When former musician Joel Young needed a voice-over for a video project at church in 2013, he hired a professional.
"I thought, this is pretty
cool," he tells Business Insider. "This lady does these for $5 to $10
apiece — and my wife said, 'Well you've got a recording mic. You know
how to do this stuff. Why don't you do it and make extra money?'"
Young, who was working as a
minister at the time and trying to pay off $50,000 worth of medical
bills, credit-card debt, and a car loan, did just that.
He turned to Fiverr, a site that lets people pay others for tasks outside their expertise, and created a page for his voice-over services.
Within one month, he made $400 doing voice-over gigs for $5 each.
"After my first month, I started
to level up, and the way that you advertise your services on Fiverr is
by putting a video on your page," the father of two explains. "I then
had people who saw my video and said, 'I don't want a voice-over. I want
you to make a video for me,' and I created a whole new gig just for
videos."
Most of the videos he creates
are to advertise a product or service for individuals, but he's also
done training videos for big companies like BJ's, Home Depot, and the
NCAA.
Over
the course of one year, he made $34,000 shooting videos — in the corner
of his bedroom, with an iPhone and IKEA lamp. "That was all I had," he
says. "I had people emailing me asking what kind of equipment I use. It
wasn't until I'd been doing it for about a year when I went out and
upgraded my camera gear."
After 18 months, he and
his wife were completely debt-free. "I basically made enough money with
my full-time job for us to run our house, so there wasn't much left
over," he explains. "We cut our spending a little bit, but it was all
freelancing that paid off the debt."
What started as a solution to
climb out of debt evolved into a lucrative career. It was the summer of
2014 when he realized he was making more money freelancing than he had
been as a minister, and his side business officially took over as his
full-time job.
"I think what separates me from others is my high quality of work, my
great communication, and my reliability," he says. "You need to be
willing to go the extra mile to serve your customers. Never
over-promise, and always exceed expectations. More than half of all my
clients buy from me again at some point because they know they will get
the same great quality every time."
Today, 32-year-old Young works about 10 hours a day, six days a week,
earning $18,000 to $23,000 a month doing voice-overs, testimonial
videos, and explainer animation videos. His wife has also started helping with the business to lighten the load.
Besides the consistent revenue, a major perk of freelancing is
being able to set his own schedule and spend more time with family, he
says: "I have the freedom to say, 'OK, I'm done with work for the rest
of the afternoon and I'll get another couple of hours in after my kids
go to sleep.' It's a way for me to be able to do things like coach my
kids' baseball team and be here when they wake up in the morning and go
to sleep."
Young's newfound financial
freedom has also opened up opportunities that weren't possible before:
"We had always talked about adopting a child, but we could never do it
because an adoption costs $30,000 or $40,000 — and that's on the low
end. We now have the money to do that and are on the verge of being
placed in the system to be matched with a kid."
What does he advise people who want to follow a similar career path?
"Do what you already know what
to do," he says. "The reality is, you don't have to do something so
unique that no one else is doing. There are always going to be a
thousand other people doing exactly what you're doing — you just have to
differentiate yourself by the way you serve people, by the quality of
your service, and your level of communication."
Also, you don't need money to make money, he says:
I was
very intent on never borrowing money to do any of this. I spent my
whole first year making money on an iPhone and didn't buy expensive
camera gear until I had made enough to pay for it with cash. Look around
at what you have, and what you can do, and figure out a way to offer
that to people. You don't need to go out and spend money to get started.
http://finance.yahoo.com/news/dad-quit-job-paid-off-183000681.html
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