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الأحد، 26 أغسطس 2012

مواقع و شركات الأرباح على الإنترنت How to Make Money Online


سبق و أن تحدثنا في أن الشركات و مواقع الأرباح على الإنترنت لا تكون كلها آمنة و لا تكون كذلك كلها نصابة...
و يمكن تقسيمها حسب ذلك إلى مجموعتين:-
1- شركات ربحية آمنة.
2- شركات ربحية نصابة.
لكن موضوعنا اليوم و قبل تقسيم الشركات إلى آمنة و غير ذلك، يعتمد على شرح ما هي أصلاً شركات الربحية على الإنترنت، و كيف تعمل، و ما الفائدة التي تعود عليها فتعطيك في مقابلها نقوداً؟
الأساس الذي تعتمد عليه كل مواقع الإنترنت، و كل مشروعات الأرباح سواء على النت أو غير النت هو أعداد الزوار و المشاهدين...
فقنوات التلفاز - كأوضح مثال - تتلقى آلاف بل و ملايين الجنيهات في مقابل عرضها لإعلان منتج أو خدمة، لأنها تعرضه على شريحة كبيرة من المشاهدين.
و كلما زادت هذه الشريحة، كانت القيمة المدفوعة للإعلان الواحد أكبر.
و كذلك الحال على الإنترنت...
تتعدد شركات أو مواقع الأرباح على الإنترنت لنذكر منها المواقع و الشركات التالية:-
1- بورصة العملات (الفوريكس) Forex
2- مواقع الدفع مقابل النقر على الإعلانات التي تظهر لفترة معينة (عدة ثوان)  (PTC( Paid to click
3- مواقع الدفع مقابل تصفح صفحات معينة (PTS (Paid to surf
4- مواقع تدفع مقابل التعليق و المشاركة.
5- مواقع تدفع ثمن عرض إعلانات في موقعك.
6- مواقع تقيم مسابقات معينة في التصميمات و خلافه.
7- إنشاء موقع يقدم خدمات معينة بمقابل مادي.
8- مواقع و شركات الربح عن طريق اختصار الروابط.
9- مواقع تدفع نظير تصفح إعلانات ترسلها عن طريق البريد الالكتروني.
10- مواقع و شركات تضع إعلانات في موقعك، و تحاسبك سواء بعدد مرات ظهور إعلانك للزوار أو ضغطاتهم لتلك الإعلانات.
11- مواقع تدقع في مقابل أن تحضر إليها زواراً أو مشاركين.
و غيرها من الوسائل و الطرق التي يمكنك استخدامها للربح أو للحصول على مقابل مادي إضافي.
  و هذه المواقع و الشركات و الطرق و الوسائل تعتمد على شيئين:-
- إما أن يكون مهارة معينة ( التصميم - الترجمة - مهارات التجارة و التسويق - .....إلخ) و هذه تنطبق على بورصة تداول العملات (الفوريكس) و كذلك إنشائك لموقع خدمي ما، أو عملك بالتصميم أو الترجمة... إلخ.
- و إما بعدد الزوار من أجل الإعلانات، إما بالضغط عليها أو بعدد مرات ظهور الإعلانات للزوار، و مثلها مثل كل الطرق الباقية مهما اختلفت أو تنوعت، و هذه تدفع نسبة من الأرباح، مقابل زيادة انتشارها و عرض إعلاناتها
 و بالنسبة لشركات الإعلانات تعرض القائمة التالية أقوى 30 شركة تربح الأموال من الإنترنت عن طريق الزوار و الإعلانات بها، و مؤسسيها و كذلك نسبة ما تحققه من أرباح سنوياً و أيضاً في الثانية الواحدة في إحصائية كانت عام 2009.

30 Websites That Make A Lot Of Money Online

 Rank  Website  Founders  Annual Revenue  Per Second
 1  Google  Larry Page and Sergey Brin  $21,800,000,000  $691.27
 2  Amazon  Jeff Bezos  $19,166,000,000  $607.75
 3  Yahoo  Jerry Yang and David Filo  $7,200,000,000  $228.31
 4  eBay  Pierre Omidyar  $6,290,000,000  $199.45
 5  MSN/Live  Nathan Myhrvold.  $3,214,000,000  $101.92
 6  PayPal  Max Levchin, Peter Thiel, and Luke Nosek  $2,250,000,000  $71.35
 7  iTunes  Jeff Robbin  $1,900,000,000  $60.25
 8  Reuters  Marshal Vace  $1,892,000,000  $59.99
 9  Priceline  Jesse Fink  $1,884,000,000  $59.74
 10  Expedia  Added Mark Schroeder  $1,447,000,000  $45.88
 11  NetFlix  Reed Hastings  $1,200,000,000  $38.05
 12  Travelocity  Terry Jones  $1,100,000,000  $38.05
 13  Zappos  Nick Swinmurn  $1,000,000,000  $31.71
 14  Hotels.com  David Litman  $1,000,000,000  $31.71
 15  AOL  Erik Prince  $968,000,000  $30.70
 16  Orbitz  Jeff Katz  $870,000,000  $27.59
 17  Overstock  Robert Brazell  $834,000,000  $26.45
 18  MySpace  Tom Anderson  $800,000,000  $25.37
 19  Skype  Niklas Zennstrom  $550,841,000  $17.47
 20  Sohu  Zhang Chaoyang  $429,000,000  $13.60
 21  Buy.com  Robb Brock  $400,000,000  $12.68
 22  StubHub  Eric Baker  $400,000,000  $12.68
 23  Alibaba  Jack Ma  $316,000,000  $10.02
 24  Facebook  Mark Zuckerberg  $300,000,000  $9.51
 25  YouTube  Chad Hurley, Steve Chen and Jawed Karim  $300,000,000  $9.51
 26  Blue Nile  Mark Vadon  $295,000,000  $9.35
 27  Tripadvisor  Stephen Kaufer  $260,000,000  $8.24
 28  Getty Images  Mark Getty  $233,200,000  $7.39
 29  Bidz  Garry Itkin  $207,000,000  $6.56
 30  NYTimes  Henry Jarvis Raymond  $175,000,000  $5.55

إذاً... يمكننا الحصول على الأموال على الإنترنت بطريقتين...
إما عن طريق تقديم خدمة أو منتج ما...
و إما عن طريق مشاركة بعض الشركات أرباحها في مساعدتها على الانتشار.
و سنتناول لاحقاً شركات الإنترنت و تصنيفاتها سواء كانت آمنة أو غير ذلك، و ما الذي تعتمد عليه في أرباحها، و الأساس الذي تشاركنا إياه تلك الأرباح...
This is not a guide to how your neighbor's step-aunt's half-sister makes $5,000 a week online. We'll leave that to spambot commenters. Instead, this is how people are earning anywhere from a few dollars to a few thousand dollars every month with a microeconomy of sorts built on the Internet.
With unemployment at over eight percent for nearly four years, it's no wonder that many are getting creative in order to make a buck. Some are renting out spare rooms and others are assembling IKEA furniture for everyone and anyone within a 20-mile radius. The 99 versus the 1 percent numbers haven't changed, but there's nevertheless a lifestyle shift within those numbers. The wealthy are stepping into the world of online consignment, putting the luxury goods they've grown tired of up for sale at prices within reach of economic tiers below them. While members of the middle class are at their 9-to-5 jobs, MIT grads are doing their laundry for them and waiting for their packages to be delivered.
Economists are rushing to label the phenomenon and its offshoots with terms like "access sharing" and "microlabor" and applying New Keynesian theories to it. Essentially, though, for those most affected by the recession, it's a simple principle: As economic woes grow, solutions to them shrink. And they've shrunk to so little that individuals are down to an economic model with just one variable: themselves.
But they're far from alone. Dozens of sites have gone way beyond lamppost fliers and their slightly more advanced Craigslist Gigs descendants to connect those peddling their skills with those in need of them. In the new economy, entrepreneurship leads to more entrepreneurship, with startups giving many a means to begin their own ventures.
Here are 12 paths some are taking to turning their fortunes around in Slideshow (original article). 

1-

Go Go Gadget


Got gadgets? Rent them out with SnapGoods. The site brings together the haves and the have-nots to distribute iPads, KitchenAid mixers, scanners, turntables, Roombas, and more. Lenders set the price, lending area, and other terms within their listings. Signup is through email, Facebook, or Twitter. While there's the opportunity to create a social network for a virtual circle of trust, borrowers and lenders can go outside it. If something happens to an item, SnapGoods ensures that it will be repaired or replaced and that there's a substitute in the meantime. 
2-

Road to Cash

Idle rides can put their owners on the fast lane to a quick buck with RelayRides. Car owners create a profile where they can set their own rental price (from $5 to $50 per hour) and when they get a request, can approve or reject it. If they approve it, they hand the keys over to the renter (either by meeting or through a dropbox) and then get a check for 60 percent of the reservation fee on a monthly basis. RelayRides screens renters' driving and credit card records and provides $1 million in insurance. 
3-

Time is Money

TaskRabbit is an open marketplace where people can post tasks they need completed and vetted task runners (aka, TaskRabbits) can bid to fulfill the request. Becoming a TaskRabbit isn't quick like a bunny, though; the application includes an essay and a written test, followed by a video interview, and background check. TaskRabbit says it adds to its warren based on community needs, skill set, and demand. When a poster marks a task completed, payment is deposited in the TaskRabbit's account; at $25, the account can be cashed out through a check or PayPal
.



On Zaarly, sellers don't advertise their services. Rather, they look for opportunities or set up an alert by choosing a keyword or category for what they have to offer, set a price, and list a location. They are paid directly by the buyer in cash or by credit card through Zaarly using PoundPay, which has a 48-hour escrow period before funds are deposited in a seller's bank account and a 2.25 percent transaction fee. 
4-

Get Creative

Artists of all kinds—painters, writers, graphic designers, illustrators, actors, singers, dancers, fashion designers, and songwriters –can peddle their skills on Streetlance. Artists make their pitches and set their prices from $5 to $50. They can also browse what potential patrons are looking for. Fourteen days after the delivery of their work, artists receive payment in a PayPal or AlertPay account.

Gumroad puts creators and their followers on the same path. Anything that can be uploaded or linked to can be put up for sale, including ebooks, music, and video games—without any digital overhead (i.e., a storefront). Using a modal window, creators can make a sale from their own site. Content creators sign up with Facebook or Twitter and post items that range from $1 to $1,000. Payment is deposited into the creator's bank account every month. Gumroad receives 5 percent of each sale plus 25 cents. 
5-

Skills in Session

Those with creative, culinary, tech, entrepreneurship, and lifestyle skills can use Skillshare to create a class and sign up students. Teachers set the price of a class and Skillshare takes 25 percent of each student's enrollment fee. Every time a student signs up, the funds are deposited in a PayPal account. Skillshare has a few pointers on its site about finding a venue, getting the word out, and teaching a class. 
6-

Housing Market

Going out of town? Subsidize that vacation by renting out your space while you're not using it with Airbnb or even just rent out a room or sofa while you're around. Listing a space is free and hosts get paid 97 percent of the reservation price by check, direct deposit, PayPal, bank transfer, international wire, or Western Union 24 hours after guests check in. Think your space doesn't qualify? Airbnb features castles, caves, treehouses, boats, yurts, tents, and even parking spaces. 
7-

Write Away

Contently is a marketplace for freelance writers to shop their skills to brands that are looking for marketing content. Writers can post their portfolios, add clips just by filling in the URLs of sites where their work can be found, write up a bio, and then link to their social media accounts to round things out. Payment is speedy; when a story's accepted, the money is deposited automatically in a PayPal account. 
8-

Mealpop

Chefs can have a little something on the side with Mealpop. Chefs, cooks, caterers, and small restaurant owners who sign up to be part of the service list dishes, the quantity they can whip up, when they're cooking, and where it can be picked up by hungry local customers. Mealpop is up and running in New York, Seattle, and Chicago. 
9-

Sell Stock

No, not that kind of stock—stock photos. Even amateur photographers can sell photos to stock photography sites like ShutterStock. At ShutterStock, photogs and other visual media creators earn 25 cents to $75 per download of photos, vector drawings, or illustrations, and $2.50 to $23 for video footage. Signup is free and the rights to the content remain with their creator. Payment is monthly and can be received in the form of a check or a deposit in a PayPal or Moneybookers account.

iStockphoto, one of the top resources for stock photography, requires a short evaluation process for those who want to sell their photos on its site. Potential contributors of photos, videos, illustrations, audio clips, Flash animation, or logos first have to join the site (which is free), then apply to be a contributor (it involves a short quiz), and submit three samples of their work. If accepted, contributors earn 15 percent for each file of theirs that's downloaded or 22 to 45 percent if their work is exclusive to iStockphoto. Payment can be requested when the contributor's account reaches $100 and is paid out by direct deposit, check, a deposit in a PayPal or Moneybookers account, or a pre-paid iStockphoto MasterCard Payoneer card. 
10-

That's Entertainment

Groaning bookshelves and empty wallets will each heave a sigh of relief at BookScouter. Punch in the ISBN numbers of books to unload and the service scans more than 40 book-buying sites to find the best prices for the titles. There are ratings of the sites from other sellers and BookScouter itself marks preferred merchants that it knows to be reliable. Those who are out and about and spy a book in a shop or on a stoop and want to see how much they can get for the find can use either the iOS or Android app; each comes with a barcode scanner. For anyone with rare or valuable books to sell, the online home of the largest independent bookseller, Powell's Books of Portland, Oregon, is the place to go.

Clutter in the form of CDs, DVDs, and games can become cash on SecondSpin. Sellers can look up the trade-in price item by item or just enter in all their UPC codes in one box to sell in bulk. A check will be in the mail within a week of SecondSpin receiving items. 
11-

Consign Yourself

Consignment shops have gone online and grown up. One of the latest, Threadflip, lets sellers (sorry, guys, it's a girls-only club, so far) set up shop using their email or Facebook account. Sellers hand over 20 percent of the price of items they list themselves to Threadflip and 40 percent if they opt to use the white-glove service, which handles the photographing, posting, and selling for sellers. Sellers receive credit in their Threadflip account once the tracking information for their package shows up in the USPS system; they can cash out the account at $25. The Threadflip app has an included camera function and filters and lets sellers handle transactions and their accounts on the fly.

ThredUP is the place to trade in the clothes kids have outgrown. Parents order a bag (for a deposit of $4.95 that will be refunded when it's returned) and pack up clean, lightly used to new clothes and shoes that have been purchased in the last two years and ship them to threadUP for free. Within about a month, they can expect payment in a PayPal account. The company airs its clean laundry on the Clothesline so that parents know how much others are earning and about how much they can expect themselves. 
 12-

She's Crafty

Crafters of the world unite on Etsy, selling handmade and vintage items. Sellers set up shop by registering with the site, choosing a name, selecting preferred buyer payment methods, and uploading images and descriptions of their items for sale. Etsy charges sellers 20 cents per item listed and a 3.5-percent transaction fee per item sold.



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