Thursday, 4 May 2017

6 YOUNG PEOPLE WHO TURNED THEIR PASSION INTO PROFIT AND BECAME MILLIONAIRES.


Looking at what is obtainable in the world today, the rate of unemployment, high cost of living and deterioration in the standard of living should give every young person an idea as not to depend on the provisions of government or employment but on what they can offer to themselves- and that is entrepreneurship.

Here are 6 young people who
are already in that path. There hobbies as teens turned into million dollar plus career.

1.Jordan Maron known as Captain Sparklez


Jordan Maron is one of the lucky few who took a hobby and turned it into a multi-million dollar source of income.
Jordan Maron is a famous YouTuber who goes by the name Captain Sparklez. His Captain Sparklez YouTube channel launched when he was just 18 years old and his original YouTube channel ProsDontTalkSh launched even before then. Even in his ProsDontTalkSh years, Maron had already partnered with Machinima.com’s media streaming website and multi-channel network.
Jordan used to mainly post videos pertaining to the Call of Duty games, but didn’t take off until he launched the CaptainSparklez channel, where he became known for his Minecraft play videos and song parodies. To date, he is one of the most profitable stars of YouTube, with millions of subscribers, billions of views, and a worth of $8.2 million.

2. Nick D'Aloisio


Nick is a self-taught programmer that started out his education on the subject with a copy of C for Dummies and How-To videos on the internet. Once he became proficient with programming, Nick launched his first app when he was only 12 years old, and from there developed a new app every time that school would let out for summer. Eventually he developed an app called Trimit when he was only 15, which would condense lengthy articles into short summaries ranging from 1000 to 140 characters. A Hong Kong billionaire saw the potential and gave Nick $300,000 in venture capital to perfect the app. This re-working would go on to be called Summly, an app that Yahoo! paid $30 million for. In addition, Nick was also given a position in the company.

3. Fraser Doherty


Fraser laid the groundwork for his $1.2 million dollar SuperJam company by selling his Grandmother’s jam recipes at farmer’s markets and delis. As time went on, Fraser put his own tweaks on the recipes and even developed ways to make jam entirely from fruit. Word began to spread around Scotland and Fraser eventually struck a deal with the Waitrose supermarket chain to sell his jam through 184 of their stores. The exposure eventually grew into a 2,000 store market, and spanned to other countries as well. The SuperJam name has even gained status from the National Museum of Scotland as an “Iconic Scottish Brand.”
Doherty has taken his business further and has also released a SuperJam cookbook.

4. Ashley Qualls


When she was only 14, Ashley Qualls began teaching herself HTML and decided to launch a site called WhateverLife.com to showcase her design work for interested buyers. At the time, the site didn’t get much at all in the way of traffic.
The following year, Ashley began offering her services to classmates that wanted more personalized layouts for their MySpace and social networking pages. As traffic grew from word-of-mouth advertising, Ashley joined Google Adsense and took a cut of the advertising revenue. As traffic began to grow still, she started making deals directly for people to advertise their products on her site.
WhateverLife.com now sees about 7 million users pass through a month, and earns Ashley millions in ad dollars.

5. Cameron Johnson


It looked like Johnson had always had a knack for business. When he was just 5 years old he would go door-to-door selling vegetables. At the age of 9 he had already started his own greeting card company called Cheers and Tears. At 12, he began buying and selling Beanie Babies at the height of their popularity.
After the Beanie Baby business slowed down, Cameron took $50,000 he had earned and started My EZ Mail, a confidential e-mail forwarding service. Finally, he started an internet advertising venture called SurfingPrizes.com. By 15, Johnson was making nearly $400K a month.
By college, Johnson had started another site called CertificateSwap.com, which he later sold in a six-figure deal.

6. Sean Belnick


When Sean Belnick was just 14 years old he invested $500 into his own business venture called bizchair.com. The initial $500 was made by mowing lawns and selling his Pokemon cards.
Belnick had spent time taking note of his stepfather’s business selling office furniture. With the internet just starting to become a fixture in every household and business, Belnick noticed how much money people could save if they cut out the middle man and sell directly online. By 16 years old, Belnick was a millionaire.
Today, bizchair has grown so large that it has a 70 acre headquarters in Georgia.

Thanks for reading. Join us next time for more motivating articles.
posted from Bloggeroid

No comments:

Post a Comment

please drop your comments

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...