How to Make Money While Traveling?

dollarbillsThere are a LOT of blog posts out there on the interwebs talking about how to make money while traveling.

But I’d urge you to change your thinkings on this subject.

Too many ask themselves “How can I make money to fund my trip?”

Instead, ask “How can I help others?”

We all know everyone has to make money to make financial ends meet to live, but you’ll find success a lot easier to come by if you think about helping others and adding value to THEIR lives rather than trying to simply enrich your own. Don’t just put out crappy blog content, offer a crappy consulting service, or write a crappy ebook — for the sake of making a few dollars for yourself if you’re not adding real tangible value to someone else’s life.

The people that take that mindset, are the ones likely to succeed. Those that don’t focus on helping others are going to be left diluting the web with more crap and an unsustainable business model once your audience realizes you are simply ripping them off for your own benefit.

[photo source]

Oh Hey World for the Student Explorer

One of the main reasons I joined the team at Oh Hey World was that I saw great potential for students traveling abroad.  As I’ve detailed in previous posts, I studied abroad in Strasbourg, France, and some of my favorite and most valuable experiences involved meeting European students with similar interests and aspirations in life and finding localized recommendations for things to do.  Oh Hey World makes this easy by facilitating connections with like minded travelers while keeping your friends and family up to date on all your adventures.  Here’s a brief guide on Oh Hey World for the student traveler.  If you have any questions or ideas, feel free to email me at martin@ohheyworld.com.

Oh Hey WorldStep 1) Set up an Oh Hey World Profile

This is easy and pretty self explanatory, enter any interests you want to pursue or talk about with fellow students; these can be anything from “German Beer” to “Ballet.”  Make sure to enter “student” and your study abroad program (if you’re the first one, you can make up a tag) as a quick filter for finding fellow students in your new home and staying in touch with those in your program.

Step 2) Create a welcome kit.

Once you’ve settled into your area, set up a welcome kit for other students of local bars, coffee shops, hang out spots, and places of interest so that other students will have a list of the best spots to frequent when they check into your city.  You’re going to develop specific knowledge of your city amazingly quickly that other students can benefit from. More info here.

Step 3) Invite friends

Oh Hey World is a network and it works best when that network is large.  Then, whenever you check-in to a new place, you will have a ready-made list of people to meet and places to check out as you travel.  Go to your profile, select “settings” and click on the find friends button.  Then enter the email address of a friend and send them an invite to the Oh Hey World Community.

Step 4) Check In

Whenever you travel to a new place (study abroad is perfect for a little extra-curricular travel), check in.  You never know who will be visiting or living in a new city until you check-in.  Moreover, Oh Hey World will point you towards students with similar interests in an area, making finding people and forming connections not just a perk of traveling, but a central part of the traveling experience.

More Community Generated Welcome Kits

Jim Duncan welcome kitWe’ve shared some community generated welcome kits around the world a couple months ago. The Oh Hey World (OHW) community is growing. That means more community generated travel tips:

Planning a visit to experience the Seattle summer? Check out OHW staff generated Seattle tips for the budget backpacker, family traveler, and more.

What tips have you gathered on your summer travels?

Travel Inspiration: An Interview with Jonny Blair

Jonny Blair at Whalers Bay - AntarcticaJonny has mastered a travel feat that even experienced travelers cannot always boast, he has stepped foot on all seven continents. His story begins in Northern Ireland but he has spent the past several years traveling around the world, blogging, and sharing ways others can travel more. 

1) What do you do?

I travel the world! I class myself as a perpetual traveller these days. By leaving my hometown (Bangor, Northern Ireland) 10 years ago I ended up on a journey round the globe. I have now visited almost 500 towns and cities, within 75 countries, across all seven continents, you can see my “Where I’ve Been” page for more information. Along the way I have worked in about 50 different jobs, mostly related to bars, hotels and farms, my working career page gives a good insight into the jobs I’ve had down the years. However these days I’m doing a lot of online work. As well as my own travel blog, I also write for about 5 or 6 other sites and work as an itinerary provider and travel expert. However when asked “what do you do?” I normally just say “I travel the world!”

2) What was your biggest obstacle to traveling and how did you overcome it?

I haven’t really had any obstacles or hurdles, we are in control of our own lives so if we want something enough, we will get it. I believe in that. The hardest part was making the first step – my decision to move away from my hometown. After that, travelling has become routine and rather easy to organise. It’s a case of getting a job, earning money and then choosing where to go next.

3) What are you most excited about right now?

Going backpacking properly with my girlfriend around the Middle East. I’ve covered all 7 continents but the Middle East is a big gap on my travel map. I’ve only ever had a day in Doha so far so I’m off to put things right. Aside from that I’ve started on a lot of new online projects all through the strength of my travel blog. So work-wise, I’m pretty excited about all that and I’m not getting a moment’s rest at all trying to fit it in!

4) What’s next for you?

I’m heading to North Korea for a short trip then straight to the Middle East. I’ve started writing for a UK travel site (Essential Travel) and also for Asia Rooms so work-wise it’s been pretty cool. It’s the first time I’ll be relying on the internet when I travel as well as my blog has built momentum in the last year and I get daily e-mails from other bloggers, advertisers, travel companies and backpackers so I need to be constantly on the ball. I’ve started compiling itineraries for an online travel site (soon to be Smart Phone App) so that’s pretty fun. My second travel site, Crossing World Borders is up and running now and I will be running that along with some fellow travel buddies.

Aside from this I was recently in Africa visiting an orphanage and a primary school and have been invited back next year to work and help out, so I’ve a lot of projects in mind, just a case of organising my travel and work lifestyle around them!

5) What’s a cause you’re passionate about and why?

To be honest, away from travel it’s football. I grew up playing and watching football. It’s all I did. As a kid I wanted to be a professional footballer. That was never going to happen though. These days I love going to football stadiums on my travels. Back in my home country of Northern Ireland we have had some sectarian problems in football down the years and for a few years I ran a supporters club and a football fanzine in attempts to eradicate the hatred. If I ever find time away from my travels, I’d love to get back into helping out with football in the community. More passionately I support three football teams and I’d love to see them get success. Northern Ireland in a World Cup would be nice to see as would either of my club teams, Glentoran or Bournemouth doing well on the bigger stage. Be it European football for Glentoran or an FA Cup scalp/flirt with the Premier League for AFC Bournemouth. I still write for the matchday magazine in Belfast for Glentoran. However most of my passion these days goes into Don’t Stop Living.

A big thanks to Jonny for sharing his successes and projects; if you’d like to connect or find out more about Jonny’s recent travels, you can find him on his OHW profile.

Jonny on Twitter and Facebook
Don’t Stop Living travel blog


We regularly feature inspiring travelers who have taken the leap into travel as a part of our travel inspiration interview series. If you’re a traveler keen on being profiled here, sign up for an OHW account and fill in your profile — then shoot Shannon an email (shannon at ohheyworld dot com).

Tech Startup Learnings: Finding a Co-Founder vs Outsourcing

Starting a tech startup as a business person, you’ll get all sorts of advice regarding getting the MVP for your vision built. Do you outsource? Or wait to build anything until you find the right technical partner for the long term? Everyone has an opinion, and I heard arguments from individuals firmly on both sides.

I am in the camp of finding the right long term partner. As a result, once I decided to do a tech startup in February of last year, I proceeded to spend the next 6 months scouring my entire personal and professional network for that perfect co-founder. I’m certainly glad I did, as it led me to Eric Roland.

What did that process look like for me?

A massive number of emails and phone calls (many on Skype since I was abroad much of the time) to friends, ex colleagues, and business connections. They generally followed the same pattern…

Me: “Hey, I’ve been starting down the path of building a travel startup and am in the market for a co-founder — know anyone I should be speaking with?”

Them: “Sounds like a cool project. Well, I’m not that person, but you might try talking to [insert engineer name] or [business person name who knows engineers]. I’m happy to introduce you.”

Me: “Thanks, an introduction would be amazing.”

Repeat that process, over and over and over and over. One phone call leads to another phone call leads to another phone call.

Which one of those conversations led me to Eric? One with John Rowles, whom I knew from his days blogging at BloodHound back in the heyday of the “RE.net”. He and I had met once or twice at conferences, and had some business development discussions while I worked at Zillow. He was a business guy, that knew technologists. I hadn’t spoken to him in 2-3 years, but timing worked out incredibly well as the startup Eric and he had been working on was winding down.

If you’re building a true technology company — then doing development in house is the only way to go in my mind. A technology company is not going to succeed with outsourced development, and in a perfect world, I’d rather have the right technical person at the helm from the beginning rather than trying to plug him or her in halfway through. If you’re doing a content/media business, or offline business that just needs a website, or if you need one specific product customized for your business but technology is not your core — then outsourcing is a viable option, and likely a cheaper one.

That’s just one person’s experience. Questions? Leave them in the comments…

PS – It goes without saying I owe a huge thank you to John for connecting me with Eric.

Travel Inspiration: An Interview with Kristin Henning

Kristin Henning in the Warsaw CavesKristin Henning is with us this week, and she is an enthusiastic supporter of OHW’s beta platform and I have loved watching her check in all over the world these past few months.

Kristin set off three years ago with her husband to show that travel after 50 is possible, and she and her husband are on a long-term journey to interesting places with a focus on outdoors adventures and nature. Let’s take a look at what she has been up to and what has helped her travel these past years.

1) What do you do?

These days I’m a full-time traveler and writer. Before this, I was involved in publishing in Minneapolis and St. Paul, including a weekly alternative newspaper, a monthly parenting magazine, a monthly arts and culture magazine, and several web sites. My job was mostly marketing and advertising sales to support the publications.

2) What was your biggest obstacle to traveling and how did you overcome it?

Agreeing with my husband, Tom Bartel, when the time was right was the biggest hurdle. He wanted to take off in the ‘90s when we sold the weekly paper, but I was reluctant to go freewheeling with two kids in middle school. We finally got on the same page three years ago when we sold our house.

3) What are you most excited about right now?

I’m continually amazed at how much more I want to travel and how much more I want to see. We’re not tired of this. And I love that it brings physical activity into our lives.

4) What’s next for you?

We are working on a couple of ‘firsts.’ This fall we will visit Hawaii and Japan, both for the first time. And we are putting together ideas with G Adventures for our first Travel Past 50 led trip.

5) What’s a cause you’re passionate about and why?

The Nature Conservancy and reforestation programs. We’re just not making a lot of new undeveloped land these days, so I love to see land of any kind protected or restored to its natural state. My favorite apps help me identify birds and plants.

A thank you to Kristin for taking the time to share her current projects and causes. If you’d like to connect or find out more about Kristin’s recent travels, you can find her on her OHW profile.

Kristin on Twitter and Facebook
Travel Past 50
HMS Henning travel blog


We regularly feature inspiring travelers who have taken the leap into travel as a part of our travel inspiration interview series. If you’re a traveler keen on being profiled here, sign up for an OHW account and fill in your profile — then shoot me an email (shannon at ohheyworld dot com).

The BRCK – Every Long Term Traveler’s Best Friend

brck

I went to a Ushahidi meetup on Friday here in Seattle to see Erik Hersman, whom I’ve known since back in 2006 when he was working for Zillow’s earliest competitor Eppraisal and later saw him at the iHub while my friend and I were in Nairobi in 2010.

Erik showed me the coolest piece of hardware I’ve seen in a long, long time.

The BRCK.

What is it?

The easiest, most reliable way to connect to the internet, anywhere in the world, even when you don’t have electricity

I’ve been in many places around the world where I would have loved to have one of these – and yes, Nairobi where the iHub and Ushahidi are based is one of those places. The BRCK has the chance to be every long term traveler’s best friend.

You can see the KickStarter campaign here

Congrats to Erik Hersman and the entire team for building something truly awesome that will help millions of people all over the globe stay connected to the internet even when there is no power! I can’t wait to see this go into real production.

The True Value of a Study Abroad Experience: People

Study abroad isn’t really about academic classes. That isn’t to say that classes aren’t important, they are full of important information and knowledge, but that the most important experiences and insights of study abroad are found outside of the classroom; they come from the people you meet and the adventures you have. Study abroad is a time of personal discovery and exploration that should be cherished and embraced.

ParisianChillin

I spent the first semester of my junior year at Kalamazoo College in Strasbourg, France (here are a few tips for the area) on the East bank of the Rhine river. Strasbourg is somewhat of an anomaly in France, a country steeped in ancient history that is sometimes fiercely protective of its distinct culture and language, with its blend of French and German influences that defies easy cultural classification. Many of its citizens are fully bilingual in French and German and Alsatian (a low-German dialect with strong French influences) can still be heard in some older quarters of the city. Moreover, modern Strasbourg is both a university town, with over 50,000 students, including many international students, enrolled at the University of Strasbourg and several related colleges, and a hotbed of European politics as the home of the European Parliament. It was into this multinational, young culture that I stepped when I arrived fresh off the plane from America.

My coursework at the University of Strasbourg centered around European economic and political institutions and was both incredibly interesting and informative, but it was my life outside the classroom that shaped my European experience. Through an old friend studying political science in Strasbourg, I developed a network of European students and scholars who, like me, loved to debate politics, economics, and philosophy over the wealth of wine and beer Strasbourg had to offer. I spent many a night with these new found friends, loudly arguing about the finer points of governance, democracy, and the rights of man. My attendance record in school dropped, and yet I was learning so much about France, about Europe, and about how to form bonds with people in a completely new place and culture.

A year and a half later, it is these connections that have stuck with me and I am still in contact with many of the friends I made over shared drinks, aspirations, and interests. It is these connections that form the true magic of study abroad.

Despite my success in forming these bonds, such connections are not immediate. I was lucky in the fact that I knew a current student in Strasbourg and even luckier that this friend group shared similar interests and aspirations to my own. Even then, these connections took months to form as I was gradually introduced to new people and hang-out spots around the city. It is here that I see the true potential for Oh Hey World.

Oh Hey World connects people to any friends or connections they may have previously made whenever they check in to a new place or location. Moreover, Oh Hey World can connect users with other people in the area who share similar interests and experiences and facilitates long-lasting bonds of friendship and connection in a way that few social media projects have managed to capture. I joined the Oh Hey World Community several months ago and joined the Oh Hey World team this summer, because I see potential for both students like myself, and the larger world, to form bonds and make connections when traveling that would have never been possible before. I travel frequently and am always excited to meet new people with similar interests and experiences. So the next time you’re heading to a new place, check in; the first round’s on me.

Exploring the Wild Blue Yonder