Install
openclaw skills install start-a-micro-businessStart earning income with no capital and no connections. Service-based and skill-based micro-businesses you can launch this week. Not "build a startup" — practical ways to turn what you already know into money.
openclaw skills install start-a-micro-businessYou don't need an investor, a business plan, or a logo. You need one skill that someone will pay for, one customer, and the ability to deliver. This is not about building a company. It's about creating income when the traditional job market has failed you. Every business below can start this week with $0-100.
You already have skills people pay for. You just think of them as "normal."
SKILL FINDER — check everything that applies:
CAN YOU DO ANY OF THESE?
[] Write clearly (emails, documents, proposals)
[] Organize information or spaces
[] Use spreadsheets / data tools well
[] Explain complex things simply
[] Fix things (computers, appliances, furniture, houses)
[] Cook well
[] Drive and lift things
[] Speak another language
[] Take decent photos
[] Manage social media
[] Do yard work or cleaning thoroughly
[] Help people with paperwork or forms
WHAT DO PEOPLE ALREADY ASK YOU FOR HELP WITH?
(This is the strongest signal. If friends/family come to you
for something, strangers will pay for it.)
WHAT DID YOUR OLD JOB TRAIN YOU IN?
(Project management, accounting, writing, design, sales,
customer service, logistics, HR — all sellable independently)
ZERO-CAPITAL MICRO-BUSINESSES (start this week):
SERVICE-BASED (trade time for money directly):
- Cleaning (residential or move-out): $25-50/hr
- Yard work / landscaping maintenance: $30-60/hr
- Dog walking / pet sitting: $15-30/visit
- Handyman services: $40-80/hr (see: Basic Home Repair skill)
- Moving help: $25-40/hr
- Personal organizing / decluttering: $40-75/hr
- Errand running for elderly/busy people: $20-35/hr
SKILL-BASED (leverage what you already know):
- Bookkeeping for small businesses: $30-50/hr
- Resume writing and job coaching: $50-150 per client
- Tutoring (math, language, test prep): $30-75/hr
- Social media management: $500-2000/month per client
- Virtual assistant: $20-40/hr
- Tax preparation (seasonal): $100-300 per return
- Copywriting / editing: $40-100/hr
- Translation: $0.10-0.25/word
LOCAL / PHYSICAL:
- Estate sale coordination: 25-35% commission
- Reselling (thrift/estate sales to online): variable
- Farmers market vendor: if you grow food or make things
- Mobile car detailing: $50-200 per vehicle
THE KEY QUESTION:
"Can I get my first paying customer within 7 days?"
If yes, that's your starting model.
DO NOT: build a website, design a logo, create social media
accounts, write a business plan, or register an LLC.
DO THIS INSTEAD:
DAY 1-2: TELL EVERYONE
- Text or call 20 people you know: "I'm now offering [service]
for [price]. Know anyone who needs this?"
- Post on Nextdoor, local Facebook groups, community boards
- That's the entire marketing plan for month 1
DAY 3-4: DO THE FIRST JOB
- Your first customer will probably be someone you know
- Charge below market rate for the first 2-3 jobs
- Do exceptional work — referrals are your growth engine
DAY 5-7: ASK FOR REFERRALS
- After every job: "Do you know anyone else who needs this?"
- Ask for a text/email testimonial you can share
- Offer a referral bonus (e.g., $20 off their next service)
THIS WORKS BECAUSE:
- Local services have zero competition from AI
- People pay for reliability and trust more than expertise
- Word of mouth is the most powerful marketing and costs nothing
DO NOT do any of this until you have 3+ paying customers:
PRICING:
- Research what competitors charge in your area
- Start at the low end to build clients, raise prices at month 3
- Always quote a flat rate for the job, not hourly (you earn more
as you get faster)
MONEY:
- Open a free business checking account (keep it separate from personal)
- Set aside 25-30% of every payment for taxes
- Track every expense (mileage, supplies, tools) — they're tax deductions
- You probably need to pay quarterly estimated taxes
LEGAL (keep it simple):
- Sole proprietor is fine to start (no registration needed in most states)
- Get basic liability insurance when you have regular clients ($300-500/year)
- LLC when revenue is consistent — not before
SCALING:
- Raise prices 10-15% every 6 months
- Add a second service that your customers also need
- Hire help only when you're turning away work consistently
- Never scale before you're profitable at the current level