Bestbuy. They have some sick discounts for employees.
That is not in the food business and requires minimal brain output. Was thinking HEB or Home Depot. Anything else?
Bestbuy. They have some sick discounts for employees.
A while back I heard that Avis (the car rental place) is hiring people for detailing. Not sure if they still are, but you might look into it. What's easier than cleaning cars?
male gigolo? not sure how you get in the biz though...
Have you looked on campus? On campus stuff is pretty good with working around your schedule.
male or female?
A good security job. If you can find an outfit that baby-sits empty buildings at night, you are golden.
Sit for 45 mins, walk around for 15 mins, write down "nothing happened" in the log, and repeat 8 times. Total study time: 5-6 hours per day, total time spent "working" 2-3 hours of mild exercise.
Pay is lousy, and you have to fit in some sleep sometime during the day, but you can work 40 hours easily as a student, and that makes up for the lower pay. The study time is golden though. The type of job that brings your GPA UP if you work more.
apply at the school rec center. better yet, find an internship that is related with what you want to do after school.
selling drugs to the mookie crew.
Telemarketing, temp agencies, filing, data entry
if you have a reliable car, pizza delivery
you don't really handle the food aside from just picking it up and driving off with it.
I did it in college and I'd do it again as a second job if I ever needed it.
he said part time
I dunno.
It never seemed to me that was worth the wear/tear/gas.
Unless they pay you mileage, I wouldn't do that stuff with my own car.
Figure you are spending 40-50 cents per mile and subtract that from your earnings.
Unless of course mom and dad are providing the car, its fuel/maint/insurance AND replacement, then go for it.
Remember kids, the largest expense of operating a car is replacing it after it gets worn out. The more you drive it, the sooner that happens, so replacement costs get tied to miles driven.
1000 miles a month is low for most people.
50 cents a mile/1000 miles is $500. I don't know anyone that spends $500 maintenance on their cars per month.
At the time I did it, Dominos paid minimum wage per hour, plus $1 per delivery. Then you got tips, on a good day around $2 per run.
Say about 3(?) deliveries per hour?
$6 (? I forget mininum wage) + $3 + $6 tips = $15 per hour
If you have an old dependable car, it's the easiest part time money you can make, imo. I don't recall how many miles per shift I put on car, but I don't remember being that many.
Anything on campus will likely be easy and they will be awesome with working around your schedule but the pay the pay will probably blow. Off campus jobs will probably get you more money but the scheduling will be less flexible.
True Cost to Own (TCO):Revealing the Hidden Costs of Car Ownership
@ Edmunds.com
That 50 cents per mile is not strictly maintenance. It includes depreciation (i.e. replacement factor), financing, insurance, fuel, everything.
The compenent breakdown does more like this:
Go here and toodle around with a few cars:
http://www.edmunds.com/toyota/coroll...tyle=101140840
You will notice THE single largest cost is almost invariably depreciation.
That 50 cents per mile is the US auto fleet average as calculated by the IRS. If your car is smaller than average, you will probably have lower costs.
$15 per hour minus, say, 40 cents per mile.
15 miles per hour, say? Subtract 6 bucks in operating costs. A bit closer to $9 per hour, before taxes.
You might not consider the replacement costs in your cash flows at the time, but you are pushing your car a few steps closer to having to replace it. Take the longer view, and it seems less attractive than it might first appear.
Still, money is money, and if it is what is available, go for it, just keep the costs in the back of your mind.
I figured as much. I never implied using a new(er) car.
I did it for 2 years while in school and I still sold my car with over 200k miles and about an extra 40-50k put on from the job. The car value difference between 230k and 180k miles on my toyota was practically nothing.
Donate plasma.
don't know if still there or not, but in Lubbock, there is/was a plasma donation center across the street from campus, right next door to a bar (Bash's for those that know).
It seemed like we got drunk much faster after giving the plasma.
True about the security job. I work for a security company and work four days and get three days off. If you have a computer and internet access you're set. I use my Evo for internet. You get time to study and it's perfect when it comes to research papers. No one bathers you and you don't need any supervision unless they put you in a place where you have to work with others.
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