@@PhilippLackner hehe 😅 yeah yeah it is one of the options 🙂 It was only joke, but I need to say you have pretty good videos and thanks for them and for your collaboration and giving hand for us in this topic. Keep it doing. 🙂
It's been more than a month I've started on upwork (15+ proposals sent but no clients yet), but after watching your video I'm more confident that I'm on the right path and will get my first client very soon, as I'm already doing all of the things you've mentioned. Thanks bro, you've been amazing as always. 🖤
@@purplehazer417 I got few clients, not from Upwork though but from private communities, and I got busy with my studies so haven't been able to give more time to Upwork in past 2 months.
Thank you for the video! You give me a hope! But, I can't find my first client yet. I got everything except good proposals. Also, it's troublesome that UpWork is full of Flutter/React native jobs. And I don't want to study it! Or jobs for both Android and iOS.
Hi, i am looking on upwork after this video. I see too many App Publishing job like 7- 10$ is it safe to open another 25$ Developer Account to publish this apps to make money? İf they ban the account on play console i lost 25$ only and nothing is illegal right?
I make a living developing apps for Android, iOS and Windows. You are right it is very difficult to make a profit from Android apps, since there are many apps on play store and Google wants every business owner to promote their app through Google ads but it is not hard to make decent income from apps published on Appstore
Well in AppStore you have to play $99 dollar each year plus they take 30% of in-App purchase. So how exactly it's hard for you to make money from Android PlayStore but not from iOS App Store???
@@deepakbisht4957 I guess it's more because iOS users are more accustomed to buying software than Android users. Remember that iOS to Android ratio is usually higher on developed countries (where people are more likely to purchase things) while it's the opposite in developing countries, where sometimes iOS percentage might be as small as 5% compared to Android, because of the price tag. So yeah, despite paying 99$ every year for App Store, and Apple taking a cut (note: both App Store and Play Store take a 15% cut for the first 1 million dollars in a year, after which they start taking 30%), it still seems like a far more profitable option if your app has good marketing and targets a global audience. (I didn't include the other extra costs that come with iOS development if you don't already own Apple devices; you need to have a Mac, and optionally an iPhone for better testing (you can use an emulator). For Android just a cheap Android phone is enough, and you can work with any machine you have).
Sir how to make my first $1 with Java
😂😂
🤣💔
By switching to Kotlin ofc
impossible with java
why are you everywhere, sir can you build my app in React Native😅
I just got my first client for exactly 100$ just today, and you uploaded this video. What a coincident
Congrats!
Brother which platform you are using for freelancing.
@@sumit_soni Upwork, was hard to find a client. Was trying for more than a month.
Nice Content!
Recommend projects that catch the attentions of clients, please
Sell your smartphone only use the emulator😂
can we use github as our portfolio initially ! if we make good readme of the repo and our github profile?
Yeah, but make sure to use lots of visuals like images, gifs and videos
@@PhilippLackner yeah I was thinking about the same think
How's your trip?
Not too much happened so far, but tomorrow that'll change 😁👌
WoW! 🤑
Sell your notebook...
Then that will be the last 100$ as well
@@PhilippLackner hehe 😅 yeah yeah it is one of the options 🙂 It was only joke, but I need to say you have pretty good videos and thanks for them and for your collaboration and giving hand for us in this topic. Keep it doing. 🙂
It's been more than a month I've started on upwork (15+ proposals sent but no clients yet), but after watching your video I'm more confident that I'm on the right path and will get my first client very soon, as I'm already doing all of the things you've mentioned.
Thanks bro, you've been amazing as always. 🖤
did you find something? or still waiting
@@purplehazer417 I got few clients, not from Upwork though but from private communities, and I got busy with my studies so haven't been able to give more time to Upwork in past 2 months.
@@khanzadakashif8248 hey , how are you doing now ? did you got any clients ?
Hows it going now bro?
I am Android Developer with 1 year Experience and Thank you For Such Clean & Concise Explanation. You are making Quality Content.
I just made 100 dollars thanks
You are the best.
Can you make videos about upload our apps to playstore ? Because i have no experience to upload it, but i have some apps what i built before. Thanks
Crisp and clear explanation. Great for beginners in Android Development.
Thank you for the video! You give me a hope! But, I can't find my first client yet.
I got everything except good proposals.
Also, it's troublesome that UpWork is full of Flutter/React native jobs. And I don't want to study it! Or jobs for both Android and iOS.
Hi, i am looking on upwork after this video. I see too many App Publishing job like 7- 10$ is it safe to open another 25$ Developer Account to publish this apps to make money? İf they ban the account on play console i lost 25$ only and nothing is illegal right?
Don't accept such trash jobs, not worth it
They will ban every dev account that related to yours, even if you try to make a new one. Not worth it
not easy its very difficult in upwork
Bro I am thinking of this only, as an 18 yr old aspirant, this will be goldmine
us moment 😂
Sell your laptop
Plez happ me
I make a living developing apps for Android, iOS and Windows. You are right it is very difficult to make a profit from Android apps, since there are many apps on play store and Google wants every business owner to promote their app through Google ads but it is not hard to make decent income from apps published on Appstore
Well in AppStore you have to play $99 dollar each year plus they take 30% of in-App purchase.
So how exactly it's hard for you to make money from Android PlayStore but not from iOS App Store???
@@deepakbisht4957 I guess it's more because iOS users are more accustomed to buying software than Android users. Remember that iOS to Android ratio is usually higher on developed countries (where people are more likely to purchase things) while it's the opposite in developing countries, where sometimes iOS percentage might be as small as 5% compared to Android, because of the price tag.
So yeah, despite paying 99$ every year for App Store, and Apple taking a cut (note: both App Store and Play Store take a 15% cut for the first 1 million dollars in a year, after which they start taking 30%), it still seems like a far more profitable option if your app has good marketing and targets a global audience.
(I didn't include the other extra costs that come with iOS development if you don't already own Apple devices; you need to have a Mac, and optionally an iPhone for better testing (you can use an emulator). For Android just a cheap Android phone is enough, and you can work with any machine you have).
This is so insightful, thank you for this video! 🔥
What to do incase of backend required and I m not backend developer
same question ...i try to use firebase
and want to learn ktor
Thanks for amazing tips my big bro ❤️🔥
i think we start with get free projects
Nice video we need other videos like that
One dollars
Thanks
Philipp
That's cool man, we need more videos like these, it's really helpful 🙂
Are you In Barmej?
Awesome content again
Thanks!
Ya at 18yrs I earned first 100$+ from Freelancing by doing native Android Development 💖
Do you recommend getting the google android developer certificate?
I have same question
If u can afford then y now
So basically you need a solids app to get some money, which you didn't recommend us to do in the first place?!
*Kotlin is very slow, do code with java its fast af!*
What a joke...
Not true at all. Java and Kotlin are very similar performance-wise.