Great podcast: How to make money without a job

Posted at 12:25 on Thursday February 23, 2006 | Filed Under

Steve Pavlina is one of my favorite bloggers--he lives what he says, his articles are long and thoughtful, and he mocks people who think conventionally yet expect unconventional results.

Here's one of my favorites: A podcast called How to make money without a job

DONE READING?
Now you can leave your own comment or subscribe to the newsletter

Comments (16)

1.

This guy's intro sounds like a pitch for a pyramid scheme!

Posted by Katie at February 23, 2006 02:01 PM
2.

Excellent. Steve really has it straight.


Although I still work a "real" job, more than half my income comes from passive/alternative incomes.


Life is dandy since I don't stress about money anymore.

Posted by Jared at February 23, 2006 04:46 PM
3.

Hey Katie without the intention of being inflammatory here, dig deeper into this guy's website like you call it and you'll see he's anything but a pyramid schemer.


I also think that you are totally missing the point since the idea here is to put out an example of something that as much as it is talked about is rarely done only by a handful of people.


To live off of passing income is possible and he is a living proof of it. Just my two cents.

Posted by Jesus Pina at February 23, 2006 05:09 PM
4.

Sorry meant to say passive instead of passing

Posted by Jesus Pina at February 23, 2006 07:06 PM
5.

I haven't listened to the whole podcast yet but I thought this little bit of incongruity was amusing.


He first says that he's gone broke before and it's no big deal then goes on to say how if you have your income coming through a variety of sources if one goes bad you still have the safety net from the other sources. So, if this system works so well why did this guy go broke? I've never gone broke and don't derive my income from multiple sources.


This kind of stuff is par for the course for these snake oil salesmen.

Posted by Jimbo jones at February 24, 2006 07:45 AM
6.

So let me get this straight - this guy is getting rich by selling ads on his website that purportedly teaches us how to make money? Hmmm so I guess I should start a high traffic website that teaches people that they can make money with a high traffic website...

Posted by Jimbo Jones at February 24, 2006 07:59 AM
7.

I enjoy about 85% of what Steve writes, which is a pretty good batting average. He certainly takes personal growth seriously and it is motivating to read about his process (read the Polyphasic Sleep series of posts, if you haven't).

Posted by Michael G. Richard at February 24, 2006 11:11 AM
8.

The fact that he graduated with a double major in three semester scares me. But I did try his method for becoming an early riser (if you are not a morning person) and it actually works. Woohoo!

Posted by liz at February 24, 2006 01:32 PM
9.

Does anyone know if this guy is a follower of David Wolfe? His intro page came off a little Avocado. But he has me curious.


Ramit, what's your take on the "power of intention?"

Posted by jennifer at February 24, 2006 06:10 PM
10.

jeez - you nned some training on web design, pal.

http://www.useit.com/alertbox/20050711.html

Posted by dave at February 25, 2006 12:49 AM
11.

Wow. We all seem to run AdSense these days, but his site seems to overdo it a bit.

Posted by Matt Henderson at February 25, 2006 08:39 AM
12.

A friend of mine once told me that the surest way to make money is to bet on human vanity. I would now add indolence and greed. These are the exact reasons why publications like this podcast or iwillteachyoutoberich.com are published anywhere else than comedy central. The chain of arguments on this mp3 is so weak that it would be an insult to my intelligence and a waste of time to debate them.


Keep your minds working and your ears away from “evagelists”. They always want to sell something.


Also check out this article on another collegue of these guys here: http://www.johntreed.com/Kiyosaki.html

Posted by Dennis at February 26, 2006 03:08 PM
13.

Jesus--
Sorry i should have been more clear. The guy does have great ideas and I totally buy into the idea that not all your income needs to come from a "job" (or any of it, in his case). It's just that...the first 5mn almost lost me due to the shocking similarity in pitch to a pyramid scheme (which I was so recently assaulted by...I'm jumpy). Anyway, point taken, I'll post the whole long comment next time

Posted by Katie at February 27, 2006 10:13 AM
14.

Ramit, thanks for the link to this site. Sounds really cool to me. I just added it to my favorites.


Mai

Posted by Mai at February 27, 2006 06:27 PM
15.

He repeats the same nebulous fluff for the first few minutes without any specific examples to illustrate. "Follow your passion" does not constitute a business model.


The catch is that the skills you need to leverage take a lot of time and effort (and sometimes expense) to develop to the point that you can turn them into passive income streams. This guy's argument also depends on a high degree of internet proficiency. Save yourself trouble and start an Ebay store or go into internet porn.


I agree with Dennis (above), but this Reed guy seems to spend an inordinate amount of time and effort debunking Kiyosaki.

Posted by JBA at April 16, 2006 03:08 AM
16.

I want my 16 minutes back. And the time it takes to post this response.

Posted by lms at December 9, 2006 03:58 AM

Leave your comment

NOTE
Fields marked with asterisk (*) are required.
:
:
:
remember me:
(You may use HTML tags for style)

getting started

This is a blog on personal finance (banking, saving, budgeting, and investing) and personal entrepreneurship.

It's for students, recent graduates, and other young people.

about me

Ramit Sethi

I'm a recent graduate of Stanford, where I studied technology and psychology. Now I'm the co-founder & VP of Marketing for PBwiki, a wiki startup in Silicon Valley.

categories
stay tuned

Stay current with updates:
Sign up for the free newsletter...

...or use RSS / Atom feed:

RSS FeedAtom Feed