Learning to fly

49

“I’m learning to fly, but I ain’t got wings” – Tom Petty 

Six months ago I was fired… let go… downsized… whatever.  I had worked for the same company for sixteen years and, in return, I was given 32 weeks of severance pay.  While it came as a shock, it was a good thing.  The mother bird had kicked me out of the nest.

I decided to see if I could make it on my own.  Could I earn a living blogging full time?  Could I fly on my own?  As I reported in the post “Up in the air” I made a simple business plan for myself:

To see whether I could make a career at blogging, I drew up a little business plan.  I started with a target monthly salary for 8 months out.  It would be less than what I was making at my prior company, but enough to comfortably live off of.  My goal was to earn 20% of that target in month 1 (April), 30% in month 2, 40% in month 3, etc.  So far, I met my goals in April (woo hoo!), but time will tell how I do going forward.  I’ll check my targets each month.  If I miss a target, I’ll have time to try to do better.  If I’m way off target 6 or 7 months from now, I’ll brush off my resume and start looking at alternatives.

Strategy

The mother bird’s timing was spot-on.  Blog readership at the time had been increasing steadily as I reported ways to maximize credit card category bonuses and shopping portal promotions.  Still, my niche was with advanced point collectors.  I felt like I needed a way to connect with newbies as well, but without dumbing down my blog.  My strategy was to connect with readers on two fronts: 1) I would continue the daily blog, do more in-depth analyses, and continue to target advanced point collectors; and 2) I would create a step by step beginners guide as a separate venture.

Execution

Continuing the daily blog has been easy and fun.  Each day, I basically research and write-up whatever interests me most at any given time.  Luckily many readers seem to share my interests!

The beginners guide has taken more effort, but it too has been fun.  I’ve written one lesson a week for 24 weeks now.  I use a service called MailChimp to automatically send the lessons via email, in-order, one week at a time.  For example, anyone who signs up now will receive the first lesson immediately, the second lesson a week later, and so on.

With both my daily blog and newsletter, my primary source of income is from credit card referrals.  As a rule, I do not put credit card offers directly in my posts, but I do provide a few permanent pages that contain my links.  For example, on my “Best credit card offers” page I list the best sign-up offers I know of, regardless of whether I get paid for them.  For some I do get paid, for others I don’t.  I want everyone to get the best offers even if it means that I lose out on some revenue.

So far, so good

I love working for myself: no bureaucracy, no timesheets or status reports, and no pointy haired boss!  Since April, blog readership is up 135% and I now have over 700 people subscribed to the beginner’s newsletter!  As to income, incredibly, I’ve done well so far!  Month over month, my income has exceeded my original targets.

Despite my success so far, continued income is no sure thing.  August revenue was amazing.  There was a near perfect storm in which Chase made public their new Ink Plus card, American Express temporarily increased their SPG signup bonus, and Citibank revealed their new Hilton card.  September revenue was much more modest, but still exceeded the goal I had set for myself in April.  Will revenue continue to decline, or bounce up and down?  Only time will tell which way things will go from here.

What’s next

As long as I’m meeting my goals, I’ll keep doing what I’m doing.  For now, at least, my point collecting hobby has become my job — my awesome job.  If revenue dips significantly I’ll look for new sources of income — I have plenty of ideas.  Until then, I’ll keep flying.

So I’ve started out, for God knows where
I guess I’ll know when I get there

Tom Petty

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[…] point. As The Points Guy explains, he didn’t quit until he was already relatively successful. The Frequent Miler points out that he had very humble goals when he first started, but his unique approach has made him one of […]

[…] point. As The Points Guy explains, he didn’t quit until he was already relatively successful. The Frequent Miler points out that he had very humble goals when he first started, but his unique approach has made him one of […]

greek2me

Congrats on being ahead of plan. You’ve earned it. Look forward to the contining idea exchange for the next 6 months, and the next and next.. 🙂

Jimgotkp

This is a really special and original blog that separates itself from the others. I really am glad that you are exceeding the goals you set. Good for you and I wish the best for you in the future! 🙂

Drew K

FM: Your blog is the best, most thoughful, interesting and innovative one out there. I get a big ol’ grin every time I read about one of your wacky schemes.

Regarding the old employer, Illegitimi non carborundum.

stealph

6 months ago you received bad news, but also 6 months ago we first found these Vanilla Visa / AMEXs GCs at our favorite office supply stores. I can’t believe it’s been going on for this long.

Congrats for all of your contributions!

marathon man

good luck with this as a job man… You have already been a great reference and you also are one of the few who doesn’t kill the goose!

Keep it up and godspeed.

Brian

Best blog around, keep up the good work! I only use your referral codes because I appreciate the lack of SPAM.

Inallfairness

I do agree your blog has been the most innovative but it seems that it has been getting longer between posts since you have proposed anything new regarding advanced mileage collection schemes.

Piecerate

FM, I’m dying to know what you did for a living in your prior life. You’re such a clear thinker and writer. I imagine you were some sort of analyst. I point people to your blog regularly because you communicate so effectively that they can understand better than if I explain. Your blog has been immensely helpful to me. I’m going to Paris in February and Vietnam in June in large part due to the techniques you expound. Thanks.

FrequentMiler

Piecerate: Thanks! My undergraduate and graduate degrees were in Psychology, so naturally I became a computer programmer. For the last 16 years I mostly designed and developed software to facilitate Healthcare data analytics (or led teams that did so).

Alan

Congrats on your success!

Also, a question, if you wouldn’t mind answering it. Is it possible to have someone else sign up for a credit card and then use your mileage redemption account? Say my friend signs up for a mileage explorer plus and then uses my united mileage account. Would he then get rejected for having multiple cards because I already signed up for that card?

Thanks!

FrequentMiler

Alan: I don’t think that would work, but if you try it let me know how it goes!

Jarred

How do I sign-up for the beginners newsletter? I can’t seem to find it…

FrequentMiler

Jarred: you can find the signup link at the bottom of every blog post where it says: If you are new to collecting miles, sign up for the free newsletter

bluto

I second the miles trading idea. Also, I recommend you start a members-only private forum where people can share tips/tricks that they don’t feel comfortable sharing publicly.

FrequentMiler

bluto: A private forum is definitely on my to do list.

JoC: Glad you like my posts! Hopefully someday I’ll make it onto your favorite blogger list 🙂

JoC

I love reading your posts. Love your honesty in detailing your experiment, success, and even those attempted “failures”. Love your style of “NOT” dumpling those application links on us.

My favorite bloggers are — travelsort, milevalue, onemile at a time, thepointsguy, view from the wing and loyalty traveller.

BothofUs2

Congrats on producing such a useful blog and not getting too crazy with pushing affiliate links to make money, like some of the other bloggers.