@@cupcakemcsparklebutt9051 He means that if you do the code for them they will fail their exam because they didn't do it themselves and didn't learn because of that.
What I stumbling into totally by chance is a job with a client who is starting his own company with a business software he wants to write himself with just a basic knowledge of coding, so he needed someone to discuss his problems with. I'm not even teaching him much cuz he mainly learns my watching tutorials and reading books, I'm just helping him fix his coding problems, like a human StackOverflow lol (needless to say, that job pays pretty well)
@@toluwanimibankole2345 no genuinely except those 30 likes no one mentioned it. In java or c family it doesnt bother that much cause its visible but in python ur debugging for hours to find why ur code doesnt give u the wanted result
1) software developer. 2) Contract job. 3) Start a blog on medium. 4) UA-cam channel 5) Make coding tutorial of udemy. 6) Online tutoring. 7) Start a podcast. 8) Charge for downloads. 9) Bug bounty hunting. 10) coding competition. 11) Hackathon 12) e books 13) sell website 14) create discord bot and sell online 15) help others to create Shopify website. 16) Do GitHub sponsorship 17) help local business to create website. 18) create online game. 19) do freelancing like Fiverr, upwork. 20) Create a software solution company. 21) Buil your own software product.
A note about contract work: I was shocked to learn they make less than employees in the U.S. Where I live (Sweden), contractors get paid about 4x as an employee. And employees have very high salary. So contract work here is extremely lucrative.
that's because it is wrong. I made more money as a contractor in the US right out of college than I did in my next 3 jobs in the first 10 years. You have to pay for your own benefits, but I still came out with more money than the benefits. Also, you as a contractor, have more freedom than a normal employee (in hours and what they're allowed to ask you to do) and often there are laws that defend your right as a contractor
I'd beg to differ on the "Contract " opinion.... I get paid 30k USD in India which is huge.... I just have to keep myself up to date and switch every 6 months.... For which I get a 30% raise again... So it's good too man
May I have your email ?, I work as a contract developer for a very reputed company but get paid like 30% of it, I have 2.5 half years of developer experience and I get like 7.7k USD / year. It'd be great to learn from you and your insights. Thanks!
If I may stick my 2c in? Unless you’re looking for the experience. Avoid a dev shop. It sounds awesome. But it’s effectively freelancing with bigger budgets and pushier customers. I worked in and ran my own dev shop. I tend to look for product companies where you have some control over your own destiny. Rather than being sweat for hire... Great content as always! Keep it up!
Freelancing without having to negotiate and contract with the customer, and the customer is paying much more than what you are getting paid so much more is expected of you than what you are receiving. That's the trade off for not having to market and find your own customers.
I've a question though. I've started learning coding sometime ago, but I don't know when and what kinds of job opportunities to hone my skills and build my existence in this industry. What and how does a fresh coder do? What could be the starting point? I'm not aware of much other than that the paths might vary and evolve depending on your knowledge and skill set. I'd love to be informed/enlightened on these terms
People get stuck on which programming language to learn but there are several other factors that are just as important. The first is you need to get good at problem solving with code. Knowing a language's syntax is not enough. If you know how to solve problems then switching to other languages is easy. Number two is that you first need to choose a framework, SDK, and libraries best for the specific task and then learn the language that framework uses. It should be a framework you can get a job in if that's your goal. Do some research on which frameworks companies use. Lastly, you should experiment and see what field interests you. You might have a deep passion for data science or app development that you don't know of if you don't try it. Good luck with your journey and happy coding!
I do think that having a fixed formal job would be much better and after you have been in the industry for a while then you can be like creating stuff for freelancing.
I'd like to correct you on contract jobs. Some of the most successful people in Software are contractors. These people sometimes know every bit about a companies internal workings and infustructure, and can almost "hold a company hostage." Depends on how you are as a person, but sometimes there's a "name your price" aspect with contraction.
Fun fact: when i started coding i used to do the mistake of using single equal instead of double equal in code. Now i do the mistake of using double equal instead of single equal in math.
Have to disagree on no. 2 - certainly in the UK there are very, very few full time employee jobs in the UK that pay anything close to contract rates when all tax implications are factored in. Take home pay is typically 50% > 100% more on contracts.
I work as a contractor developer and I can attest that being a contract developer suck. You'll - 1 - Get less paid (I get about 30% of what they pay to the actual developer) 2 - You don't get treated as the main developer as a contract developer. 3 - If they're firing, you'll be the first one to let go. 4 - There are no benefits with regard to insurance as for direct employee jobs. 5 - Even your work is great, It totally depends on your company to take you or not. [Mostly not] I'm looking for a change. #ScrewCovid.
Batman Smashes I don't understand # 5. What do you mean by your company take you or not. Do you mean going from contract to full time employee? Or something else?
@@gejer123 Well that's about 320k a year if you can get contracts consistently so yes absolutely, most full-time positions max out at a base salary of about 130-150k (+ bonus, equity)
Ya, but that means its an if. I mean: if(code == money) { Console.WriteLine("Wtf, that's wrong lol") } Actually I need help, i don't know why i'm on this comment.
Alot of these need loads of experience. Like bug bounties are great but the chance of a beginner in the cyber security industry actually completing a bug bounty let alone make a living out of it is slim to none.
Lena yep, but he said in the video contractors get paid less. I’ve hired contractors on £1150 - £1250 a day! Work for 6 months of year party for the rest 😛
Funny you mentioned some of these. My wife heard some and laughed because she’s seen me do these. Like I own a gaming company starting up and got a verry diverse team with a wide range of views and creative solutions. But most my team now was first a paid consultant or worked on commission based.
I've seen so many videos and articles listing the same things over and over. I was going to say: "he only missed Upwork..." but it was the number 24. So it's exactly the same as the other videos, blog posts, and Medium articles I've seen before.
Hey hey, been watching your videos that explain stuff and, I'm a 12th grader this year searching for a job that interests me and... I came to the conclusion to either become a software engineer or a software developer, I weighed more on reason and interest to software developer but which would you recommend? It's a bit confusing watching alot of videos and research about their differences and I heard that software developers get to immerse themselves more but Is that really true? Sorry it's not pertaining to your video but I plan to watch more videos to get information but I need to truly narrow it down to the best choice. Plz help :)
Well decided to go nr. 26. Having 1 Open Source Project with Managed Cloud Hosting Service, 1 paid Windows Product, and 1 Paid Webservice :) Well, guess this is what I like at most.
7:08 Please, for the love of God DON'T. Im not a Roblox player myself but please, don't waste your time and others' money. There are too many p2w games on Roblox so theres a very low chance yours will catch other people's attention and while you're right, some people are crazy enough to buy useless virtual stuff, Roblox takes an INSANE cut. I know all this from a friend who tried this out, its not worth the time and effort, but who am i to tell you what to do afterall ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
If i would see this video before i get coding skills, i would say, that coding - sucks. "You can teach, you can have a blog/youtube/medium, you can write a book" WOW! Unic features for coders! ... and then - find a bugs for money, make extensions for WordPress, sell Bootstrap templates... All this is kind a hunting for opportunity with NO warranty of success. Like "If you have money you can buy things and sell it for bigger price. Ok, cool." This list could be so mutch shorter: - You can make things for money (Job, freelance projects) - You can invest time in your project. Main feature of coding - is that you can make almost anything by your self, and anything you need - is your skills, time, and computer.
I stopped programming many years ago as a computer scientist(approximately 10 years ago). I want to come back to it. Where would I start from in order to catch up with the current trending?
Has anybody found good ways to earn some extra income from coding in the off time from your non-coding day job? I'm in my mid-40s and have been studying computer science for a few years now. I've also been at my current employer for 20 years in various positions that are not related to anything computer science. I've been hoping that eventually I can move into a more relevant position at the same company, but if that fails to pan out, then I'd consider using some of my evenings and weekends to do coding or something on the side. Some of the things mentioned in this video could possibly work in that scenario, but I was curious if anyone is actually doing what I described. :)
It really depends. If you're building an app, you can have your time and learn when you're a beginner. But if you wanna work in a company, you must be very competent. In general I think 1-2 yrs of experience would be enough for starting to make money.
If you record some tutorials on coding interviews = how to prepare, what are the topics, some questions and solutions will enhance the channel's view count and popularity.. I just sense your recent topics are not much interesting.. It is up to you.
@@Aksoma You run into situations where you're not a high priority for the company. This sometimes leads to having to sue to get paid and or even being ghosted in the middle of a project. Also you dont get benifits so contact work is just objectively worse than full time employment
I mada a script to auto insert info into my school database. The UI for the school app was shit so I made lots of money just charging ~ 1USD to insert mostly repetitive info the school needs you to report. Easiest money I made. Just find an opportunity to do something with high demand do it.
Can you think of other ways to make money with code?
Invest in yourself!
codecanyon.net/
It's also a good place for sales code.
Bitcoin mining!
Creating a useful script.
Cryptocurrency/stock prediction program and sport matches outcome prediction
1 0:56 Software developer
2 1:20 Contract
3 1:50 Blogging_Medium
4 2:35 YT channel
5 3:02 Coding tutorials
6 3:21 Online tutoring
7 3:29 Podcast
8 3:56 App development
9 4:21 Bug bounty-hunting
10 4:27 Find security vulnerabilities
11 4:30 Coding contest
12 4:38 Hackathons
13 5:04 Publish an EBook
14 5:09 Plug-in_WordPress
15 5:24 Frontend themes/landing pages
16 5:35 Discord bot_Fiverr
17 5:46 Twitch_extensions
18 5:49 Shopify_app
19 6:30 GitHub_sponsorships
20 6:52 Website redemption
21 7:09 Roblox games
22 7:38 GameDev
23 7:52 Freelancing_upwork
24 8:42 Software solutions
25 9:16 Own software product/startup
you're a legend !
Bloody legend
you are a blessing
The hero noone asked for but everyone needed
legend!
you're one of the few creators that I actually wont mind watching ads for, lol.
😂😂 I know right
I watched a 3 minute ad in his entirety hoping it will pay for his next Starbucks or at least candy bar.
@@thedumbestdoge881 haha! same here!!!
Lol, bro you no get mineyfor premium
so when u watch the whole ad without skipping, it pays more??
tf i didn't know that
Get paid from struggling students to do their coding homework muhahahah
They will never learn. But they will pass the class
@@pixel6134 pretty grim statement. Any advice?
lol I actually do thesis for pple
@@cupcakemcsparklebutt9051 He means that if you do the code for them they will fail their exam because they didn't do it themselves and didn't learn because of that.
@@ironman5034 wow you are bad for them but hey, it's money
What I stumbling into totally by chance is a job with a client who is starting his own company with a business software he wants to write himself with just a basic knowledge of coding, so he needed someone to discuss his problems with. I'm not even teaching him much cuz he mainly learns my watching tutorials and reading books, I'm just helping him fix his coding problems, like a human StackOverflow lol (needless to say, that job pays pretty well)
In the thumbnail you should've put
Code == Money
*Output:*
True
I think u are the only person who noticed it
@@mohammadmahdigoli6268 sarcasm? I can't tell
@@toluwanimibankole2345 no genuinely except those 30 likes no one mentioned it. In java or c family it doesnt bother that much cause its visible but in python ur debugging for hours to find why ur code doesnt give u the wanted result
@@mohammadmahdigoli6268 ok
When you said "let's whip out the counter" I legit thought you were gonna start the list at 0...... 👀
Me too lol
@@aasserelzoghby6781 Makes sense on a video on coding. Probably why he came up with 26 instead of 25, So it adds up.
Contract jobs are the most well paid, usually they pay 30% more than full time. But you are right, there is no stability or benefits.
@espoir inconscient you don’t know about taxes..
1) software developer.
2) Contract job.
3) Start a blog on medium.
4) UA-cam channel
5) Make coding tutorial of udemy.
6) Online tutoring.
7) Start a podcast.
8) Charge for downloads.
9) Bug bounty hunting.
10) coding competition.
11) Hackathon
12) e books
13) sell website
14) create discord bot and sell online
15) help others to create Shopify website.
16) Do GitHub sponsorship
17) help local business to create website.
18) create online game.
19) do freelancing like Fiverr, upwork.
20) Create a software solution company.
21) Buil your own software product.
You honestly should have like a lot more subscribers! Your videos are helpful and rlly high quality!
A note about contract work:
I was shocked to learn they make less than employees in the U.S. Where I live (Sweden), contractors get paid about 4x as an employee. And employees have very high salary. So contract work here is extremely lucrative.
that's because it is wrong. I made more money as a contractor in the US right out of college than I did in my next 3 jobs in the first 10 years. You have to pay for your own benefits, but I still came out with more money than the benefits.
Also, you as a contractor, have more freedom than a normal employee (in hours and what they're allowed to ask you to do) and often there are laws that defend your right as a contractor
Vad är contractors?
@@idirisosman6784 Konsulter.
wanna build me an app for my service businesss ?
@@danielreiman4446 let's do it
I'd beg to differ on the "Contract " opinion.... I get paid 30k USD in India which is huge.... I just have to keep myself up to date and switch every 6 months.... For which I get a 30% raise again... So it's good too man
Hi.are you married?😅
@@pppppp297 No I am not...I'm 28
@@thedeveloper4207 p
May I have your email ?, I work as a contract developer for a very reputed company but get paid like 30% of it, I have 2.5 half years of developer experience and I get like 7.7k USD / year. It'd be great to learn from you and your insights. Thanks!
If I may stick my 2c in?
Unless you’re looking for the experience. Avoid a dev shop. It sounds awesome. But it’s effectively freelancing with bigger budgets and pushier customers. I worked in and ran my own dev shop. I tend to look for product companies where you have some control over your own destiny. Rather than being sweat for hire...
Great content as always! Keep it up!
Freelancing without having to negotiate and contract with the customer, and the customer is paying much more than what you are getting paid so much more is expected of you than what you are receiving. That's the trade off for not having to market and find your own customers.
I sell code on several corners in downtown Seattle if anyone's looking for a couple of lines. It's the 26th way to make money from coding.
Don’t let the coppers catch you
This is genuinely helpful. Thanks man
I've a question though. I've started learning coding sometime ago, but I don't know when and what kinds of job opportunities to hone my skills and build my existence in this industry. What and how does a fresh coder do? What could be the starting point? I'm not aware of much other than that the paths might vary and evolve depending on your knowledge and skill set. I'd love to be informed/enlightened on these terms
well,as a starter i'd suggest u to learn html,css and java
People get stuck on which programming language to learn but there are several other factors that are just as important. The first is you need to get good at problem solving with code. Knowing a language's syntax is not enough. If you know how to solve problems then switching to other languages is easy. Number two is that you first need to choose a framework, SDK, and libraries best for the specific task and then learn the language that framework uses. It should be a framework you can get a job in if that's your goal. Do some research on which frameworks companies use. Lastly, you should experiment and see what field interests you. You might have a deep passion for data science or app development that you don't know of if you don't try it. Good luck with your journey and happy coding!
I do think that having a fixed formal job would be much better and after you have been in the industry for a while then you can be like creating stuff for freelancing.
Yo, this is super great stuff. Thanks for not shying away from the subject of money.
I'm building my own software product, I'll come back here if I get very rich :)
God inshallah will help you and you will success but follow your dreams meet you in the future when you are rich and popular bye
@@wipeyouscreen4659 probably the most positive comment i ever receive, God bless you bro !
did you get very rich
@@hamzac.4555 you failed i think 🤔
Its been 2 years whats the update reply asap
Greetings bro, I dont normally hit the like button on youtube videos but you made me do so for this video. Big up more love
I'd like to correct you on contract jobs. Some of the most successful people in Software are contractors. These people sometimes know every bit about a companies internal workings and infustructure, and can almost "hold a company hostage." Depends on how you are as a person, but sometimes there's a "name your price" aspect with contraction.
Is it legal?
Glad to see an honest video that is not a get rich quick schemes.
Nice detail in the thumbnail, double equals; from an if statement.
Hi, great content! I was wondering which mic u use, has really nice quality. Cheers!
Code == Money 😂What A Positive Logic Thumbnail
Fun fact: when i started coding i used to do the mistake of using single equal instead of double equal in code. Now i do the mistake of using double equal instead of single equal in math.
@@Isaac-eh6uu what triple equal? And single equal in math and double equal in programming are same
Have to disagree on no. 2 - certainly in the UK there are very, very few full time employee jobs in the UK that pay anything close to contract rates when all tax implications are factored in. Take home pay is typically 50% > 100% more on contracts.
I mean he’s from the USA though
I work as a contractor developer and I can attest that being a contract developer suck.
You'll -
1 - Get less paid (I get about 30% of what they pay to the actual developer)
2 - You don't get treated as the main developer as a contract developer.
3 - If they're firing, you'll be the first one to let go.
4 - There are no benefits with regard to insurance as for direct employee jobs.
5 - Even your work is great, It totally depends on your company to take you or not. [Mostly not]
I'm looking for a change. #ScrewCovid.
Batman Smashes I don't understand # 5. What do you mean by your company take you or not. Do you mean going from contract to full time employee? Or something else?
In the UK senior contractors make like £1k a day
@@gordonramsdale that's a lot, right? Even without the perks of a permanent job. (i'm hoping not being trolled)
@@gejer123 Well that's about 320k a year if you can get contracts consistently so yes absolutely, most full-time positions max out at a base salary of about 130-150k (+ bonus, equity)
Government contracting always pays well depending on the unit it can be a great place too
Thank you for this video it has really motivated me a lot. Keep on man.
I felt very confortable in this video because i'm a non native speaker and i understand the 100% of the video
Making money is an art, learn this art and live rich till you live !~~~
Don't forget quantitative analyst, trading, and game hacks (CS GO). Nice video!
I love when he put 2= on the thumbnail
Ya, but that means its an if. I mean:
if(code == money)
{
Console.WriteLine("Wtf, that's wrong lol")
}
Actually I need help, i don't know why i'm on this comment.
@@kleydermendoza4771 i thought you were really dani i freaked out
Thanks for sharing!
You have no idea how much do you help people 💪
O shit I went straight to the dark web i thought that was my only option
Alot of these need loads of experience. Like bug bounties are great but the chance of a beginner in the cyber security industry actually completing a bug bounty let alone make a living out of it is slim to none.
Starting a startup
😄
Contractors normally get paid way more than employees
Precisely, because they have no benefits.
Lena yep, but he said in the video contractors get paid less. I’ve hired contractors on £1150 - £1250 a day! Work for 6 months of year party for the rest 😛
He meant "Contractor Developers" in context with hired by the X company then used as a resource in different companies.
@@batmansmashes783 that's a smart thing company do.
Rule of thumb for charging hourly contract rate: Salary of similar position x 2 / 1700
Funny you mentioned some of these. My wife heard some and laughed because she’s seen me do these. Like I own a gaming company starting up and got a verry diverse team with a wide range of views and creative solutions. But most my team now was first a paid consultant or worked on commission based.
I think I’m going to go the instructor route. I like talking to people and eventually never see them again
Contractors in Australia earn way more than full time coders!
everything is upside down in Australia
How is one able to land on of this contractors
WordPress dev here. Plugins, themes. Have a great day! 😀
I was like what about -#26 ,oh there it is
You gain a new subscriber you opened my eyes to so many things good video and thank you...
Contractor pay is higher than salaried employees in most cases.
Fiverr doesnt seem to be good as there are so many people offering so much for only like 5€. i never got anything going there
deff needed this
I've seen so many videos and articles listing the same things over and over. I was going to say: "he only missed Upwork..." but it was the number 24. So it's exactly the same as the other videos, blog posts, and Medium articles I've seen before.
My eyes on the question mark box
Thanks for the video!
How old are you? I really like your content! Actually pushing me to better my skills!
Great vid and all but can we get a house tour???
i started to see people charging for some vscode extensions
Hey hey, been watching your videos that explain stuff and, I'm a 12th grader this year searching for a job that interests me and... I came to the conclusion to either become a software engineer or a software developer, I weighed more on reason and interest to software developer but which would you recommend?
It's a bit confusing watching alot of videos and research about their differences and I heard that software developers get to immerse themselves more but Is that really true?
Sorry it's not pertaining to your video but I plan to watch more videos to get information but I need to truly narrow it down to the best choice.
Plz help :)
They’re the same thing
I mean, if you dont mind being arrested & thrown in jail, you could always dev malware
Bad idea, Trust me
If you're underage then you're just fine.
GREAT video! Thank you!
Your Mic is unique, I like it! 😅
God loves you all
thanks you so much, really valuable video
I think this is the best video on this topic. Now the only excuse I have is that I'm lazy.
Well decided to go nr. 26. Having 1 Open Source Project with Managed Cloud Hosting Service, 1 paid Windows Product, and 1 Paid Webservice :) Well, guess this is what I like at most.
So I have a question I’m like well 15 and I’m starting how to code from scratch and I’m trying to find out how to make money selling my games
Hi guys can you tell me if my English sucks or can you understand what I say in the videos?
Most companies don’t require colleges degrees now. How do you learn coding by not going to school….
“MAKE A ROBLOX GAME” I’m doing that right jow
7:08 Please, for the love of God DON'T. Im not a Roblox player myself but please, don't waste your time and others' money. There are too many p2w games on Roblox so theres a very low chance yours will catch other people's attention and while you're right, some people are crazy enough to buy useless virtual stuff, Roblox takes an INSANE cut. I know all this from a friend who tried this out, its not worth the time and effort, but who am i to tell you what to do afterall ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Thanks for the info
If i would see this video before i get coding skills, i would say, that coding - sucks. "You can teach, you can have a blog/youtube/medium, you can write a book" WOW! Unic features for coders! ... and then - find a bugs for money, make extensions for WordPress, sell Bootstrap templates... All this is kind a hunting for opportunity with NO warranty of success. Like "If you have money you can buy things and sell it for bigger price. Ok, cool."
This list could be so mutch shorter:
- You can make things for money (Job, freelance projects)
- You can invest time in your project.
Main feature of coding - is that you can make almost anything by your self, and anything you need - is your skills, time, and computer.
The most common way in any field is to teach other how to do it !
Like i dont know how to use my skill but i will teach it to you
1:33 Employees can be terminated at anytime without reason in 49 out of 50 states.
I Love coding.❤
7:09 LOL
Great Content keep up the good work
Game changing video. Thanks heaps!
The fact that you ended up talking about roblox shows how much research you made!
becoming a high school coding teacher in your free time
in hawaii with rich people, then start a youtube channel and get famous for crazy ideas then end up becoming famous on twitch.
What's the difference between contracting and freelancing? It looks like the same.
freelance is like working in your own time and space, while contracts are jobs, but for a particular time period
The Hi was lit man 😂😂
You can make a video on 25 Ways To Make MONEY With CODE
I stopped programming many years ago as a computer scientist(approximately 10 years ago). I want to come back to it. Where would I start from in order to catch up with the current trending?
i think u shoud start with python libraries if your basics are cleared.. :)
you just got a new follower :)
Excellent video. Thanks, man. I wonder how ai will cause these ideas to evolve...
Number 1: Hack into Jeff Bezos bank account, take all his money, bale yourself out of prison, richest man in the world😎
form 25 ways which one pay highest?
So freelancing(contracting) sucks ?
Has anybody found good ways to earn some extra income from coding in the off time from your non-coding day job? I'm in my mid-40s and have been studying computer science for a few years now. I've also been at my current employer for 20 years in various positions that are not related to anything computer science. I've been hoping that eventually I can move into a more relevant position at the same company, but if that fails to pan out, then I'd consider using some of my evenings and weekends to do coding or something on the side.
Some of the things mentioned in this video could possibly work in that scenario, but I was curious if anyone is actually doing what I described. :)
4:25 yes, then don't tell them about it and exploit it :)
Could make you a lot more money.
Finally I'm not a blob of dissapointment
0:38 But how much skill is decent though?
It really depends. If you're building an app, you can have your time and learn when you're a beginner. But if you wanna work in a company, you must be very competent. In general I think 1-2 yrs of experience would be enough for starting to make money.
finish the full course tutorial
Thanks man
Build trading bots. Build e-commerce arbitrage bots.
Do you know of any good coding contests?
The background music is from streambeats (right?)
If you record some tutorials on coding interviews = how to prepare, what are the topics, some questions and solutions will enhance the channel's view count and popularity.. I just sense your recent topics are not much interesting.. It is up to you.
Definitely say all the way away from contracts unless you really need experience
What are the main reasons for avoiding contract work?
@@Aksoma You run into situations where you're not a high priority for the company. This sometimes leads to having to sue to get paid and or even being ghosted in the middle of a project. Also you dont get benifits so contact work is just objectively worse than full time employment
Great content, keep it up!
Heads up it 26
Time to spam stupid games on evey app till one goes viral
I mada a script to auto insert info into my school database. The UI for the school app was shit so I made lots of money just charging ~ 1USD to insert mostly repetitive info the school needs you to report. Easiest money I made.
Just find an opportunity to do something with high demand do it.