My 15 Streams of Income at Age 38 that Earn $300,000 a Year
Roberto Blake
Founder of Awesome Creator Academy. Helping 13,000+ Creators Go Full-time and Earn $10,000/month
How much money do you make and how do you make that money is often the most searched question for any public figure, author, or social media influencer. Essentially I make my income as a Content Creator no matter how you look at it. Here are the main ways I currently make the most money (rough estimates:
Overall I make roughly 15 different streams of income and receive 1099 tax forms from nearly 30 different companies. These income streams were built over the course of my adult life but most of them were developed over the past 10 years or the more recent 5 years for many of them.
While most would be surprised at my YouTube Revenue Earnings, I'm not an entertainment channel, and even as an education-based channel I cover very niche topics. I don't get millions of views a month. I actually average between 2M to 4M views a year more often than not and haven't been consistently uploading since the pandemic started. The average YouTube creator would only earn $1500-$4000 for 2M views which is why most full-time channels try to focus as much on views as possible and struggle to earn a full-time income if they don't have those types of views. If my channel were to ever get to 1M views a month it would be earning roughly $100,000 a year purely from YouTube Revenue given I have a $25 CPM rate most months on my content.
As of the writing of this post, I don’t sell a course for hundreds of dollars, but I will be developing courses like this in the near future. I don’t see having a course or not having a course as a point toward someone being more or less credible.
I do think that narrative appeals to a certain group of people, but there are plenty of people who are legitimate course sellers, and value is something determined at an individual level. Courses ultimately are just content, if you receive the content described then I don’t see a problem with it, though I do take issue with the marketing style of some course sellers being distasteful.
Regarding affiliate marketing, the SAAS products I refer people to have been used in my own business and content creation, and I've been seen and known to use these products for years and are all from reputable companies (Adobe, Tubebuddy, Streamyard, Epidemic Sound, Storyblocks, Skillshare, VidIQ, etc). And since I am only able to earn income if people continue using these products and are happy with them, nobody can say that it's dishonest or a scam. Anyone who isn't happy with a SAAS product can stop using it anytime and just about all of these have free trials so people can try before they buy, I'm only paid for people who are retained by the company and are happy to keep paying for their product.
The same is true when it comes to physical products I recommend regarding the Amazon Influencer Program, mostly camera and computer equipment. These are high-end purchases for most people and Amazon has one of the best return policies and is known for its customer service being the leading online retail standard.
While I can't name the price I'm paid by individual sponsors for my content and deals with them, I will say that having long-term sponsors contributes significantly to my monthly recurring revenue and that I earn over $10,000 a month consistently as of the writing of this article, purely from sponsored content across my platforms. This was accomplished by building a strong reputation as a thought leader over a period of time and producing well-crafted content that would represent my partners well.
MY 15 STREAMS OF INCOME AT AGE 38
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THE SKILLS REQUIRED TO EARN THIS KIND OF MONEY
In order to earn this kind of money there are several skills that are essential. Many people underestimate the technical and creative ability that content creation in multiple formats requires. I have a background in photography and graphic design and I studied graphic design and advertising in community college but took an entire degree’s worth of electives around art, photography, marketing, and technology.
During my teenage years, I worked in retail and often in commission sales jobs in the mall, and learned communication and sales, and marketing from the school of hard knocks one customer at a time, in addition to learning to negotiate rates as a freelancer.
Communication skills and salesmanship are vital to being able to achieve this level of success but you also need technical ability and hard skills in order to scale your income.
Throughout my entire life, I have built creative and technical skills, primarily focused on the visual arts. In my early 20s, I entered my professional career in design, advertising, and marketing. It was through this professional work that I learned about the concept and gained the capacity to scale my skills by learning higher levels of online distribution, client acquisition, and the fundamentals of traditional marketing, as well as becoming an early adopter of online marketing and social media.
My 30s taught me the true lessons in entrepreneurship one can only gain through experience but it was also here where execution matters and you don’t have to prioritize more learning. The information and skills I obtained in my 20s were more than enough to earn a 6 figure income, it was a matter of applying them over a period of time and moving away from wage based and hourly earning, to results-based earning and value-based pricing models.
Additionally, having a community, an audience, a customer base, and clients are all separate things, even though today they can easily overlap. By developing all of these different relationships and managing them I was in a position to deliver several levels of value and monetize them.
For a person who pursues a traditional income, they do not have the versatility and variability, and the assumption is the consistency they have offers more stability. I would argue this is rarely the case, the success and failure rate of entrepreneurship is often cited but not the reasons for it.
I tend to relate it to the analogy of the success rate of people who have fitness goals vs the success rate of people who obtain their fitness goals and ideal body. When it comes to becoming a high earner or entrepreneur, people are very quick to make the assertion you are better off not trying since you will most likely fail. This is not applied when it comes to becoming more fit, despite the fact most people are not in great shape, or even to studying despite the fact very few are honors students.
My hope is that through transparency, encouraging critical thinking, revealing and explaining best practices, and helping others develop skills, the success rate can be increased significantly for those entering into the creator economy and creative entrepreneurship.
Roberto, thanks for sharing! How are you doing?
Tax Strategist/Wizard of Finances. I help service providers grow their business by crushing tax bills and increasing cash flow, even if they already have a CPA. We're Hiring! linktr.ee/TaxesHammer
1 年Thanks for sharing
Do Better Ads. Professional Nerd. Ads Shouldn't Suck. Oh, and Boutique Digital Agency, VP of Marketing
1 年I spoke with you years ago - and Im not surprised by any of this. You’re going to continue to excel because that’s who you are… always moving, always growing, always *doing* Just make sure you save some time for yourself too.
Creative Entrepreneur | Content Curator | Consultant | Branding Strategist | Digital Marketer | YouTuber | Music Artist
1 年??????