64 Ways Location Independent People Earn a Living

workin-for-a-livin

Have you ever wondered how you could earn a living that would allow you to live and work anywhere in the world? Many people already living that dream shared the details of how they make a living in the recent Location Independent and Digital Nomad Survey.

64 of their answers are below. The results might surprise you if you thought location independent people were all bloggers or online business owners.

The truth is that these people earn a living in many different ways. Sure, there are plenty of freelance writers, consultants and web developers, but there are also professional musicians, lobbyists and land developers on the list.

Check out these 64 real ways people earn a location independent living:

  1. Database consulting for MySQL
  2. Sales (other peoples’ products)
  3. Public affairs and public relations working in digital engagement
  4. Updating blogs and ghostwriting
  5. Through coaching and consulting, by helping expats and diplomats cope with homesickness and culture shock, staying focused on their goals and overcoming the emotional and motivational challenges of expat life
  6. As a music composer and sound designer along with running an audio production company
  7. Website design and audio engineering
  8. Through a business that produces ready-made newsletters, sold online to people cross North America
  9. Graphic design for a Fortune 500 company
  10. As a freelance writer, involving blogging, copywriting, ghost writing and article and e-book writing
  11. Affiliate marketing
  12. Software development, end user support, training, documentation, database management, project management, technical marketing & strategy and producing travel content
  13. As a self-employed webmaster, blogger and travel writer
  14. Communications strategy consulting and content development
  15. Running a yacht charter company
  16. Professional poker player
  17. Freelance script writer and script doctor
  18. Online community manager, community consultant and entrepreneur
  19. Translation and related language services
  20. Instructional designer and consultant for large businesses
  21. Reporting, copywriting, and marketing consultation
  22. Project Manager for an electronic medical records software company
  23. Geographical information analysis for research institutions
  24. Consulting services for organizational development
  25. Selling information products and coaching
  26. IT project management and regulatory compliance
  27. Web development
  28. Senior consultant for a large data services/hardware company
  29. Customer service manager for online software company
  30. Website design and management with 2 major contracts
  31. Sales (conducting phone sales with Skype to contacts in the US)
  32. Market research
  33. Writing for other people, recording conferences and audio programs and selling “stuff” on-line
  34. Web developer
  35. IT systems design and software implementation
  36. Creating websites to sell online niche products
  37. Freelance translation of technical documents
  38. Working as a full time employee at home for a major IT company
  39. Through three websites and some freelance design work
  40. Building blogs and websites for small companies and social media consulting
  41. International airline/aviation consultant and lobbyist
  42. Land development and consulting
  43. Affiliate marketing manager and digital marketing consulting
  44. Through recurring income from web hosting and support contracts
  45. Adjunct professor specializing in online learning (teaching and designing online courses)
  46. Consulting, training and coaching in the fields of new ways of working and information worker performance
  47. Professional musician
  48. Public relations for creative (advertising, marketing, PR, design) firms
  49. Working for a publisher (writing, illustration, photography)
  50. College instructor
  51. Health and wellness coaching
  52. Running a web application with a monthly subscription model
  53. Consulting in software development
  54. Selling an extension to a popular content management system
  55. Working for Matador Network and Where There Be Dragons
  56. Arts consulting
  57. Business advisor
  58. Manage operations of online business
  59. Senior IT consultant
  60. Marketing coach and copywriter
  61. Trading forex (foreign exchange)
  62. Owning an internet business
  63. Selling online eBooks
  64. Running a technology sales website

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photo by Untitled blue

49 Responses to 64 Ways Location Independent People Earn a Living

  1. lawrence benkelman June 16, 2009 at 7:59 am #

    Great post with lots of great ideas for work.

  2. Daniel June 16, 2009 at 8:34 am #

    This is a great little article, it’s good to see exactly what people are up to already. I look forward to more of these snippets as the full results from the survey come out. Good work guys and a big thanks to everyone for sharing!

    • Corbett Barr June 16, 2009 at 9:55 am #

      Yes, thanks everyone for sharing. I can’t wait to write more (and read what other blogs write) about the results.

  3. Sean June 16, 2009 at 8:35 am #

    Definitely lots of things I never would have thought about being L.I. on that list. I think I am going to live on a yacht and become a musical composer…

    • Corbett Barr June 16, 2009 at 9:56 am #

      I was thinking about being a professional poker player and college instructor ;)

    • cecilia January 4, 2010 at 11:16 am #

      hi sean, i completely agree with you!! i travelled all around the world on my own, i m italian and one day i ll go living on a tropical island, pacific area whom i know nearly everything. it s about 22 years i m a bank employee and still saying the same thing i want to escape (vojoscappa of the email means in italian slang escape ahah), hope you understand my perfect english ahah, best regards cecilia

  4. Jeremy June 16, 2009 at 11:43 am #

    Corbett,

    I see a ton of technology jobs. It is amazing to me how quickly technology changes the landscape of business. Many of the jobs that are allowing people to live this way probably weren’t even jobs/positions 5 to 10 years ago. Very cool. Thanks for the information

    Jeremy @ RefocusingTechnology.com

    • Corbett Barr June 20, 2009 at 8:47 am #

      Yeah, living the location independent life was a much different proposition 10 years ago. It wasn’t impossible, though. Steve Roberts was doing it waaay back in the 1980s.

      It’s exciting to think about how technology will improve people’s lives even further over the next 10 and 20 years. Location independence will definitely become a more attainable lifestyle.

  5. Renato June 16, 2009 at 10:18 pm #

    I am already a “location independent person”, I work as a senior software engineer for a small Silicon Valley-based startup. I am (currently) based in London and I am currently looking for my next short rent somewhere in Europe. But this post gives me a few more ideas if I want (or I have) to change soon…

    Thanks!

    Renato

    • Corbett Barr June 20, 2009 at 8:49 am #

      That’s great, Renato. It sounds like the company you work for is quite progressive. Is the entire company distributed throughout the world, or is there a central office that most people work from?

  6. Justin June 17, 2009 at 4:42 am #

    Great post! I myself have tried some of these and was successful in some and got failure in others. being a freelancer one major thing required is a central system so that wherever you are you can access things in an easy way.
    Initially we used basecamp (www.basecamphq.com) for project management purposes and it changed the email email games we used to play. Though we find out some even better product named Proofhub Proofhub (www.proofhub.com)which provided the same or you can say better services at a cheaper and effective price. The thing is that wherever you are your work should be effective enough to attract more business.
    Thanks for the post

    • Corbett Barr June 20, 2009 at 8:52 am #

      Thanks for the advertisement, Justin ;) Your point is important though. Communication is one of the trickiest parts about being location independent.

  7. Colin June 17, 2009 at 7:01 am #

    Haha, guess I’d better learn to play poker and compose music. Then I’ll be set!

  8. Benny the Irish polyglot June 17, 2009 at 8:12 am #

    Fascinating!!! I took part in the survey (I’m the freelance translator of technical documents) and it’s so interesting to see the large scope of jobs that you can take with you across the globe :) Interesting to see what I share (blogging) and what is different between myself and other technomads (no children and in the younger age group in my case).
    Really looking forward to further information on the survey!

    • Corbett Barr June 20, 2009 at 8:54 am #

      Thanks for participating. I’m glad to see such a diversity of people represented in the survey. It makes interpreting the results very interesting! I look forward to sharing more soon. I love your nickname here, by the way. Which languages do you speak?

      • Benny the Irish polyglot June 21, 2009 at 10:49 am #

        English, Irish (Gaelic), Spanish, French, Italian, Portuguese and Esperanto! I’m currently learning Czech (and blogging about if it’s possible to learn it in 3 months flat!)
        Looking forward to these results :)
        All the best!

  9. Phil August 6, 2009 at 3:52 am #

    I’ve been a freelancing IT consultant for 10+ years and whilst the pay has been excellent and it’s also allowed me many good travelling experiences, it’s definitely not a silver bullet or the end goal.

    The business model (if you could call it that) is fundementally flawed, in fact it plain sucks. You’re always trading your time for a dollar, which means ultimately although you have a bit more flexibility, but you still have to show face everyday and put in your 8 hours.

    The only way to have true freedom, is to build a residual income stream which isn’t dependent or reliant on you warming a seat 5-days a week. That being said, consulting can be a good stepping stone to nirvana.

    • Jeremy February 15, 2010 at 10:05 am #

      @Phil : Man, you are like my mirror image then. I’m in the exact same boat, but consulting only for about 8 years. I tried expanding the consulting buisness, i.e. hirring people, which helped some, but didn’t really get me to true freedom either. I think like you said residual income streams are key. So my task now is trying to figure out what is the most straight forward way to turn my 8+ years of IT Consulting experience into some sort of product that can be sold. Would love to kick around some ideas with you around that topic if your interested.

  10. AdventureRob October 9, 2009 at 6:25 am #

    I do 10 of these and still don’t earn enough to sustain myself (yet) :/

    • Overseas Assistant August 28, 2010 at 4:04 am #

      Hi Rob :)

      I reckon it can be tricky to make your incomes steady enough.
      The thing is to re-assess your business as often as possible and find what you can ameliorate whenever possible.

      Good luck! :)

  11. Modernape November 5, 2009 at 8:55 am #

    I’m an online psychologist providing live therapy sessions over video or IM, and I manage to make ends meet, its been sustaining my ILP lifestyle for 3 years in 4 continents.

  12. Cornelius Aesop February 22, 2010 at 8:26 am #

    Great list, I’ve been reading on many aspects of what people do to maintain their lifestyle while traveling and the necessities of being a digital nomad but nothing really listing what everyone is doing to actually earn an income while traveling. I want to break my own way of making income through location independent means but I’m no expert in anything – but hopefully by the time I take that jump move outside the US I’ve refined any skills needed.

  13. Rico May 5, 2010 at 3:38 am #

    How come everyone praises an article that has a number of repeated suggestions (streching it to the number of 64) ? I am getting into this idea of blogging slowly, and it appears that a lot of the comments act as a lead to “hey, come check my stuff out” – reoccuring theme of “e-books, blogging” – maaates…All good though – It’s a wonderful post! Can’t wait to get more :) !

    • Corbett May 5, 2010 at 11:28 am #

      Hey Rico, I think you’ll find that empty comments like “nice post” won’t help you connect with anyone or deliver new visitors to your site. The more value the better. Try to contribute something to the conversation. That usually works best.

  14. Pankaj August 2, 2010 at 2:17 pm #

    Nice article. I’ts amazing you could think of so many things one can work on from home. to condense, almost any information work can be done from home.

  15. Logos and Websites Designer August 28, 2010 at 4:30 am #

    If you do Design and Webdesign, you have to compete with talented people from emerging countries who set the prices very low compared to someone who wants to remain location independant (costs of living aren’t the same!).

    I think that it’s the main difficulty if you don’t manage to have at least 4 big clients who constantly rely on you.

    Added to that, there is the issue of trust.
    Many companies have difficulties to trust someone they can’t see or meet.
    So, you’d better have to find those 4 big companies before you become truly virtual.

  16. Jenny October 5, 2010 at 11:28 am #

    I’ve been location independent for 8 years. I have a graphic design and marketing business that has done very well over the years. I’m now expanding to other markets in hopes to create a more passive income.

  17. Alex November 8, 2010 at 7:40 am #

    Comprehensive list! I’ve met many location independent workers but meeting everyone this list will take a while

  18. EJ July 4, 2011 at 10:57 pm #

    Very cool post.

  19. Monica Ray July 15, 2011 at 8:41 pm #

    Corbett – thanks for the list, I’m really enjoying reading your blog and hope to someday too be location independent :) .

  20. Ron November 20, 2011 at 2:03 pm #

    This list is really timeless. Today may be a couple years after this post was published but it still rings true. Hopefully those who read this list a couple years ago have figured out how to implement some of the stuff here.

  21. Centsable Too January 27, 2012 at 3:20 pm #

    Great post! I am a web developer and already working location indepently. However I only have one main client, and if I lose them, I’ll be in trouble. I’m embarking on other ways to generate income, and your post has given me more ideas. Thanks much!

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