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"I Tried 5 Crazy Business Ideas in 30 Days — One Made Me $10,000"

From selling digital art to renting out garden gnomes, I tested the wildest ideas I could find — and discovered what actually makes money fast.

By Nizam khanPublished 7 months ago 3 min read


Week 1: The "Print-on-Demand T-Shirt Empire"

I started with something I thought would be easy: selling custom t-shirts online using a print-on-demand service. I created a quirky brand called "Existential Threads" with dark-humor slogans like “I Think Therefore I Overthink” and “404 Motivation Not Found.”

I set up an Etsy shop and ran a $50 Instagram ad campaign. I got… three likes. One pity sale — from my cousin. In total: $3.97 profit after fees.

Lesson learned: A good idea isn’t enough. You need an audience, marketing skills, and probably more than 7 t-shirt designs made in Canva at 2 a.m.


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Week 2: Selling Digital Art (AI + Etsy = Win?)

My second idea felt smarter. I used an AI image generator to create dreamy, surreal wall art and listed the digital downloads on Etsy. I called the shop "Pixel Reverie." No shipping. No inventory. Just files and vibes.

This actually started to work. I priced bundles at $5 and $10, and after keyword research and better thumbnails, I made 17 sales in one week.

Total profit: $108. Not bad, but not life-changing. Still, this felt like a sustainable side hustle with room to grow.

Lesson learned: Passive income is real, but not instant. It takes time to build a store people trust.


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Week 3: Renting Out... Garden Gnomes

Yes, you read that right. I found a weird trend on TikTok about “gnome parties” and decided to test it in my neighborhood. I bought six ridiculous garden gnomes from Facebook Marketplace for $20 and offered a “Gnome Delivery Service” as a joke on Craigslist and a local Facebook group.

People LOVED it. For $15, I’d secretly place a gnome in someone’s yard with a cheeky note — kind of like a prank-gram. I made $180 in two days and had more requests than I could handle.

Lesson learned: Novelty sells — especially locally. People will pay for weird experiences, especially if they can laugh about it later.


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Week 4: Freelance Voiceover Work

I’ve always been told I have a "radio voice" — so I finally decided to try freelancing. I signed up on Fiverr and uploaded a sample reading the intro to Shark Tank like a movie trailer. To my surprise, I got 2 gigs the next day — $50 each. Then a $200 order for a podcast intro. Then a $500 corporate gig.

By the end of the week, I had made $10,050.

I’m not joking. One client referred me to a startup that needed an entire audio ad campaign. I recorded 8 scripts in my closet using a $60 microphone. The startup paid me $9,000 — and even tipped me $50.

Lesson learned: Sometimes the thing you’re naturally good at is more profitable than any trend. And yes, recording in a closet with a blanket over your head is a totally valid studio.


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Bonus Attempt: Pet Rock NFTs

Okay, I’ll keep this one short. I tried to sell AI-generated “Pet Rock” NFTs on OpenSea for $2 each. I sold zero. Someone messaged me, “Dude, why?”

Lesson learned: Not all ideas are good. Some are just dumb. And sometimes that’s okay.


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What I Learned After 30 Days of Business Chaos

Here’s the truth no one tells you: most business ideas don’t fail because they’re bad. They fail because we give up too fast, or we don’t know how to test and improve them.

Each idea I tried taught me something different:

T-shirts taught me about the importance of niche and design.

Digital art taught me that low-effort passive income isn’t totally a myth — it just needs strategy.

Gnome rentals reminded me that fun can be profitable.

Voiceover work showed me how undervalued natural talent can be.

And the Pet Rock NFTs? They were a reminder not to take myself too seriously.



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Final Thoughts

I didn’t become a millionaire in 30 days. But I did:

Make over $10,000,

Try five different businesses,

Discover what I actually enjoy doing,

And prove to myself that starting doesn’t require perfection — just action.


You don’t need a massive startup idea or thousands of dollars to test what’s possible. You need curiosity, a bit of nerve, and the willingness to look ridiculous (especially while hiding gnomes in someone’s garden at 6 a.m.).

So, if you’ve been sitting on a weird or wild business idea — try it. The worst-case scenario? You’ll have a great story to tell. And the best case? You might just surprise yourself.

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