# Turning $100 Into Generational Wealth with AI (5 BEST WAYS)

## Метаданные

- **Канал:** Nick Saraev
- **YouTube:** https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6yqoPQZC9hk
- **Дата:** 22.11.2025
- **Длительность:** 20:57
- **Просмотры:** 20,437

## Описание

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Summary ⤵️
5 of the best ways to make money with AI right now include using cheap AI content to reach huge audiences, automating service delivery, implementing AI systems for businesses, teaching AI, and running personalized AI-powered outreach. With only $100, you can quickly generate distribution, fulfillment, and lead flow at a level that wasn’t possible before.

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Why watch?
If this is your first view—hi, I’m Nick! TLDR: I spent six years building automated businesses with Make.com (most notably 1SecondCopy, a content company that hit 7 figures). Today a lot of people talk about automation, but I’ve noticed that very few have practical, real world success making money with it. So this channel is me chiming in and showing you what *real* systems that make *real* revenue look like.

Hopefully I can help you improve your business, and in doing so, the rest of your life 🙏

Like, subscribe, and leave me a comment if you have a specific request! Thanks.

Chapters
00:00 Introduction
00:27 1. Use AI to capture a large market share (content)
4:42 2. Perform an auxiliary service that uses AI to produce deliverables
08:53 3. Sell AI service implementation directly.
11:58 4. Sell AI education directly (C-Suite Executives, Communities)
15:26 5. Use AI to produce assets for personalized outreach

## Содержание

### [0:00](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6yqoPQZC9hk) Introduction

Hey, here are the five best ways to make money using AI for less than 100 bucks coming from somebody that's made over a million in just the last two and a half months. I feel somewhat qualified to speak on the subject. This Google doc contains everything I'm about to talk about. It's at the top of the description. You guys can download it for free. There's no email, no payw wall, no nothing. I'm literally just giving all this value away, and these are pretty in-depth. We had somebody in one of my groups make $96,721 with one of the methods just a moment ago. So, if you guys want all that, feel free to check out the top of the description, but I of course hope that you will join me on this lovely journey.

### [0:27](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6yqoPQZC9hk&t=27s) 1. Use AI to capture a large market share (content)

The first way is to use AI to capture a large market share. So, there's maybe three or six months to do this effectively. We're already seeing this at scale because a bunch of people are starting to monetize this channel. The good news is you can get started super cheap. But $100 for between 100,000 to a million views. I actually just spent uh $20. 26 generate 93,000. So, with 100 bucks just with my own math, that's about 500k. But this depends on the economics of the clipping platforms that you're using. And I'll run you guys through all of that in a second. So, traditional content economics worked like this. Okay, if this is my graph where this is the amount of money that I make on a piece of content, then this is the time. Basically, like when you start, okay, at like time point 0, you're kind of in the hole. Okay, the reason why is because you've invested a fair amount of time and money and energy into making a video. What happens though is you eventually publish the video and then the video starts generating asymmetric returns over time. And you know, you hope that it blows way the hell up. Sometimes it's going to taper off, whatever. And basically the money that you make is just a direct return on however much time, energy, and a capital you spend and allocate it in like generating the video. So I mean like the way that I make my videos, if you guys haven't noticed, is super cheap, right? Like I try and invest as minimal as possible and then I just rely on my knowledge and my ability to articulate and obviously to make the ROI as big as I can. But what this means is the bottleneck back in the day is production and distribution because videos could cost hundreds or thousands of dollars sometimes to make. Then you also have to spend some time, you know, to create it if you're a creator like myself. Well, here is where AI can absolutely crush. You now have the intersection of two new and emerging technologies. The first is what's called AI UGC. UGC stands for userenerated content. And essentially that allows you to produce human level indistinguishable content for production value that tends towards zero. If you don't know what I'm talking about, this is one of said platforms that allows you to do so called Archads. This is another one called Higsfield. There's like 50 more of these. And I'm not affiliated. I'm not going to try and push these platforms or anything like that on you guys uh in that way. So, you know, use whatever the heck you want. But basically this solves your production. And then the second is clipping farms. Now in case you guys didn't know, there's a new sort of hack uh for organic content out there where you treat your content as advertising. Then you charge CPMs, cost per mills, and then what happens is other people distribute for you, which solves distribution. So for instance, if you guys have never done this before, you know, I just search up my own name here on this website, which typically handles most of these clipping campaigns, although there's a few other places that you can do this. And what creators like me will do is we will do campaigns that say, "Hey, if you get me a,000 views, I will pay you $2. " You're probably thinking like, "Well, Nick, that math is pretty wild. Like, that means for 20 bucks, I would only get 10,000 views, which is kind of crazy. So, I don't know if this makes sense. " Well, the really clean and kind of nifty thing that people are doing out here that not a lot of people are talking about is on clipping platforms like this, you have what are called view thresholds where in order for somebody who, you know, creates a channel, uh, edits a video of yours, posts the video, in order for them to get paid a certain amount of money, they need to hit a certain view threshold or you don't pay them out at all. And so, typically, if you have like good view thresholds and if you kind of game the system a little bit, you can actually get insane numbers of views without actually needing to invest very much whatsoever. Um, this is, you know, kind of like morally gray. I'm mentioning it first because I think this is probably one of the most legit opportunities here. And if you're curious about how to do it, what you do is you spend the first 2 or 3 days learning all about AIGC, signing up to one of these platforms, and then understanding how to build stuff. Then you build a unique content format in a pipeline. Um, this is something that's not yet flooded yet. So maybe some sort of screen share talking head video, maybe you going through some news or something. But basically, you need some sort of like AI avatar that is overlaid on top of something. It can't just be the AI avatar itself because that's already getting pretty saturated. An example of this is this influencer talking about herself. She's an AI influencer obviously and then the images are also AI generated. Variety of cool things you could do there. Maybe like 3D subway surfer Minecraft footage. I don't know. I'll let you guys play around with that. But um yeah, then you get a bunch of people to clip it and then you can generate thousands of views a day for a marginal production cost um as long as you're distributing with clipping farms. So, this is something that a lot of people are doing right now. And the benefit is like you're capturing a very large market share in an exploding space of synthetic content. And pretty soon synthetic content is going to overrun organic content a factor of like a million to one. Uh this is like a massive market movement. If you could get even like a small little percentage of that upside, you could make a ton and you could start with literally just $100. Obviously, when you have that distribution, you could use it to do whatever the hell you want. You can market products, you could do affiliates, you could just build your own brand. I don't know if you really wanted to. Okay, so that's method number

### [4:42](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6yqoPQZC9hk&t=282s) 2. Perform an auxiliary service that uses AI to produce deliverables

one. Method number two is to perform an auxiliary service that uses AI to produce deliverables. So what do I mean by auxiliary service? I just mean whatever service you're already providing. So if you are an agency or a freelancer and you provide copyrightiting services, screenplay services, design services, I don't know, like anything that's digital, what you do is you use AI to produce those deliverables extraordinarily quickly and you basically dial that in and turn yourself into an API endpoint and then you just crank that wheel up all the way. And you can make a ton of money doing this. So, literally four years ago, before ChatGBD, before all this stuff, back when we only had a dinky little model called GPT3 that I was privileged enough to get secondhand access to really early on, we scaled to over $90,000 a month with my version of this, which was content writing or SEO writing. Uh, and that's with way way worse models. If you're smart about how you systematize and productize, you could probably push that way further. And then the whole play here is the only thing that actually tends to take time when you are a service provider is really like the client management outside of that. So you just productize and automate as much of it as possible. Instead of doing, you know, like weekly meetings to deliver the Google ads progress report or something, what you do is you fully automate the copywriting and then the creative production of your Google ads, all your targeting and strategies and stuff like that. And then you just deliver like a daily update instead and you just do it over Slack, which you can fully automate. Client management tends to scale one to one with your time. So much so that if you put like one unit of time and then you know you're looking at like the unit of return, it's kind of like this. So what you do is you just try and eliminate that entirely so that you just invest a little bit of time and then you get a ton of ROI. If you guys are curious about how to do this, um couple of steps here. I'm just going to outline them on this board. Uh and I talk all about this in Maker School. If you guys are curious, definitely check that out. But essentially what you do is you take your work. Okay? So let's say you're, you know, an email copywriter or something. Then you just break it down into steps like this. And then once you have those steps, you'll have let's say like what's involved in my email copyrightiting project. Well, first I have to fill out a briefing form. After that, I write three rough drafts. After that, I edit it into three fine drafts. Then I do QA before I publish. What you do is you break these tasks down and you just identify which one of these are automated or how many of these can we automate with like cutting edge models now um the GPT5 series and more. So, I mean like we could totally write three draft uh rough drafts almost entirely automatically. We could totally fill out forms entirely automatically. Maybe the only thing that we can't really do is this QA. And maybe that's fine. But if you think about it, like right off the top, we're eliminating more than 75% of our production cost. And so if you have a thing where your cost of goods sold, that's what this acronym refers to, goes down by 75%. Okay, this is enough to carve out a massive advantage, massive arbitrage in any industry because you can reallocate that saved budget directly to marketing like we did with 1 second copy uh and just like gun it all the way up. Another example is you know in my case I run an automation agency called Leftclick which is essentially a AI growth partner now where we supply automated outreach mechanisms to small to mid-size businesses you know multi-billion dollar portfolio companies and so on and so forth. And so one thing that we typically do is we will launch campaigns in cold email platforms like instantly for our clients and then we will copyright we'll send everything uh and you know they just basically see a bunch of book meetings come in on their slack. Um but the deliverables for this might be you know launch instantly campaign first we connect the domains to the workspace connect the mailboxes instantly warm up configure mailboxes complete SPF and demark write the campaigns QA the campaigns and then set them live we also have like some testing periods here and stuff like that I don't mention this is like an automation service that we're providing now and I'm going to get into that in a second but I mean how many of these are automatable well you don't actually even need to do this anymore or this or this you can have most of this automated for you this might be the only manual step and then even this can be done through like an API endpoint so I mean if you think about that how many steps is this? Seven. It's like one out of seven steps. 16% I think if my math ain't trash or manual. I mean, that's like an 84% arbitrage play. And you can just run that up all the way to some massive margin or whatever. Okay. So, that's more or less it. Um, you're just automating yourself out of a job in this case. I will say you also don't really have much time with this. So, if you want to make money now, feel free. Go for it. Gun it. Run it up to like 20 to maybe $50,000 a month for a little bit and then you're solid. You've established a towhold. Um, it is likely that agentic workflows are going to take over a lot of this stuff over the course of the next half year or so. So, you know, obviously proceed with caution, but it's one of the cheapest methods to bootstrap yourself up to make enough money to do all these other methods.

### [8:53](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6yqoPQZC9hk&t=533s) 3. Sell AI service implementation directly.

Okay, method number three is just to sell AI service implementation directly. AI is obviously a gold rush. So, if you just sell AI implementation services directly, the richest people are the ones who sell the transformation itself, not necessarily uh uh, you know, like the gold so to speak. So, AI is swallowing up large enterprise right now. It's also swallowing up really large consultancies, but there's a gap when small to mid-size businesses want to implement these things and have no clue what they're doing and they also don't hit sort of like the cost basis necessary in order to I don't know reach out to one of these uh large enterprises or consultancies to get some help. So the real thing is how do you get chatbt out of the chat box and into our internal processes? So what do you do when your economy is being automated? Really the play is you become the person that automates the economy. You're just a distribution mechanism or a channel by which all of this lovely, you know, zeros and ones and whatever bits make it down to like the average consumer. Okay, that's supposed to be a smiley face. It's not a very good smiley face. Um, that's what we did at Leftclick, which was my other agency, and we scaled over $70,000 a month in just a few months. We weren't even trying that hard to be clear. I mean, like maybe at the time I thought I was trying hard, but I really wasn't. So, here's how to do it. Um, what you do is you learn the ins and outs of LLM prompting. There are variety of sources. There's um an open AI prompting cookbook which is really cool. They run you through basically like how to prompt with a bunch of examples for a variety of different needs. So feel free to take a look at this. There's a bunch of like handwritten prompt guides from members of the team and different approaches and stuff like that. Funny how all of these massive companies literally just publish all this information. Like so few people actually use them. Um they also have a really good uh prompting guide over at Enthropic. This one's fantastic. It's like a really in-depth prompt engineering overview. you know, a variety of other model providers and stuff like that, Gemini, Google or whatever, they have their own versions of all of these. Feel free to take a look. But basically, if you just read one of these top to bottom, you'll know more about prompting than like 99% of all human beings, which is so stupid considering the degree AI is already taking in our lives. Like, this should all be mandatory education. We should already have this like mandatory in school. There should be a whole year where you just learn nothing more than how to interact with AI models because that's obviously the future and everybody does not seem to see the writing on the wall. But who the hell am I to say? Um, what you do is you learn the ins and outs of LM prompting. Then you learn how to drag and drop simple systems together with platforms like NAND, make and Lindy. So NADN, for instance, is a simple drag and drop plat platform where I don't actually need to know how to code in order to build something. I just need to like be able to interpret basic things like wait, split out the content, edit some fields, aggregate the content together, pass it into an Agent, and so on and so forth. Now, I mean, like this may look like magic to you, but it certainly looks like less complicated magic than an actual whole new programming language, right? And therein is the play. You just learn how to drag and drop these modules together to do cool things. And there's a variety of templates out there that show you how to do so. And then you just build a business doing this for businesses. You can join a community like mine if you guys want to streamline roadmap, but I'm not going to push it on you. We do have a 90-day moneyback guarantee if you don't land your first client. So that's more or less everything up here. You're just doing it in AI service implementation directly. Like if I were you, I'd probably do that and then I'd also try and automate everything. But I just wanted to you know give options to people that are all at variety of different income levels and capabilities. Okay. Method number

### [11:58](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6yqoPQZC9hk&t=718s) 4. Sell AI education directly (C-Suite Executives, Communities)

four is to sell AI education directly. Now there's two main paths here. The first is to sea suite and the second are to communities. With sea suitees you can do paid workshops educating people on how to implement AI across the organization or you can do larger workshops to members within that organization um showing them how to use various tools to improve their productivity and throughput. from a business owner's perspective or maybe a seuite's perspective. If you can show a thousand people in an organization how to use a tool that increases their productivity by 10%. You know, maybe their total cost on a yearly basis is like, I don't know, like uh what's a,000 times? $5 million. If you can increase this their productivity by 10%, you have saved that company $500,000. How much money is a company willing to give to you in order to educate people in order to allow them to do that? And it's usually much more than 10%. Because keep in mind that most people have no idea what the heck they're doing with these technologies. even a little sprinkle can massively improve their uh their effectiveness. So that's number one. Okay, you help people do that and then you get paid a uh you know fraction of the value you're providing and it's really lucrative. Um we just had somebody in one of my groups here make $96,721 for a big seuite like workshop series that they did. Uh and this is somebody that started with very little experience in the field just a year ago. I mean insane case study here. They came to make money with make and then they went to maker school and now they have a bunch of their own sort of like educational consulting uh things. But you could do this very quickly within like a year. You just need to know what the heck you're doing. Ideally, you'd have a background in some form of education and you need to be the sort of person that's not just going to like, you know, freeze when five seuite workshop people are looking over at you like, please explain this. Anyway, um here's how he did it. He started by creating a bunch of content around AI and automation, how to implement simple workflows in businesses. So, similar to stuff that you probably see on my channel. Then he gained a very modest subscriber base, I might add, across a couple of platforms. So, there's a few thousand subscribers. anybody here could do that in you know maybe a couple of months if they're dedicated and then he just offered to host in-person workshops for teams upscaling on AI in his content and he mentioned that repeatedly and then some of the people that watched a very small fraction of them were seues and they said you know that might help so um then he went up really hard on the referrals and you know that's how he closed almost $100,000 at once alternatively okay that's path one with the workshops alternatively you could do what I do which is instead of doing you know really high ticket to a small number of people you go really low ticket to a really wide number of people and then you sell education surrounding how to use AI tools themselves. Now, this requires significantly more distribution because if you think about it, if you only have like a thousand subs or whatever and you know your average ticket price is like a 100 bucks, how many of those people are going to convert, how much money you actually going to make? You got to go high ticket when you're small, right? But if you're really big, well then scale economics come in and then you can make a ton of money through distribution. So yeah, that's what I do. How I did it, I built two businesses with healthy revenue using AI. So, I achieved something like $160,000 a month in combined revenue. And I did all this without content. I think it's really important that if you want to establish a ton of credibility in a field uh in the content space, you can't do so with content. Otherwise, people are just going to stick their noses up and be like, "Well, yeah, you just made YouTube videos, right? " You need something aside from that. Then, I just created content all about how I did so. And because I did all that off platform, nobody else had seen 99% of what I was talking about. So, it was novel, it was organic, it was interesting. I derived my own conclusions and I kind of did it my own way. Uh once I hit 10,000 subscribers, so much more than our friend up here, I monetized with the community. And although I didn't make, you know, big invoices like $96,721 at once, uh you know, eventually I'm now at the point where I'm making multiples of that. So you can think of that first approach is kind of like this. And the second this, right? Like eventually you cross it and then you probably scale. But this approach probably like uh caps out just because you're on time. Okay, method

### [15:26](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6yqoPQZC9hk&t=926s) 5. Use AI to produce assets for personalized outreach

number five is to use AI to produce assets for personalized outreach. Now, this sounds pretty silly, but I just want you to kind of like zoom out a little bit. Most of the methods on this Google doc are all about building some form of distribution, right? You build a distribution and then you monetize afterwards. So, for instance, AI to capture a large market share. Like market share is fantastic and it's great, but you still need to sell something, right? This is an example of inbound market share. Okay, this over here though is an example of outbound market share. What do I mean by outbound? Well, like inbound marketing is when you do something, okay, really cool and then you make an ad or bunch of content and then people come to you. Outbound, okay, is the exact opposite. What you do is you make something really cool, but it's not like you show anybody. You then go and snipe rifle, put this thing in front of them and say, "Hey, I made something really cool. Do you want to buy? " So, with inbound, it's much higher distribution, and as a result, you can typically go lower ticket like I was talking about. With outbound, though, because it's like a sniper rifle, you're talking to people individually one-on-one. You can usually charge large amounts for that. It's a lot more relationship building and a lot more sustainability, I would say, if you figure out how to do it. Okay, so what do I mean by this? Well, back in the day, if you wanted to like write really good cold emails or really good cold DMs and like, you know, talk to people that were kind of way above your pay grade, you had to sit down, you have to spend a large amount of time and energy like personalizing your email outreach, doing said research, and so on and so forth. Well, that's what AI is fantastic at. And you can do this for cents on the dollar. What this allows you to do is for under 100 bucks, you can market to about 6,000 people or so with really personalized messages. What you do is you take your product or service, okay? Whatever your product or service is, and maybe you don't even have the product or service yet, but you just have a vague idea of what you want the product or service to be. You just take this thing, okay? Or you can do affiliate. You list all the main benefits in an outcome format. So, if my product or service is copyrightiting for cold emails, let's say, well, that's a little too meta. Let's just say, I don't know, it's search engine optimization. It like helps you rank on AI uh like chat GBT queries and stuff like that. Um, that's what I do. But what's the benefit of that? Well, the benefit of that is by ranking higher on all these things, uh, you know, you're significantly increasing your visibility. So, you're going to get way more impressions. Those impressions are going to lead to clicks. Those clicks to, I don't know, consultations for your service if I'm offering this to like some sort of service provider. And more consultations are going to lead to more money. So, at the end of the day, I'm going to make you more money. How much more money? Well, you know, my historical clients have made all this much and blah blah. Let's say on average, I drive an additional 5,000 to 10,000 additional revenue per month. What we do is we take these outcomes, okay? And we have multiple of these. You don't just have one. Maybe one is I drive 5 to10,000. Another is I help people get featured in, you know, big magazines like the Washington Post and the Guardian. Uh, you know, you just iterate and you have a bunch of these. You just get mailboxes for $3 each with a platform like Zapmail. Now, I'm just putting Zapmail up here as an example. You could use whatever the heck you guys want, but um, basically what you do, okay, is instead of sending from just your email, you use a service like Zapmail and then you send from their emails. and their emails are optimized to maximize the probability that things will actually land in the recipient mailbox. Then you add them to a sending platform. And there's a bunch of different sending platforms out there. Okay, this one over here is called instantly. Basically, the way that it works is you just create a bunch of campaigns. You add your mailboxes as the senders of those campaigns and then you can start sending like crazy high volume. So here's an example campaign that I sent called PPC brand sniping aircale. So, if I click on this, you guys could see what we do is we write messages like this to people. We make it seem super personalized. We create multiple variants of this work and then we just send and we see what people say and people tend to get back to you really positively. I've received I think it was like a 4% reply rate or something like that cumulatively across this campaign. 3 point something%. Think about that. If you sent, you know, 6,000 emails at a 3% reply rate, it looks like about half of those actually responded positive. That's 1. 5%. If we multiply 1. 5% by 6,000, at the end of it, you could literally book 90 meetings for anything that you are selling. Now, are these going to be like the greatest meetings in the whole wide world? No. Probably a big portion of them aren't going to show up. A big portion of these people that you initially send messages to aren't necessarily going to book with you. But if you can book even a third of these, that is literally enough for one meeting a freaking day with somebody that is in your target market that is interested in purchasing your product or service. It's insane. So costs are still very, very cheap. Variety of different mechanisms to do so. Um, you could scrape leads using Ampify or an alternative. Uh, there's a specific scraper right now called the leads finder here on Ampify that is $150 per 1,000 leads. You tend to get enrichment rates of like 80% or so. What that means is you can get about 6,000 leads for about $8. And then if you just do the math on the rest of these platforms, it's about 50 bucks for Zapmail, 40 bucks for the sending service, 10 bucks for the leads, and a few hours of your time. So, there's still other ways to make money with AI, but I just wanted to give everybody here like a very, very highle overview of how to do so. I'm going to include this document down below at the top of the description. As I mentioned, you guys can get it for free. It's not going to cost you anything. Feel free to take a look at that. And then my recommendation here is obviously I gave you guys some actionable step by steps, but if you really want to make money with AI, you know, you do need to use your critical thinking a little bit. Take these steps at a high level and expand upon them. See what you can offer maybe with your background, your unique skill set that other people necessarily can't, and then build out your own actionable list and start executing. you know, the window of opportunity for this stuff is unfortunately shrinking as as annoying as it is for me to say. There's only a certain amount of time before these agents are going to be better at doing these things than necessarily you will. So, if you want to carve a tow hold out in the future of our freaking light cone, now is the time. Anyway, I'll leave you guys there. Definitely check out Maker School if you like this sort of content. We do guarantee your first paying customer for an AI or automation related service in 90 days of your money back. And I'll catch all y'all on the next video. Thank you.

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*Источник: https://ekstraktznaniy.ru/video/11731*