I've been working on side projects for the past 3-4 years on whatever caught my fancy and have thoroughly enjoyed experience and the rabbit holes some of them have led me into. I like it and I feel I'm at a point where I want to get more people involved in side projects. But, any discussion about these projects with (nearly) anyone ends with 'How will you make money'. I don't have a way to avoid or answer that question without losing people's interest. I'm curious about how others handle that one.To be clear, I do not work on side projects for money. Neither do I intend to. Thats what my day job is for. I just want to involve more minds interested in similar things that I'm racking my head against.
[+] [-] ggm|7 years ago|reply
guerrilla knitters. billboard spraypaint agitators. music makers in pubs. choirs. scratch orchestras. the guy who makes kites or the professor who shows kids how to do astronomy on street corners.
the mens-shed movement is about older people (yes, I know the name is offputting but they aren't all men actually) who are bored and have skilz. Also, not about money.
likewise tool libraries. or, computer upcycler schemes for the unemployed: these are people who do things because they think they are worthy (tm)
It may be you need to lay it out in front, that nobody is going to get rich and very possibly building the worlds first custard-throwing robotic tyrannosaur is going to cost a lot of money, having said which ROAAAAR - Splat..
[+] [-] tomcam|7 years ago|reply
I seriously don’t know a better way to put it. Why not use your own words?
[+] [-] topicseed|7 years ago|reply
Try to find like-minded people at Meetups
[+] [-] bigiain|7 years ago|reply
And then "side-hustles" became fashionable, so people talk about getting into coffee, or beer, or fixies, or ukulele orchestras, or scuba diving - as their "side-hustle".
I "play with" coffee making, electronics, drones, motorcycles, electric bicycles - none of them are a "side-hustle".
[+] [-] DoreenMichele|7 years ago|reply
I know of a non profit project that tried to set up a formal non profit corporation and ultimately threw in the towel. It still exists. It still does what it has always done. But there is no board, no heavy paperwork, no budget, etc.
It's run as a website and a collection of email lists, same as it ever was. Trying to turn it into a formal non profit turned out to involve a lot of hassle and, seemingly, little to no upside -- or, at least, not enough upside to make the bureaucratic overhead make sense.
[+] [-] anotheryou|7 years ago|reply
(And I also prefer to take either no money or decent money for jobs for friends and acquaintances. The middle ground just lacks in reward, monetary and in gratefulness.)
It's more difficult for something that you have to invest time in heavily to have any form of success. That's when this question has to be answered and might be the most important one.
[+] [-] remyp|7 years ago|reply
It could be that the utility of working for an organization whose mission they are passionate about outweighs the money they "lose", or it could be something else, but it's a good place to start.
[+] [-] stefkors|7 years ago|reply
[+] [-] yonder|7 years ago|reply
Also, perhaps you shouldn't think too muchs about how to justify things you do to others.
[+] [-] deepaksurti|7 years ago|reply
Project Name - Project Description - Learning Potential - Earning Potential
The one with a 'Y' in both the last columns are I prefer to work on. They are very rare though!
[+] [-] bigiain|7 years ago|reply
[+] [-] return1|7 years ago|reply
As for the money question , one can just say "i might sell it"
[+] [-] unknown|7 years ago|reply
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