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Info | Passive Income For Freelance Designers



Editor’s note: This article is contributed by Stelian Subotin. Stelian is an enthusiast and design fan who is working on his new design-related blog called Rocket Graphics.

Each day, more and more freelancer designers are looking for a way to earn more money than the usual client work or full-time position they have. In the following article we will discuss a lot of ways how you can earn more from being a freelance designer.

The one true weapon a freelancer has is total freedom on how to manage their time and work. That can be put to good use to diversify the income streams. There is more than one way to make a buck on the Internet.


Some of these methods may need you to work outside of your comfort zone but they are great ways to help you hone your craft, reflect on your own skills, pick out your weaknesses and strengths and utilize that to increase your income pool.How to make extra passive income as a freelance designer.


1. Writing Your Own Blog

One very good way of creating a cash flow-in is to start writing about your experiences or design topics you are interested in or have a background in and share it with people. If you have the right skills, you could also prepare tutorials which are on a high demand in blogs that publish them on a regular basis.

With all the tools the Internet has to offer, you can get your own design blog up and running in almost no time regardless of whether you can code or not.


If you have decided to start your own blog then there are various ways of earning money, the most common being the adverts you can display on your website.

With the huge numbers of pay-per-view and pay-per-lead advertising systems, you won’t have a hard time finding a suitable network to work with, if your content is top-notch.
Guest Post On Various Blogs

Many big design blogs out there are willing to pay you a good buck for your top-notch articles and sometimes even more for welll-written tutorials. The payment ranges from a dozen of bucks to hundreds, depending on many factors. Guest posting is an good way of generating extra income, butthe effort you put in must be high as well.
Write A Book

Many designers have proven that e-books are a very good source of income. Sacha Greif, a reputable designer in the community reported an income of $40,000 for his latest e-book over a period of a few months, while Nathan Berry reported that his last book made him over $28,000 in the first day alone!

There are various ways to get your book out. For printed versions you can try Amazon Publishing Services and for e-books you can definitely try services like eJunkie.



2. Stock Graphics

It’s been getting more and more popular in the last year, and still it is. Selling stock graphics on various markets doesn’t sound like a very easy job but many designers could actually make nice amounts by working on their own products and putting them up for sale.

There are actually various way of selling them, and you can easily choose between a marketplace, or your own web store. Again, creating a web-store isn’t as hard as it sounds, whether you can code or not. You can totally unleash your creativity and create whatever kinds of files you’d like.


Stock items that you can usually put for sale include, but are not limited to: icon sets, photoshop filters, fonts, web layouts – basically anything that you have expertise in creating will do the trick.

Below are a few markets that can help you start out.

ThemeForest

ThemeForest is the leading site for selling and buying web templates and WP themes. If you cannot code, you can also focus on the PSD template category. PSD Templates here are priced from $8 to $10, depending on the sub-category. A single-paged template is usually at $8, while a 5+ pages template comes in at $10.


Based on the analysis of 30 files submitted a month ago in the PSD Templates category, I can conclude that the worst-selling template ended up making $20 for its owners, the best-selling between these made $300, so it’s up to you to decide whether you want, or do not want to invest your time into stock graphics, and PSD templates in specific.

Another pro for selling there is that you can find a developer to work or build a team with, here.

GraphicRiver

If you are a graphic designer, then GraphicRiver is probably the most suitable marketplace for you. It is the place for business cards, icons, fonts, photoshop actions & filters, flyers and other stock items. GraphicRiver has grown much in the past few years, so you should be aware of the competition and a huge number of (similar) files. Unique items would probably sell better here.



Creative Market

Creative Market is a “newborn” in the design stock community, even though it has some very good “parents”. Built by the guys at ColourLovers, the place sells any kind of stock items but the very best thing about Creative Market is that it considers authors’ opinions most and gives them a lot of freedom.

There is no review process and no prices based on categories at Creative Market. Once you are approved as a seller, you have the possibility to upload as many items you’d like, set the prices, and see them for sale fairly quickly.



3. Side Project

Side projects are usually small tools, utilities, services, products and probably membershipsthat help you solve or make a task easier for you and the community. Depending on the popularity of these tools, they can earn somewhere from a dozen of dollars to a few hundreds, not including services and products that vary from one to another in their income.

Some tools that can be given as examples are:











4. Physical Goods

Another way of building a stream of passive income, which has been quite popular in the last years is selling physical goods such as posters, t-shirts, compilation books or other similar items. There are many creative people out there who are constantly looking to revamp their wardrobe and walls with cool and strange things!


I’ve seen both agencies and freelancers succeed at selling their stuff to the masses, and often times they end up building a massive shop, such as Ugmonk to cater to the demand.



5. Design Contests

Design contest websites have been around for a very long time, and many designers out there have gotten their start from there. Websites like 99Designs would pay you well, starting at $249 for a logo design, $599 for a website design and $199 for a postcard or flyer.


The best thing about design contest websites is that there is always work to do. Hundreds of projects are set as open and you have the opportunity to earn a few hundred of dollars for a “design piece”. The bad part is that there are thousands of others like you hunting for the same bounty. You have to really impress the contest creator and show that your work is the best, otherwise you are simply wasting your time working on a project that you’ll never get paid for.



Conclusion

To conclude this article, I wanted to say that there are a lot of ways of creating a flow of side income, and you never know how this side income will turn into your main source of income or even your main job. Try to put focus on a category that fits you most and start “digging” for your best way to earn yourself a great passive side income.

New Resources For Designers And Developers



This month’s compilation include some fun plugins and tools, like one for constructing responsive website with GUI, one for creating disposable avatars, and one that allow you to write CSS in British English. And if you like Bootstrap, check out the Bookstrap Expo for new ideas and inspiration.



There are countless of documentations, articles, and tutorials about JavaScript on the Internet. Finding one that is the best fit for your skill level could be really time consuming. Don’t worry,SuperHeroJS is here. It’s a collection of JavaScript resources, from articles, JS troublehoot, best practices, and videos — for beginners and for seasoned developers.





If you find coding responsive website through a code editor annoying, I think Adobe Edge Reflow could help you out. Adobe Edge Reflow might be similar to other Web editors, but it is also packed with several special components to build responsive websites in a new way, by using GUI.





Web designers rely on inspiration to keep working. And the “inspiration” can be found anywhere including other’s people website. If you build a website on top of Bootstrap, then Bootstrap Expois one of the sites to visit. The list is curated by Bootstrap’s author, and lists only the best implementations of the framework.





We technically are able to change webpage styles without affecting the actual stylesheet through a developer tool like Firebug. But, once we refresh the webpage, the styles reverts to the original. In the case when you want to make your changes permanent on that webpage, you can install this extension, called My Styles, in your Chrome.





Sassaparilla, to me it sounds like pasta, but it is actually reusable style rules for building (responsive) websites, built on top of Sass and Compass functions. That said, if you have been using Sass or Compass, I think you would be familiar with it fairly quickly. With a focus on typography, Sassaparilla includes a set of style rules that make your website paragraphs, font size, line height, as well as spacing and kerning in the right size.




When building a WordPress theme, we have to ensure that the elements within our posts and pages are displayed correctly. For this reason, we need some dummy text to fill in the post. If you prefer, you can write it on your own. Or you can use WP Fill to generate the whole content or only the particular elements that you only need.




LESS Hat is collection of resuable LESS mixins. LESS Hat takes the library further by including a set of Mixins that are not included in similar resources. It includes some cutting-edge CSS3 features into the libraries such as Keyframes, Animation, Backface Visibility, and Background Origin so that we can write (the syntax) less.

In practice, we need vendor prefix for some experimental CSS features. Using LESS hat you can specify whether it should include or exclude particular prefix by using this variable.






Nowadays, it is common practice to display a user picture or avatar on our sites and apps. UI Faces is a handy tool to generate avatar pictures in your design mockup. You can set the border radius of the avatar, and the size. Then, download the ones that you need.




Responsive Nav is a lightweight JavaScript library that turns your web navigation into a toggle navigation in a small viewport size, a popular practice today. This plugin works independently, and does not require a third-party JS library like jQuery.




FESS or Fat Expanded Style Sheet is a tool to expand your CSS shorthand property into an individual property. So, border property will be translated into border-left, border-right, border-top, and border-bottom. This is a nifty tool if you, somehow, charge your client in per line of code. The more code lines, the more you will get paid.





CSS language is built using US English vocabularies. Spiffing CSS is an entertaining tool to turn the way you write CSS, as it allows you to write your CSS in British English.

For example:


Keep Calm & Love Your Web Designers [Posters]



Web designers have a lot to deal with and we’re not just talking about the work that they are doing. Malfunctions, miscommunications, subjective tastes, colors that are not colors, micro-managers, fickle trends, bosses that don’t get it, clients that refuse to get it, and the list goes on.


(Image Source: Alan Guzman)

Perhaps, that is why there are so many of these Keep Calm and [insert tongue-in-cheek solution here] posters around to keep our collective chins up. Here are 12 Keep Calm posters that let you have a good glimpse into the designer’s daily struggles. And to all our beloved web designers, we share your pain(!) and we salute your courage to soldi

Keep Calm and Carry On. Having a bad day with designer’s block? Just keep calm and carry on!(Image Source: Graham Phisher)



Keep Calm and Save Often. It’s the oldest rule in the book, because if you don’t, well, we’ll let thisTwitter stream say the rest. (Image Source: Alex Jane Art)




Keep Calm and CMD+Z. Previously known as the Undo button, this is the command that we wish to have a real-life counterpart to. (Image Source: Paweł Kadysz)





Keep Calm And Use The Force Quit. Then, breathe! Breathe like Vader! (Image Source: ron-guyatt)





Keep Calm And CTRL+ALT+DEL. You win some, you lose some, but if you stay calm, you can start again. (Image Source: Keep Calm And Posters)





Keep Calm And Google It. Don’t you feel all warm inside knowing that Google has your back?(Image Source: Manish Mansinh)





Keep Calm And Look Busy. If you ever wonder what the real purpose for social networks is, there you have it. Someone’s coming, look busy! (Image Source: Manish Mansinh)




Keep Calm And Make The Logo Bigger. Sometimes the client from hell deserves a chair in the face. Other times, we should just watch our blood pressure and make the logo bigger. (Image Source: Eleonora Anzini)




Keep Calm And Lorem Ipsum. They say a web designer’s experience is proportional to how much Lorem Ipsum he can recall. I can do… Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet. Good enough. (Image Source:Eleonora Anzini)




Keep Calm And Type On. Once the type is on, it’s hard to not spend a night perfecting its kerning.(Image Source: Alan Guzman)




Keep Calm And Flip A Table. Keep an extra table nearby just to flip it when things go south, then carry on soldier. (Image Source: Keep Calm-o-matic)




Keep Calm And Redesign The Web. Too many mobile devices to support? HTML5 and Responsive Web Design to the rescue. All hail HTML5! (Image Source: Vinícius de Thomaz Domingues)




Got your own piece of Keep Calm quote to share with us? You know what to do!
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