Digital Products: Create Once, Sell Forever
E-books, templates, courses, and printables can generate income for years after creation. Here's how to build digital products that actually sell.
TRENDING TOPICS
1716 articles found for "passive income"
E-books, templates, courses, and printables can generate income for years after creation. Here's how to build digital products that actually sell.
With the 10-year Treasury near 4.25% and the Fed expected to hold rates steady, government bonds offer attractive risk-adjusted income. Here's the opportunity.
Musicians, authors, photographers, and inventors earn royalties decades after creation. Here's how to build assets that pay you indefinitely.
The FIRE movement isn't just for tech workers. Here's how ordinary earners are achieving financial independence decades ahead of schedule.
President Trump told Congress tariff revenue could replace the income tax. But the US collects $2.5 trillion in income taxes annually, and the math reveals why this proposal cannot work.
Home prices have surged 53% since 2019 while incomes grew just 24%. New research from Fortune suggests the crisis is driven by wealthy buyers, not a lack of supply, upending conventional wisdom.
The One Big Beautiful Bill eliminates income-driven repayment for new Parent PLUS loans after July 1. With processing taking up to 8 weeks, March is the last practical window to act.
Morningstar's latest Active/Passive Barometer shows just 38% of active funds outperformed passive peers in 2025. Over a decade, only 21% survived and beat their benchmarks.
With AI disruption pummeling software stocks and consumer sentiment at multi-year lows, dividend-paying equities are staging a quiet comeback. Here is why income investing is the right move right now.
Wingstop's stock surged 12% on earnings but the first same-store sales decline in 22 years tells a story about lower-income consumer stress in 2026.
USDA projects net farm income will fall to $153.4 billion in 2026, marking the fourth consecutive year of decline. With commodity prices weak, input costs elevated, and debt rising, economists call it a generational downturn.
A widening gap between upper and lower-income consumer spending reveals a K-shaped economy where record stock portfolios coexist with record credit card delinquencies.