frame left frame top frame right
Summer Job header image
frame bottom
 
MENU
ARTICLES
BOOKS
Summer Jobs Worldwide 2008 (Summer Jobs Abroad)
Summer Jobs Worldwide 2008 (Summer Jobs Abroad)

Our Price: $19.95
Used from: $13.39

Summer Jobs Worldwide, 2009: Make the Most of the Summer Vacation (Summer Jobs Worldwide)
Summer Jobs Worldwide, 2009: Make the Most of the Summer Vacation (Summer Jobs Worldwide)
by Vacation Work
Our Price: $14.93
Used from: $14.93

The Back Door Guide to Short-Term Job Adventures: Internships, Summer Jobs, Seasonal Work, Volunteer Vacations, and Transitions Abroad
The Back Door Guide to Short-Term Job Adventures: Internships, Summer Jobs, Seasonal Work, Volunteer Vacations, and Transitions Abroad
by Michael Landes
Used from: $16.73

Peterson's Summer Jobs for Students 2001: Where the Jobs Are and How to Get Them (Summer Jobs for Students, 2001)
Peterson's Summer Jobs for Students 2001: Where the Jobs Are and How to Get Them (Summer Jobs for Students, 2001)
by Peterson's Guides
Used from: $0.19

Paul Has A Summer Job
Paul Has A Summer Job
by Michel Rabagliati Michel Rabagliati
Our Price: $13.22
Used from: $2.44

Make Money with a Summer Job

There are many ways to make money with a summer job. For many individuals, a summer job provides a form of financial relief that is much needed. Teenagers, college students, teachers, and people with similar positions may consider a summer job to get some extra cash to cover their financial obligations, or just to simply put some cash away to save for long term goals. If you are looking for ways to make money with a summer job, you are sure to benefit from the many ideas that are listed in this article. Here, you will find many methods that you can use in order to make money with a summer job. Not all these options are right for everyone, but you are sure to discover an option that is right for you.

 

One of the most common ways to make money with a summer job is to get into the lawn care business. This is a very popular type of summer job. One of the reasons that lawn care is such a popular summer job is that a lawn must be tended to more frequently during summer months. If you build a good list of clients early in the summer, you are sure to stay in work all summer long on a consistent basis. Having this type of summer job requires some basic lawn care equipment, such as a lawn mower, a weed eater, and a rake. If you purchase this equipment in the right places, you will have to spend very little when it comes to the cost of starting this summer job. More than likely, you will make back what you spend within the first week or two if you advertise your business properly.

If you are looking for a less common summer job that can result in profits and costs very little to start, you should consider selling various types of beverages in places where they are not readily available. In the summer months, many people go on camping and fishing trips. You could set up a cooler in these locations and fill them with a lot of ice. You can then place an assortment of beverages such as bottled water and different kinds of sodas in the coolers and sell them. The only start up cost for this type of summer job is the ice, the cooler, a vehicle and gas to fuel that vehicle, and the price of the beverages. You can make up to a 200% profit on these beverages if you sell them in the right locations. You may want to consider selling at local parks, flea markets, and small sporting events as well.

There are many types of summer jobs that you can engage in to make money. It is important to select a summer job that interests you. You can choose to work for someone else in your summer job, or you can choose to start your own business to make money.

PRODUCTS



SPONSORED LINKS
 
 
The Summer Job Site Videos

 

Click a thumbnail to watch a video
Loading...
Chicago Area Summer Jobs News

Economy forcing many seniors to cut on health care (Chicago Tribune)

Senior citizens with mounting medical bills are finding they don't have the necessary resources to keep up. Here are four stories about how Chicago area seniors are faring. They are splitting pills or deciding not to refill prescriptions. They're missing doctors' appointments, skipping needed dental work, canceling home-care services.

Read more...


Hangin' tough on Main Street (SouthtownStar)

Of all the jobs to have right now, small business owner must rank among the toughest. There's the slowing economy, which means fewer customers and slumping sales. Credit is hard to come by, so small business loans are drying up. And with no massive corporation or nationwide sales to bolster the bottom line, small business owners shoulder that burden all on their own. So how are small businesses ...

Read more...


Financial crisis may hit mental health (The Herald News)

Although mental health might be the last thing on people's minds the past couple of weeks compared to declining retirement accounts, job losses, a credit crunch, and even the heartfelt loss of the Cubs and Sox in the playoffs, good coping skills to prevent depression are essential in tough economic times.

Read more...


Meltdown trips up aspiring investment bankers (MSNBC)

The path to a high-powered career in investment banking suddenly is full of roadblocks for MBA students who have seen Wall Street drastically reshaped while they sit in the classroom.

Read more...


A semester abroad ... in Tinseltown (Los Angeles Times)

U.S. colleges send students to Britain for literature or Italy for art -- so why not to Hollywood? Forget about Paris and a semester at the Sorbonne. Who needs to study in Florence or struggle with Mandarin for just months in Beijing?

Read more...


 
 
Copyright 2008. All rights reserved. Terms of Service | Privacy Policy
bottom bar