship and fire because, you know, immediately Nick's brain goes to all the business
opportunities. Here's how to do this. Just put some figure out how to get in front of the demand.
It's running a business. It's this entrepreneurial bug that some people, I think, me,
you, Nick, clearly have. And other people don't. And it's totally fine not to have that.
And that's why I was pushing so hard on what are jobs that don't require, side hustles that don't
require this like true business mindset that are just more like, I can just show up and I can get paid a much fairer,
much higher rate per hour with even basic skills.
If I'm willing to sacrifice, but not necessarily sacrifice my body.
That was the next piece, right?
If you're 24 and you're willing to sacrifice your body on the weekends, you can make a lot of money,
I think.
If you're, you know, and you're willing to pick up heavy things or move them or get on ladders,
I think there's a big, big opportunity there.
That's obvious, I think, relatively speaking.
But I think that the bigger question is,
how can somebody who doesn't have that same desire ability make money?
And I thought there was a really good discussion around that.
I do too.
And I think it's really, really important for you to be honest with your skills,
your time availability, your personality, your physical strength.
Scott, you might not want to move mattresses,
but you absolutely could move mattresses.
Whereas I can probably get by with it.
But, you know, there's a lot of people who, like, that's not an option.
Mattresses are heavy.
They're awkward.
The Shertown did exercise equipment.
I am not moving a treadmill.
In fact, I have a treadmill in my basement.
And I did not get it down there.
We had to have somebody come and help Carl take it downstairs.
Oh, man.
Watching the guy moved the treadmill was unbelievable, right?
I can't do that.
And I'm, I mean, maybe I could do that.
But I'm a power lifter at this point, right?
I'm an amateur journeyman powerlifter.
And so that's, those things can really get big.
And very, very heavy.
So that like, Sheratown might be awesome for you if you're 6'8 and weigh, you know,
300 pounds of solid muscle.
But, you know, that might not be a great side hustle for the 4 foot eight ladies in our
audience who weigh 80 pounds.
There's lots of different options available for side hustling.
I love his AI assisted side hustle brainstorm document or worksheet.
Again, you can get that at side hustle nation.com slash.
BP money, download that for free. It is a great starting point. And then once you're into the
AI, it'll spit out some ideas. And then you just refine. Like we said, I don't want to do a service
related. I don't want to do a physical job. Or, you know, I want to do more of this. It's so easy to
just get these ideas. And then you can really start thinking about finding and pinpointing something
that's going to be a great fit for you. Because the side hustle that you hate is just like a job that
you hate. You don't want to do it at all. I love it. I'm looking forward to the next review for the
Bigger Pockets Money podcast coming in saying, I've listened to Bigger Pockets Money since the very beginning
in 2016. And now I quit my job and shovel poop for dog owners three to four days a week. So that's the
big takeaway there. All jokes aside, there are lots of creative businesses and if you can find
activities that your neighbors, friends, family, peers don't like to do and want to do them for them,
I think there's a big opportunity, especially if you're willing to humble yourself and do the work that nobody else wants to do.
All right, Scott, should we get out of here?
Let's do it.
That wraps up this episode of the Bigger Pockets Money podcast.
He is Scott Trench.
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