5 people who made up to $470,000 secretly juggling multiple jobs explain the best roles for making it work
Briefly

Tom Wedding, founder of LVRGD, advises that jobs with little communication and repetitive tasks, such as software development and tech support, are best for overemployed workers managing multiple remote jobs. Many of his clients seek to do this to increase earnings or assure job security, although they face potential professional repercussions. Insights from other job-jugglers confirm balancing roles can lead to burnout, yet financial benefits often outweigh risks. Industries involved range from tech to healthcare, revealing the diverse opportunities for multiple job holders.
"It's best to find something that is remote, has simple repetitive workloads, and is highly systemisable," said Wedding, 25, who's based in Australia.
Many job-jugglers told BI the financial benefits have generally outweighed the downsides and risks.
Read at Business Insider
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