Notion ? It's profitable in 2026 .

Beyond templates... how are people actually making money with Notion?

Every time I search this, I get the same answers: templates, courses, consulting.

I'm curious if anyone is using Notion in a more unconventional way to make money.

What's the most underrated or unique business model you've seen?

reddit.com
u/Last-Year7645 — 2 days ago
▲ 0 r/KDP

Help me ?

I have same ebooks in I want to published in KDP , you. Can help me to find the best courses in this topic ,

reddit.com
u/Last-Year7645 — 2 days ago

If you had to make your first $10,000 online starting today, what would you focus on?

I've been thinking about this a lot lately.

Imagine you're starting from absolute zero.

  • No audience
  • No investors
  • No expensive courses
  • No special connections
  • Just a laptop, internet, and a few hours every day.

Your goal is simple:

Earn your first $10,000 online as realistically as possible.

Not looking for:

  • ❌ Crypto moonshots
  • ❌ Gambling
  • ❌ MLMs
  • ❌ "AI makes you rich overnight"

I'm interested in methods that people have actually used, such as:

  • Learning a valuable skill
  • Freelancing
  • Selling digital products
  • Print-on-demand
  • Content creation
  • Affiliate marketing
  • Building a SaaS
  • Automation/AI services
  • Local businesses
  • Anything else with real proof behind it

If you had to start over today, what exact path would you take?

I'd love to hear:

  • What you'd start with
  • How long you think it would take
  • Biggest mistakes to avoid
  • What you'd never waste time on again

I'm hoping this thread becomes a practical roadmap rather than generic "work hard" advice.

reddit.com
u/Last-Year7645 — 4 days ago

What's one "small" change you made that ended up saving your business hours every week?

I've noticed something interesting while talking to other small business owners.

The biggest improvements rarely come from huge investments. They're usually tiny workflow changes that remove repetitive work.

For example, I've seen businesses save hours each week just by:

  • Creating canned replies for common customer questions.
  • Using a simple intake form instead of endless back-and-forth messages.
  • Automating appointment reminders.
  • Keeping SOPs so employees stop asking the same questions repeatedly.

I'm curious:

What's one small change that had a surprisingly big impact on your business?

It doesn't have to be software—it could be a habit, process, spreadsheet, template, or anything else that made life easier.

I'd love to steal a few good ideas from this community.

reddit.com
u/Last-Year7645 — 4 days ago

Pinterest account

I have a account Pinterest for niche dogs , I can change the account niche ? It's good or not for my old account!!!!!

reddit.com
u/Last-Year7645 — 4 days ago