Side Hustle King: 6 $60K/Mo Businesses Nobody's Doing

GregIsenberg loNrCpi5dkw Watch on YouTube Published January 11, 2026
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You're a side hustle away from changing your life. In this episode, I brought on Chris Kerner, who gave me his best ideas for side hustles that not only don't take a lot of money to start, but they can actually scale to be really big businesses. A side hustle could turn into a real company, and a real company can change your life. So, in this episode, it's all about ideas that could generate cash flow that can turn into real businesses anywhere between a few hundred,000 a year to $50 million a year businesses. Enjoy the episode. >> Welcoming my brother from another mother, Chris Kerner, on the show, Startup Ideas Podcast. He's back I think for the third time. Chris, by the end of this episode, what are people going to learn? >> They are going to learn that they should not stay seated in their seat. They need to This episode is successful if they pit pause and go out and do something and then come back days later and finish it. >> And will you give people like specific ideas and sauce to get them out of their seats? >> Greg, my my name is Christopher Sauce Kerner. Like that's the whole brand we talking about here. Of course. >> Okay. So, as long as you could commit to the sauce and that I mean, people do need to move their own legs, but at least, right? >> Yeah. >> But you're going to get them pretty close. >> This will be saucy. There's going to be like four linguini noodles in there and it's just going to be drowning in arabiata sauce. >> Okay. And what And before we get in, what type of categories of ideas are we talking about? So, we're going to go um approachable, low startup cost, low friction to start, um affordable, but like I in my opinion, everything is scalable, right? So, the the question I I just hate it when people say like, is that even scalable? Like, yes, it's it's scalable. The right question is how hard would it be to scale to that to whatever number? Cuz for some $100,000 a year is scale, to some h 100red million, right? So, these are all scalable. >> So, these are ideas that can be anywhere from 10 grand a month all the way up to >> um shoot. I mean, eight figures a year, $10 million a year in revenue with double digit profit margins. >> Okay, you you have my attention. >> Okay. Uh I'm going to read some stats to you. You ready? >> Yeah. >> Facebook Marketplace. We talked about Facebook last year on maybe the last time I was on this Facebook Marketplace. Um, Facebook has over three billion monthly active users. 16% of those are monthly active users for Facebook Marketplace. Half a billion people use Facebook Marketplace. 16% of active users log into Facebook for the sole purpose of shopping on Facebook Marketplace. And Facebook knew what they were doing. They saw that the wall wasn't very popular anymore. So they started adding groups and mark like they know what they're doing. They're smart, right? That's why we invest in Mark Zuckerberg. Um 51% of all recent social media purchases, so like not Amazon, social media purposes all happened on Facebook Marketplace. Okay, like my point, Facebook Marketplace is massive. It's huge. There are countless people that solely rely on Facebook Marketplace for their living. Um, and I've got a bunch of ideas around this. A lot of them like kind of like hands-on, dirty, sweaty. But the first one is why is like no one building third party apps for Facebook Marketplace? Apps that like scan items for you, apps that like give you price alerts, apps where you can like use the API in a compliant way to scrape and to find alpha and to see, oh, this dresser over here is listed for this, but it's actually worth this on eBay. Like arbitrage apps. I've already looked into it. Don't tell me the API permissions don't allow for it because they do. People are not building apps on top of Facebook Marketplace and I don't know why. >> That's crazy, dude. >> That's crazy. >> A billion users. >> I was almost 100% convinced that it just was impossible, >> right? >> Yeah. >> Like I vibe coded one that like scanned items. It would reach out to people. Like I'm not an expert. I don't even know how to code. I vibe coded it and it worked for my use case. I didn't like scale it. I didn't sell it, but like it is possible. The API allows for it. People would pay for it. They make their living from Facebook Marketplace. If they could have an edge, they would pay for it. No one's doing it. eBay has thousands of apps built on top of it, right? Some of those apps got acquired by eBay for hundreds of millions of dollars. Like, there's something here. >> There's no third party apps for Facebook Marketplace. >> Not really. Like I found like a couple kind of janky ones, but not nothing legitimate. >> That's crazy. >> It's crazy. >> It's crazy. I mean, how big is the Shopify app ecosystem, right? >> Oh, jeez. Billions. I think there's hundreds of thousands of Shopify apps. Oh, what does Perplexity say? So I said, "How big is Shopify apps? How much revenue through there?" So they've got 12,000 apps powering more than 87% of merchant stores. I'm >> surprised there's not more. >> I mean, these apps earn developers earned a billion dollars through it. A driven by an average annual earnings near 100,000 per developer. Interesting. 7,000 developers with a 27% increase in total apps from early 2024 2025. >> Wow, >> pretty crazy. So, um, what are the most popular third party apps that help Facebook marketplace sellers besides Facebook? Right, that's the question. >> Mhm. Have you heard of these? >> Yeah. I mean, Offer Up, that's like a direct competitor. Merkari. I haven't heard of Depop, >> but these Depop is like for secondhand clothes and stuff like that. Um, wow. I've I've actually used it a lot. So, and it says the audience focus is young trendsetter, so I must be a young trendsetter. >> I've always seen you as such. >> Uh, these are competitors to Facebook Marketplace. These aren't tools and apps that could help sellers. >> Yeah. >> So, this is food for thought. Thanks for that, Alpha. >> Dude, I'm telling you, like I I posted a video about appliance rentals on Facebook Marketplace and then a guy went and started doing lead genen. Like he posted appliance appliances for rent in other markets and sells those leads to locals that are renting out appliances and he like vibe coded his own internal app for posting for responding automatically. Like people are doing this like in the shadows, right? But not at scale. >> Mhm. Which is what we like to hear. We like to hear about that's where that's where the alpha is, right? When people are doing things in the shadows and you can productize it. We like that you can vibe code a lot of these solutions too. Use things like cloud code. >> Um these this is this could scale, right? This can scale really big. Doesn't cost you a lot of money to to to build this. You probably can build MVPs of this in a couple weeks. Yep. >> You should be building something in this space. >> Building. I have too many things to build. Greg, come on. >> Well, should we go to the next? >> Yeah. >> So, my business idea is not this product itself. I'll elaborate. >> Thing right here. This reminds me of one of my favorite quotes. First time founders focus on product. Second time founders focus on distribution. What is this product going on behind me? Day six of genius business ideas. Follow the war. It's literally a round piece of foam. That's it. You put it around your propeller when you're not driving the boat so kids don't hit their legs into it. They're selling thousands of these things because they're going viral because it's so simple. Because people don't know how it works. That's distribution. 99 out of 100 people would have never launched this business because they would have thought, "Who's going to buy that? It's just a round piece of foam. There's nothing proprietary about it." Sometimes it pays to be a little naive and to understand human psychology. Get my favorite human psychology mark. >> All right. So, here's what I'm thinking. Um, anything is scalable. Anything can be sold with the right distribution and marketing. Would you agree? >> Yes. >> Like I could tweet about the dumbest thing at the dumbest price point and maybe sell none of them. And if Elon Musk retweets me, I'll sell some just because of the distribution, right? Um, so we have two magical tools. You could argue two of the most magical tools that the internet has ever seen, and that's the short form uh video algorithm, right? And AI. So, this tool that I showed is objectively dumb, right? I've had a boat. Uh, it's a piece of foam you put around the propeller propeller. You don't leave it on the propeller as you're driving. You just you leave it there when you're out there on the water parked so a kid doesn't swim up against it and like cut their leg, which is like very unlikely cuz kids stay away from it. Whatever. It doesn't matter. What matters is that the distribution, right? it. They sell thousands of these things because of that video that was going on behind me. Because, you know, nothing goes viral without half of people thinking, "You're dumb. You're an idiot." So, half people like, "This is stupid. This is useless." yada yada. And the algorithm is like, "Oh, comments good. Spread it. Spread it. Spread it." And the other half of people are like, "This is awesome. I could use this." And so, it sells, right? So, ideas that were once dumb are no longer dumb because of short form video. So why not use CHAGP cloud whatever AI to come up with all kinds of dumb product ideas and I guess I forgot the third piece of technology 3D printers all types of like seemingly dumb product ideas that match three things. Number one it can be 3D printed so you can make a prototype easily. Number two um it can be like AI would come up with it. AI has the capacity of thinking of it. And number three, um, it can spread in like a 10 like a five to 10 second video via short form video like how it works. Just showing you how it works in a video. Um, and coming up with like a product studio and you don't really invest money in the product development until you have thousands of pre-orders, demand, you throw up a Shopify site, whatever. Uh, and you just start selling these dumb little products. What do we think? I like it. Where my mind goes to, and I'm curious your thoughts on this, is how do you how do you put AI on some of these ideas? And the reason I say that is because especially on Tik Tok, uh, but in the world generally, people hate AI. >> Mhm. >> People hate it. Like it's very very like they violently hate AI. So, I think that you can do a lot of these hardware ideas or physical product ideas that are quote unquote dumb, but you implement AI into it and on purpose. >> Okay. >> Like you create like one AI feature which is like so >> Yeah. >> You know, dumb. >> Pointless. Yeah. >> Pointless. And and people are like, why do we need AI and everything, >> right? Like what what if it were that propeller that was like voice enabled? >> Yeah. Exactly. What? >> Yeah, >> but to some people they're like, "Oh, I could see myself using that." And those are the people that buy your product. And that's the beauty, right? Is that you know these platforms have billions of active users, so you just need a small percentage of them to buy? >> Yes. >> But is that like malicious? Like is this is this is it worth people spending their time on this sort of stuff? >> It Well, okay. So, I get asked that question a lot. Like people will approach me with a business idea like, "Chris, what do you think? What do you think?" And one of my first questions back to them is like, "What else do you have on your plate?" Like, "What else are you looking at?" And some people are idea machines and the one they're asking me about is one of like 50 that they're kind of throwing around. And some people are like, "This all I got, right?" And so I'm always very cautious to tell them like, "You're pretty biased cuz this is all you got." The the statistical probability that the only idea you have being like the best use of your time and money is almost zero. So keep that in mind. Irrespective of my opinion of the idea, it's probably not the right idea for you because you don't have anything to compare it against, right? So if someone's listening to this and like it it all comes down to their background. Do they have like a background in product development? Do they have a background in short form video or editing or whatever? Um this could be the perfect idea for them. Um, but if someone has no experience or background in that or they're not insanely passionate about it or they have 50 other ideas, then it's a terrible idea for them. >> Okay. >> But >> that's fair. That's fair. >> Yeah. >> So, it's good for some, bad for others. >> Exactly. Yeah. That's why like just this is my soap box, but like you just share your ideas. And I know you agree with this. We've both talked about this, but don't withhold your ideas because like Greg, you're going to come across something in the wild. Um, like I remember you had the idea of like having a certification program. You you walked by your dentist. You walked by your now dentist and you saw best dentist in Miami and one of your ideas was like that needs to be a thing like who's going to become the certification program for X, Y, or Z industry, right? >> Yeah. and you love that idea because you saw it. You own it, you experienced it, you gave that dentist thousands of dollars. Um, and like maybe you know a guy in college who had like a certification. Like all of these life experiences led you to really loving that idea, right? Y >> and other people heard us talk about it and like that's stupid, that's dumb, right? And so when we share our ideas, the only chance of someone stealing it is if that other person has had like the exact same life as us. They had the same work history, the same personality. They're also an introvert. Their mom also divorced their dad at age 14. Like these random things that we could never really quantify, they would have to also be true in order for them to maybe also love the idea. And then the qualifier is they have to actually go like get around all the friction to doing something about it. There's one caveat which is that that is true on the internet but when you're talking about let's say opening up a coffee shop in your town and it's a town of 700 >> and there's already a coffee shop then there is a defined pie and you're fighting for the pie. But when you're building on the internet and you're doing what we're talking about, which is short form, spending money on meta ads, uh building organic audiences, writing memes, all this stuff, >> the pie is infinite. And it's almost like the way, you know, it's really hard to even imagine it. It's just like it's it's very similar to when you think about how big the world is, like the planet Earth or the universe we live in. It's so big. it like how big is the universe, you know, how far is Mars from here? How far is, you know, how big is our galaxy? That's like the internet. It's infinite. It's literally infinite. >> 100%. There's another exception to that and that's like um which is on the internet. Let's say you're Evan Spiegel, founder of Snapchat. You're in a bar. You're talking to like a Facebook developer and you're like, "Dude, I'm starting this company. I think it's really unique because our messages are going to disappear." And the data is showing us this. like there's actually I know it sounds stupid but that's also a feature not a bug like yeah and that Facebook developer is like interesting okay that's like a it's on the internet but it's a limited pie right and like that idea can be stolen partially because they have like kind of the same brain in a way um so like I or like patent patentable ideas you know like there are exceptions to what I'm saying >> but even with the Facebook example like having you know I've advised some of the biggest social companies on the planet biggest tech companies on the planet Someone like Facebook is only copying your idea once it hits millions or hundreds of millions of users. >> They need signals. Yeah. >> The the reality is if you're like the chief product officer of Facebook, you have all the ideas. You know all the ideas. The problem is you're only going to implement the ones that won't get you fired. >> Like the ones that have the most validation. I remember being in a meeting with Facebook uh at one point or someone who worked at Facebook and he was basically like >> yeah uh I I was telling him about an idea that he should do and he said we will only do ideas that will will generate between 1 billion and hundred billion dollars a year of revenue. So you know >> that's cute. >> That's cute. Yeah. Exactly. Um all right. What's your what's your next idea? That's that's that's a really good point. Um, all right. Let me pull this bad boy up. All right. I'm going to take a I'm going to take a left turn here if you don't mind. It's going to go a little different thing right here. Guys, I'm amped up about this business. I'm a cyclist and I hate washing my bike. Everyone hates washing their bike. Germany is the world leader when it comes to health and fitness trends. And those trends always come out west. Here's exactly how you make a,000 bucks a day doing this. This is a mobile bike wash automated on a trailer. You know how many places you could post this up at? Bike parks, bike shops, trail heads, cycling races with thousands of cyclists. All of them need this and it's a perfect business right now because cycling has exploded in the last few years. Ebikes, mountain bikes, road bikes, gravel bikes. There are millions of cyclists in the US spending thousands of dollars on their bikes. And these aren't casual riders. There are people that have 5 to$15,000 bikes that care about maintenance, but they also don't have time or the desire to wash their own bike. It takes an hour. You need a hose, soap, brushes, degreasers. Most people are in apartments. They don't have a good outdoor space. So, what do they do? They just don't wash their bikes or they pay a bike shop way too much money to do it and wait a week to get it back. But if you showed up at the trail head after their ride with an automated bike wash, 20 bucks for a full wash and dry, forget about it. Takes 5 minutes. They pay you back on the road. It's easy sale. 40 washes a day at 20 bucks each is 800 bucks in revenue. No inventory. No employees needed to start. You just start with you and trailer. Full details here. Look at this freaking thing right here. >> All right. What do we think? >> I love this idea. I also think that you could put these station put these put this product at like uh just popular bike paths, right? So in Canada, we have a at our house in Canada, it's on a popular bike path. You can actually uh for cyclists, you can actually cycle for 130 km on on this bike path. And every maybe 15 kilometers there's a you know little station where people could hang out, have a coffee, have a bite to eat. >> Yeah, exactly. Fix a flat. So it's just like how do you and the cities operate that like the towns operate it. So I would do a deal with them >> and be like let's split the revenue on this. Like this is this just makes your bike path just more like a better experience. So you're happy. You're also getting some more revenue and then you have distribution there. >> Oh, I love that. Sell them, you sell a dozen of them to a city and just like charge an ongoing maintenance fee and >> instead of trying to make a,000 bucks in a day, you might make 50 bucks a day, but a lot more passively. >> A lot more passively. Yeah, >> I like that a lot. >> Yeah. The other thing that comes to mind is like, but how do you actually go and okay, like let's say this is a good idea. How do I actually go and build this? Like how do I manufacture this? like what are the next steps? >> I don't think you need to manufacture anything. I think you start with a a rented trailer, uh a $200 pressure washer, and like very manually you cleaning bikes in areas where there are dirty bikes right then and there, right? And then you you go from there. You save your money and you buy one of these when you can afford it. I don't think you have to start with that. >> Okay. So, you just basically prove it out with like, >> you know, Yeah. You just prove it out first. >> Yeah. And you don't even need to buy a like those box trailers are like 10 grand. You don't even need to buy one. You can rent one from Home Depot or whatever. Have you uh Are you a cyclist? Have you washed a bike? >> No, I've never washed a bike, >> dude. It's It's the worst. I'm like I have a road bike and a mountain bike and I'm not technically inclined. I'm not a handy guy and these things are always breaking the gears. Like I just wish someone could just like ensure that like my bike was clean and maintained on a regular basis. and I don't ever have to think about it cuz half the time when I go to ride like something's broke, something's dirty. Like that that could be a whole other business on like a bike maintenance plan or whatever. There's a company called Vell Fix that does like mobile bike repair. They come to you. That's a pretty big business actually. I think they sell franchise territories, but something like that, but for ongoing maintenance. Um or you could have like a a bike washing subscription with with this idea. So >> cool. I mean, I like the idea. I'm not a cyclist. I don't like the idea of strapping into something and not being able to get out. Um, that being said, I see tons of cyclists. Uh, I see it only getting bigger. And when I'm coming up with a business idea, I'd like to focus on people who have money >> and disposable income. >> And, you know, to your point in the video, people are spending 5, 10, 15 grand on these things. So, like of course they want it to look clean, >> right? >> Um, so I like this idea because you can focus on bikes. It's scalable. Uh, the MVP isn't crazy. And then maybe you can take that knowledge and then bring it to, you know, golf, tennis, other high-end sports, and build your empire that way. >> Yeah. Why aren't we washing golf clubs outside of the clubhouse? >> And even golf bags. Like I was I was with a friend the other day and he was like he's like, "Yeah, I spend like $650 on my golf bag." I was like, "That's how much these things cost?" He's like, "Yeah, I just like wanted it to look good." And uh and like I get it, but it's like in 10 years or 15 years or 5 years or 3 years, it's not, you know, it's probably not going to look that good. >> Yeah. Well, dude, that gives me an idea. Like why not like contract with a clubhouse, a golf course, and have like some like cheaper Amazon golf bags as loaners and people roll up like these are like the daily golfers and you say, "Hey, well, I'll wash your bag. You go play golf. Just let me swap out your clubs real quick. Take the laner." By the time they're done with their nine or 18 holes, their bag is spotless. >> What are we doing? >> There you go. >> There you go. >> See, it's it's kind of like what we were just talking about with sharing your ideas. someone's listening to this that's not a golfer, not a cyclist, and they're like, "Next, skip." You know, and that's fine. It's not for them, but like there's a cyclist out there listening to this like, "Oh my gosh, yes, that is true." Like everything he's saying about cycling is true. This is the idea for me. So, >> the other the other thing that's happening now is I've got a friend who has a few car washes and he was telling me he's making most of his revenue from subscriptions. I was like, "Subscriptions? What are you talking about?" He's like, "Yeah, well, what I, you know, because I own this local area, uh, I basically was like, for $40 a month, you can have unlimited car washes." >> Yep. >> And I was able to and he's got like a popular Instagram account in his local area. >> So, he was able to create like a pretty big email list from that. And then he just like hammered them and like, "Hey, get get on the subscription. Get on the subscription." And people are like, "Yeah, this is dope. Like, unlimited car washes. This is amazing." Turns out >> they're only still going for like one car wash or two car washes a month, right? >> So with this with the bike idea, with the cyclist idea, it's like maybe it's a subscription where it's like for 25 bucks a month you get unlimited washes. >> Yeah, I like that. And then you strategically introduce some friction to getting those washes so they don't claim it as much as they might think. >> But what are you trying to say? You go and like break their legs. Uh >> oh. Hey, no, we're just talking here. All right. Do we have time for another idea or two? >> Yeah. Let me uh let me go through this real quick. >> Do two more ideas. >> Okay. >> If you can >> Oh, I can. Um All right. This is This one's a little This one's a little offthe-wall, but it's good. It's a very approachable. So, before I show this video, I'm going to give you some uh background. So, I was a senior in college. Um I launched an iPhone repair store, a retail store. on the busy road in Tuscaloosa, Alabama called Phone Restore. And it was not going well. Um, students, there were 30,000 Alabama students. They didn't know I existed. And one night, it was a Sunday night, I couldn't sleep. We were not, it was just not going well. And I had this idea, for whatever reason, to get custom printed wristbands. Right now, I don't go to bars. I've never even tasted alcohol, but I just know at bars sometimes they give out wristbands. Are you overage or underage, whatever. Um, and in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, there's a lot of bars. And so I thought, is there a way to get uh those Tyveck disposable wristbands custom printed with a message on it? I open it up and there's a there was a this was 2010. There bunch of websites that did this. So I ordered a whole box of them for like 2 cents a piece. And then I went to the bars and I just said, "Hey, do you give out wristbands?" Yeah. And this was like at like 3 p.m. which is like on one hand it's like don't sell the restaurants, don't sell the bars and on the other hand if you catch them at the right time like they're there. They're not busy and they're there. So I would go and they weren't busy but open and I just say hey you give out wrists. Yeah. Do you want to give out these instead of those? Sure. Yeah. Now we don't have to buy wristbands anymore. Cool. And also I'd throw in like I'm a student, you know, help out a for a fellow student. They were most likely a student, too. And they just start passing out my wristbands. So these students would go out to the bar. They would get drunk. They would break their iPhone. They'd wake up with a broken iPhone. What happened last night? And they'd see their wristband. And I have a picture of this. Al, you can put it over the video if you want, but uh it was like 15% off iPhone repair, a phone restore, phone number, address, whatever. And that completely changed the trajectory of the business. That one idea late on a Sunday night, which just a side note, I just love the fact that with any business, you're one idea away from completely changing the outcome, right? and they say ideas are worthless. >> Amen, brother. Ideas are everything. They're more important than ever today. >> Yeah. >> Um, so that's my backstory that made me see this and think, "Oh, there's an opportunity here because then I went down this rabbit hole. I didn't pursue it much, but like I need to have like a wristband advertising agency. I need to go find local businesses and and they charge me and I I go to bars and I match them up together and I take a cut of in between." That's a business idea. like that's not really anything new. It's just kind of a new medium for it. Just an ad agency, right? Matching buyers and sellers. So, that's an idea. But, um, when I saw this video, I thought of that idea. So, that's the backstory. Cool. >> Yeah, I'm with you. >> Right here. Here's my biggest takeaway from this video. A lot of times we look for complicated or elaborate solutions to simple problems. This woman here is solving a real problem with a very simple solution. You don't need a chemical or a pill that changes the color of the drink when something's added to it. You don't need cameras or sensors. Literally a sticker that you put on the drink. The brilliant part about this is it's recurring. You can sell these rolls of stickers to the bars and they'll buy from you and only you every single month. You can sell ad spots on the stickers with a QR code. It sells itself because it's viralable and it promotes safety and it's fearbased. It just has all the makings of a good business idea. Full details here. >> All right. So, for those that are only listening, it's just it's a round sticker. It's just a legitimate sticker that you put over your drink at the bar so it doesn't get spiked. Um, so the idea is to monetize that, to get your own stickers printed that do the same thing and sell them to bars, sell advertising, do your own ads, whatever. What do we think? >> What What like What does a roll cost? You know, how much are they buying it for? >> Stickers are like a a a cent and a half each. >> Oh, really? >> Yeah. So, you you can do like a thousand stickers and sell it for how much? >> Um, oh man. Let's see. I would think like 50 bucks, 10. So, I mean, a,000 stickers will probably cost you, if it were scent each, that'd be 10 bucks each. That's not realistic. It might cost you 25 or 30 bucks, right? >> So, sell for one to 200 bucks a roll, but you could sell like a case of five or six rolls, you know, and set them up on a on a subscription. you could get their like name custom printed or whatever. Um, and so I think like the potential downside that people are thinking about this is like, well, what's stopping like Vista Print from just like selling their own, you know, like just taking their round stickers and calling them, you know, anti- spike drink stickers? Well, it's like it's competition, right? No one like these bar owners aren't going to think to go to Vista Print to get this brand new product that didn't exist. They're going to buy it from the guy that conveniently walks in and solves a problem right there on the spot. >> And you're thinking sell advertising on it, too. >> Yeah, you could. That that'd be a bonus, but you don't have to. You just mark them up. It's just it's an old product in a different way with a different package, which has shown time and time and again like there's nothing too stupid. Like you just repackage something, reframe it how it's used, and you win. >> Would you sell this door to door or are you thinking also like meta ads? So meta ads, you know, would probably work because it works for basically anything, but I would scrape every single bar. Um, preferably in a local area just so you can preferably in your local area so you can have a tie to it. Um, and send them free samples. Um, like enough to where they could use them for a week or a night. Um, and I feel like it has like this this viral effect like people are going to post it to their stories and people are going to talk about it and they're going to be the bar in town. That's like the sales pitch of like, you're the safest bar in town because you're buying this from me and it cost you almost nothing. And it's like it's a liability to not buy this from me. What are you do? How are you still in business not buying these stickers from me? >> I saw this uh video from an entrepreneur. Her name is Ty Haney and she had this talk where she said I think she said CAC here. CAC is the hack. Hold on, let me pull it up. She basically her her pitch is basically like how IRL events is what's going to drive customer acquisition in the day of of a AI. >> She says 2026 is going to be all about local experiential IRL and I believe it's the hack. Um so you know she's selling like touching grass as a service is her business. Um which I think is really interesting. Um, and she, you know, I'm just reading this here. He said, "You don't have to pay people to post. People just show up." So, what I like about your idea is you're not going to have to pay people to post >> about their of the bar, right? They're just going to take a picture of their drink >> and they're going to post it on Instagram and they're going to tag the bar. So, it's free customers. >> Yes. And take that a step further. Make the default sticker be your name, your brand, your QR QR code to your website. That's the default. For a little extra, you can get generic plain ones. For a little more than that, you can get custom branded ones. >> I like it. All right. What's your What's your next idea? >> This is like along the same vein as the bike washing. Okay. We're talking about trails. We're talking about people getting outside. And I just know that people love a good vending idea. Um, people love it. Everyone loves it. Who doesn't want a vending machine? Um, so I'm going to share this. >> Well, I think people like the idea of you buy a thing and it literally vends you passive income. I think that that idea of vending machines, >> you know, people equate to passive income. >> They do, which, you know, a lot has been said about passive income, but so we'll both agree that, you know, some income is more passive than others, but yeah, >> almost nothing is purely passive. Um, all right. Let's go. Freaking thing right here. I'm gonna sit here and wait for hours while you give me a good reason why these things aren't at every trail head in the world. The rocks cost between 5 and 20 cents each. You sell them for $2 each. That's a 90% profit margin. Go collect your cash every week or so. Refill it with rocks and you're printing money. Full details here. All right. It's a like a shiny cool rock vending machine by Trail Head or anywhere. Um, it's simple. You can scale it. It's not food. It doesn't expire. It doesn't go bad. doesn't get bugs. Um, what do you think? >> It's so It's so funny cuz like you're you're literally selling rocks >> for $2 or2. >> But let me tell you, Greg, um, I've got four kids, 9 to 15. And we've talked, you know, about Bies. You know my tie to Bies. Um, something about the South. I don't know. Kids want rocks in the South. If you go to Bies, they have this station of shiny rocks. It's just like this little cart. It's like four by two feet and you got like a fake leather bag and you've got these shiny rocks and kids can scoop them out and they for like 25 bucks they can fill this little leather bag full of shiny rocks and my kids love it. Every kid loves it. Like it's a reason that So just to back up like Buckyy's square footage is like extremely well thought out, right? That's why one of their biggest complaints is no seating for food. like they sell they have multiple restaurants in there, but you can't sit down and eat anywhere. And it's because it's not profitable for them to to put in tables, right? So, when you consider that, the fact that they have this in all of their stores means it crushes. It does really well. So, kid, this isn't really for adults. The video shows an adult doing it. This is for kids. So, anywhere there are kids, um, I think this would do well. >> I like this idea. I It reminds me of another like I'll take this idea that relates more to me. So, I live in, you know, Miami Beach and I see kids picking up seashells all the time. So, they come from places like Canada and they're on vacation and there's snow. There's, you know, they're up to their knees in snow and they bring home seashells. So, not, you know, all the kids and not everyone gets the opportunity to go on the beach. You know, why not put a sea shell dispenser at the airport >> or at at restaurants? Um, you know, maybe they maybe they maybe they go to the beach and there's tons of jellyfish or whatever and they can't find any, you know, the right seaells. So, the idea is basically seashells in a vending machine. >> I love that. That's a no-brainer. I love vending machines because it enables like offline AB testing, right? take one kind of generic vending machine and you just every month you just swap out something else. Swap out the sign, swap out the product and just see what crushes because like in Chris Kerner's world, if I could like wave my magic wand and and run this entire world, I would just have random vending machines everywhere just so I could learn like what hits where, like what random product in what random location in front of what demographic of person just crushes. Like I just find that interesting. >> I like it. I mean, it's not my world. I'm I'm like more in like this I you know, my equivalent of that is like own, you know, singlepurpose apps like and software >> that do one thing. Um, and then you know using organic content or using meta ads to get a particular type of person in you know to that experience >> like Facebook marketplace apps >> like Greg's like that's a I mean that that world sounds great for you but my world has like you know no hunger. It's got peace. I don't know like everyone has a decent income and a warm home. I I'm just quirky. Chris, >> I don't judge. I don't judge. Can we do uh one last idea? >> I got one. I got one. So, we were just talking, Greg, before you hit uh record. And you've got some Pokemon cards in your background. And we're similar ages, I'm assuming, and I had Pokemon in middle school. And but I I've never been into like the breaking stuff, the Logan Paul stuff. Like, I'm not a card guy. I'm not a collectibles guy. Um but then I came across something on Twitter that that it just immediately rang true to me. Have you heard of the Kabuto King? >> I have not. >> Okay. The Kabuto King is some anonymous dude on Twitter who started buying every single first edition Kabuto Pokemon card. Kabuto was one of the first set in the late '9s. 152 cards, fossil edition. These cards at the time he started buying were worth about 30 to 50 cents each ungraded. Okay. Um, now granted, like you said, Pokemon has outperformed the market, right, as an asset class. Nobody no one ever thought to buy like worthless, dumb characters that no one's ever thought about, especially if they're ungraded or not holographic. Like the only special thing about them is their first edition. They're provably old from 1999. Okay, you tracking? >> Yeah, I'm tracking. But like Kabuto is Yeah. It's probably one of the least attractive. It's probably one of the like if I am opening a pack and I'm getting a Kabutoo, it's like it's I'm having a bad day. >> Yeah. Totally. >> And that's that's the meme, right? That's the whole thing, right? Dogecoin. What's cool about Doge? It's a meme, right? So, he's he's turned this lame Pokémon into an awesome Pokemon. He's turned it into a meme. And all he did was just start buying them and tweeting about it. Okay. And so now the price of a first edition Kabuto ungraded I think last I checked is like $10 to $20. So he has influence the price to go up 100x plus over the course of about 3 months. Um and the graded ones are worth many hundreds of dollars. Um and he's kind of started this movement this first edition Pokemon movement. And now there's like a echans king and there's like five or six guys that are doing the same thing and they're just buying up every single card uh irrespective of the condition and just holding forever just expecting them to go up in value. Okay. >> Okay. I'm with you. >> Time for my big reveal. You should feel special, Greg, because I've been doing this for months and I haven't told a soul about what I'm buying. I I did post one short form video that I'm kind of doing this, but I didn't tell them what I'm buying. So, this is the great reveal only on your podcast. >> I have been buying two different cards from 1999 Fossil Edition. Uh, first uh first edition only, non-holographic, ungraded, any condition, near mint, heavily played, doesn't matter. And I have about a thousand of them so far. Okay. >> See this? >> That is crazy. >> It's crazy. And two different cards. So, you can see how many. This is just some of them. Look at this. Look at this. I haven't even opened these ones yet. Okay. >> Are you buying them from eBay? >> I am. I'm buying them from eBay and tcgplayer.com, which I had never heard of until recently, which is like the place to buy and sell Pokémon cards. So, we got Shelder and we got Krabby. So, I had a chat with ChatGpt about this before I went all in and I'm like, "All right, here's Kabuto King. here's what he's doing. I want to do the same thing. Um, what card should I buy? And he's like, you don't want to go for like the cool ones like Snorlax. >> Uh, you want to go for the lame ones, like the lamer the better. Pidgey, Caterpie, whatever. So, for whatever reason, I landed on Shelder and Krabby. >> And I have purchased over a,000 of these at an average price of like including shipping, $180, call it two bucks. Um, no, I've spent more than that. I've spent like 3,500 bucks. So, I think I've I've bought about 1,700 total um for two bucks each, give or take. >> Mhm. >> Um and the price has gone up and I haven't told I haven't used my audience. I haven't told anyone about what I'm buying until right now. >> Um now, what's my plan? Like, I don't know. This is just fun. Like, it's really fun to have a mailbox full every single day. And I thought my kids would get into it. They'd be, "Oh, dad, let's go open car." like they don't care. Only I care. I have four kids. They don't care. So my idea is for other people to do this with the other 150 cards. Like the vast majority of these cards have been untouched. They're 20 cents each. You can buy some sellers sell 30 of them. So for a dollar shipping you can order 30 cards for 20 bucks, right? >> And and then flip them. Is that the idea? >> Just hold just hold them. And like if you want to take it a step further, you go Kabuto King's route and you make a meme out of it. Make a Twitter account and you start post and you just sort all of his tweets from day one and you just copy the strategy. You you post pictures, you use his same uh verbiage and you just do that and you just sit on these forever. Um and it's just supply and demand. They're not making any more of these. Pokemon's not going away anytime soon. They're cheap. They're affordable and you sit on them. And then the other thing you go ahead >> and how important is like the first edition nature of it. >> That's important um because they printed all kinds of runs. So they it has to be first edition from 1999. But then there's also some alpha in there. Some cards are misprints. Like 2 to 5% of cards are misprints that are worth like instead of 20 cents they're worth 20 bucks. So you pull those out. Um, and then some cards are like mint condition and you send them in to get graded for 15 bucks each and they're worth a h 100 bucks. So the trick is to kind of callull out the the best of the best and the ones that have flaws and get those graded and then you can flip those right away to get all of your money back and then some. But other than that, you just sit on them forever. What do we think? Um, what do I think of the idea and in what context? >> There's my answer. Thank you. Okay. >> Like from a >> that's a fun thing to do. >> It's a 10. It's a 10 on 10. Like the reason I recently started collecting Pokemon cards, by the way, like I went just for the cool ones. Like there's a Snorlax back there. There's a Charizard back there, >> you know. I'm not going to flex on everyone, but there's this, there's that, you know. So, um, I basically walked into the store and I was like, I want the old school vintage. I didn't really care if it was first edition. I just wanted to like look back and like see my childhood >> that, you know, the card that I couldn't get as a child, seeing it there is worth so much money >> and so much value and it makes me excited to be like walking to my office. Um, and then as I started like getting into Pokemon recently, there was this Wall Street Journal article that said that Pokemon has outperformed the S&P and is like the best performing asset class. And I was like, whoa, hold on a second. Should I be like selling my Berkshire Hathaway and buying a first edition Charizard? Um, so I'm not surprised that this um like meme Pokemon first edition trend is happening. I think that I mean not financial advice, but I think that in 20 years, 10 years, 15 years, like the first editions are going to be worth more than they are today. >> Um because Pokémon is such a nostalgic thing. I think that this is a great like this is like a Gary Vee, go to a garage, you know, store, buy something for $5 and flip it. >> Um idea. So if if that's the thing you're into, then I also think that's a a 10on 10 idea there. That being said, I'm kind of like we're in an AI revolution and I'm buying like and Krabbies, you know. >> All right. Well, I did promise at the beginning of this all of my ideas could scale to eight figures. Did I not? >> You did. >> And then I backtracked it like a and I said, "Except this one." Well, I'm going to backtrack the backtrack. Okay. I'm going to say this is an eight figure business and here's how you do it. Okay. There's your clip. Hey, clip that, editor. Clip that. Okay, got it. Um, someone needs to hire someone cheap, $50,000 a year, 40 hours a week to sit online and to buy every single first edition Pokemon card from 1999, regardless of the character. All 152, all the lame ones, right? Cuz we're not doing Charizard. We're not doing Snorlax. Every single one. This is a full-time job. You're ordering, you're paying, you've got your AMX, and you're unopening, you're opening them, and you're you're categorizing them all. Um, that's going to cost you about, let's see, 45, give or take, to buy like the vast majority of everything that's on the market, it's going to cost you 400 grand. Okay? But over the next years and decades, you're the guy like you own everything. You own the supply. And if slashwin, not investment advice, the price goes 10 to 100x, you've got an 8 figureure business on your hands. you. Everyone has to go through you. A lot of people out there, Greg, they want the full set. First edition, all 152 cards from 1999. A lot of people want that and they collect that. How are they going to get that? They got to go through you. >> Mhm. >> So, there's the business. >> So, but how do you do that realistically? Like, and you know, not everyone has 400 grand >> Mhm. >> sitting around. So, how how do you do that? You start by getting them graded, pulling out the best ones, getting them graded, selling them to fund yourself along the way, right? >> Mhm. >> That's what you do. This could be a business. >> But here's the thing. Here's the thing that I learned about grading is, and by the way, there's a business idea in like >> create a new PSA. Like, how big how big of a business is PSA? >> Isn't it a racket? >> Oh man. >> Why do they have that monopoly? >> I don't know. That's the real idea behind the idea is there needs to be a new PSA. So PSA from what I understand is like I've got a Charmander back there and beautiful little Charmander. Um I think it's first edition. It might it might not be. It might be. But let's just say it's first edition. Um actually let's say it's not first edition. Let's say it's a reprint. And if I want to go and uh get it graded, which obviously I do, >> it's going to cost me $40 to $50. >> Did you know that? >> Yeah. >> $40 to $50. You basically how it works is you send it. There's like I can go to my local card shop. They'll do it for me. They'll send it. I have to pay shipping. There's probably margin that they're making on the shipping there, too. And then I wait like three or four weeks. and they like it's the grand reveal of like it's a PSA 7 and it's like so arbitrary. There was actually an idea on idea browser.com that was like a PSA uh like an app that basically >> allowed transparency throughout the process and showed you like where where your >> where your um card is in the process. >> We're putting PSA on the blockchain. That's what we're doing. >> Yeah. So, if you were trying to compete with PSA, how would you do it? I I was thinking about that as you were talking about it. I would So, like any industry, there's going to be an 8020 rule. There's going to be a handful of players, car shops, um, or buyers that control most of this. You need to get them on board. You need to give them equity in your business, right? Take a minority piece of the business, get all the incentives aligned and say, "Hey, this is a new PSA. This is BSA. This is better SA, okay? And you own a chunk of this business. I will give you Pratta distributions uh for doing so. You send all your cards through me and we just need a critical mass. Like we need the 8020 of this. We need to get like the 10 biggest players or like 10 of the 30 biggest players on our side of the table and then on all the eBay listings, all the listings, it's going to have BSA in the title and everyone else is going to be like, "What? Who? Who's this guy? BSA? Well, that guy's BSA. That guy." And it's going to appear like a 100% of people are doing it because 10 of the biggest players are. and then you become a self-fulfilling prophecy. >> What I don't like about that idea is I need to get so many people on board and if I don't have the credibility in that space then it's hard to do. So I'm wondering like how can you like what is the micro version of competing with PSA look like? >> Maybe it's just like a a $5 alter alternative. >> Yeah. It's just like we're gonna grade it. It's $5. And I think like one of the reasons why I like PSA frankly versus other grading services is it looks dope. >> Yeah. >> It looks high quality. It looks really good. The type >> you can do that you can do that for cheap. >> You can do that for cheap. But I think like coming up with a uh like a visual something different something different visually that looks like people look at it and they're like wow that looks really cool. You know, this morning I I walked by this um I think it was a Kia that looked like a Range Rover >> and I was like, "This car looks amazing. Who makes it?" And I looked behind it. I was like, "Kia?" I thought it was like a $200,000 car. >> Mhm. >> So, just because you know you're building a Kia doesn't mean you can't make it look cool. >> Yeah. Packaging. Um you could make it kind of like an uh Remember Antiques Road Show? >> Yeah. >> Right. You could make it you could make a live stream aspect of it where you've got like a camera, you've got a light, you've got the camera pointing down at the card and someone very engaging, entertaining is talking through it like this guy, this card came from Bob in Omaha. He got it for his son. Yeah. Let's look at this card. And it's fully transparent and there's just a guy just riffing just live streaming. You could clip it up. He could flip it over. You've got like a reveal. You've got retention hacks in there. That's part of it. Like you could have kind of a a grounds up uh viral effect of that. And then if you took it a step further, just create this David verse Goliath narrative and just like PSA is a scam. It's a scam. We're we're disrupting all that. Five bucks. Yeah. And just like just go wild with the like we're persecuted and they're the big bad wolf. >> Okay. Here's the idea cuz I really like your live commerce piece of it. And I think that's a trend that's only getting bigger. >> So you spend $5 to get it graded on this service. There's it sends you back. let's say the Charmander, but there's also a chance that you get like a Charizard graded with it. So, it's basically like a you get you get a >> game of chance. >> It's a game of chance. You're like >> you you there needs to be a creator at the top who obviously is big in the Pokemon scene >> or or trading card scene >> and and he or she is the Willy Wonka of the space and then you have these like golden tickets that you give out. So, why would I go to this $5 PSA? Well, it's not just that it's cheaper. It's also like I want to play I want to gamble a bit. >> Yeah. >> And I want to see like if I'm going to get a Venusaur first edition, you know, when I get this graded. >> Mhm. Can I take it a step further? >> Okay. Yeah. >> That's why we can't hang out, right? Cuz we're just like, >> this is the problem. This is the problem. Um, so where's all the cost in this? It's we're shipping two ways. We're shipping back and forth. Even though they're small cheap cards, you have to package it right. So, you can't put it in an envelope. It still costs like low dollars to ship both directions, right? So, it's cheaper and the user, the card owner can use their iPhone 15 or whatever to take a picture like in portrait mode or whatever. Maybe it's through an app, right? Maybe it's through their like proprietary app. It's really just an app with like a camera wrapper in it. Um, and they upload it and it has a unique identifier and it's one picture for the front, one picture of the back, good lighting, just like if you're scanning in a check to your bank or whatever. Um, and there's only one way shipping. And then they say, "Hey, congratulations. Your grade is 7.5. Uh, we're going to mail the like the, you know, the box that you display it in to the address on your account." And then for $1.50, you ship like a baller looking box. Maybe it has like a shimmer to it. It's just different. It stands out. It's got your name. You could have like a nickname for the card like for your Charmander it would be like Mandy, you know, or whatever whatever you decide to call it and that it would be it would have the grade in there. It just it would just look and feel different. It'd be very organically sharable. Um, what do we think? >> I love it. I love I love this idea. This is >> Dude, you could use AI to look at the picture, right? AI is like, "All right, there's a little smidge in the corner that docks a half a point." Think about how insane people are spending $40 to $50 plus shipping, sending their cards somewhere, and then finding out in 2026, like 4 weeks later, what their card is graded >> in a world with Amazon Prime where we're all used to like things same day or next day. >> No, no, we're not doing this. Isn't 1982? >> No, >> that's a good one. There's like six good ideas in there. >> I like having you on. You're an idea machine to say to say the least. Um, so thank you for for being so generous uh with your ideas and uh for being you for being awesome. Um, I highly recommend people go and check out Chris's ecosystem. There'll be links where you can go and follow him and subscribe to all his things. Um, but is there anything specific, Chris, you want to leave people with? >> No, I mean go start a business. Check out my podcast, The Kerner Office, and uh, go start a business. Go do something with this information. Right. Yeah. Take your legs and get the moving. >> That's right. Amen. >> Yeah. All right. We'll see you next time, Chris.

Summary

The video features Chris Kerner discussing six scalable side hustle ideas that can generate $60,000+ per month with low startup costs, focusing on leveraging platforms like Facebook Marketplace and creating innovative apps or services around trending markets like trading cards and live commerce.

Key Points

  • Chris Kerner presents six side hustle ideas that are low-cost, scalable, and can generate six-figure monthly revenue.
  • One idea is building third-party apps for Facebook Marketplace to enable price alerts, arbitrage, and data scraping.
  • Another idea involves creating a viral, low-cost trading card grading service with a gamified element and branded shipping.
  • The live commerce trend is highlighted as a growing opportunity, especially for niche markets like collectibles.
  • A key concept is turning a simple service into a branded experience with elements like unique identifiers, premium packaging, and AI-powered grading.
  • The speaker emphasizes that scalability depends on execution, not just the idea—any business can scale with the right approach.
  • Facebook Marketplace has over 500 million monthly users, with 51% of social media purchases made there, indicating a massive opportunity.
  • The idea of using a David vs. Goliath narrative to disrupt established players like PSA in the trading card grading space is proposed.
  • The video encourages viewers to take action and start businesses rather than just consuming ideas.

Key Takeaways

  • Look for underdeveloped opportunities on large platforms like Facebook Marketplace to build scalable apps.
  • Create a branded experience around a service to increase perceived value and shareability.
  • Use gamification and low-cost entry points to attract customers to niche markets like collectibles.
  • Leverage AI and mobile technology to streamline processes like grading or scanning.
  • Start small, focus on low-friction entry points, and scale with a clear growth strategy.

Primary Category

AI Business & Strategy

Secondary Categories

Career & Entrepreneurship Computer Vision AI Tools & Frameworks

Topics

side hustle business ideas Facebook Marketplace AI grading short-form video 3D printing product validation distribution local services collectibles grading lifestyle business scalable ventures

Entities

people
Chris Koerner Greg
organizations
Facebook Facebook Marketplace PSA
products
Pokémon cards Charmander Charizard Venusaur anti-spike stickers bike washing service shiny rock vending machine
technologies
AI short-form video 3D printing API livestream mobile app image recognition

Sentiment

0.85 (Positive)

Content Type

interview

Difficulty

beginner

Tone

educational inspiring entertaining promotional