![]() The overhead is extremely low-sellers don’t have to worry about storing any inventory or making physical items. Zubia is one of many average Americans who are tapping into what’s known as “passive income”-revenue streams that can generate cash for people who put in a bit of work at one moment in time, and then sit back and watch checks come in forever.Īlso called print on demand, this method of passive income works differently than, say, renting out real estate or playing the stock market. Even more remarkable, he’s still pocketing roughly $3,000 a month today from those years-old designs. That work spurt earned him $120,000-enough to move out of his parents’ house and buy his own home in El Paso. Eventually, Zubia had a 2,800-item catalog of designs, slogans, and illustrations online that people could purchase on T-shirts and hoodies. “I was designing as many as I could spent from seven to midnight every day cranking those out.” Idea, design, upload,” the 32-year-old says of his life in 20. ![]() Then, sending up a prayer that they’d sell, he started all over again. On Thursdays he saved his creations in the correct image format-a process that takes longer than you’d think-and on Fridays and Saturdays he uploaded them to Amazon. On Tuesdays and Wednesdays he designed in Adobe Illustrator. On Mondays he did research, scouring the Internet for funny slogans, like the one where Santa Claus asks, “Where My Ho’s At?” ![]() Nearly every night after dinner for eight straight months, Glen Zubia brewed a cup of coffee, turned on heavy metal music, and made T-shirts.
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