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Most social media influencers want to cash in on the metaverse: survey – Markets Insider

Growth projections for the metaverse are reaching into the trillions of dollars, and most social media influencers say they're contributing to the burgeoning virtual world but the majority have yet to turn a profit for their efforts, according to a recent survey.

A 56% majority of US social media influencers are participating in the metaverse, said influencer marketing platform Izea about its findings from an online survey conducted in November.

The metaverse refers to the next version of the internet in which immersive worlds are experienced through virtual-reality and augmented-reality headsets. Companies including Facebook parent Meta and software giant Microsoft are putting money and resources into preparing spaces to draw in virtual foot traffic and advertisers.

Social media stars hold the potential to drive more people to play, shop, and work in the metaverse in the coming years, and 60% of influencers see themselves as participating in the metaverse as creators, said Izea.

The firm said brands can leverage influencers by having them host virtual events or co-create and promote NFTs. Influencers can already make hundreds of thousands of dollars a year promoting brands on popular social platforms such as Instagram.

Meanwhile, 51% of influencers are considering ways of making money from the metaverse, said Izea. But only 21% said they are already bringing in money from their virtual ventures.

Still, investment banks have been among those on Wall Street projecting huge potential in the metaverse. Goldman Sachs, for one, foresees the metaverse becoming an $8 trillion market. Crypto giant Grayscale projects $1 trillion in annual revenue being drawn in from metaverse advertising, hardware and other components.

With so much money to be made, how would influencers prefer to be paid for their time and effort in the metaverse? Bitcoin, said 49% of them. Ether was the choice of 9% of respondents followed by "another cryptocurrency," at 5%.

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Most social media influencers want to cash in on the metaverse: survey - Markets Insider

Send2Press Announces 22nd Anniversary Celebration with 22% off its Press Release Distribution Services – Digital Journal

TEMECULA, Calif., Feb. 21, 2022 (SEND2PRESS NEWSWIRE) Send2Press, a newswire service of Neotrope, announced today that for its 22nd anniversary celebration in 2022, it will be offering both new and existing clients a 22% discount on services starting 2/22/22 and running through March 2, 2022. Send2Press has consistently been ranked one of the top newswire services overall based on honesty and credibility.

Its been quite a journey for our family-owned business the past 22 years, said Send2Press co-founder and Neotrope CEO, Christopher Simmons. The news dissemination business has changed markedly with the ongoing shift from print to online, and the rise of social media as a major media platform.

Simmons added, Remaining small and agile has allowed us to weather many economic storms including the recession and pandemic, and retain our focus on quality over quantity. We thought numerically, we should do something fun, and 22 percent off on 2/22/22 for our twenty-second anniversary would be good timing.

How the Promotion Works:

Starting Feb. 22, 2022, North American customers can get 22% off on Send2Press press release distribution plans using the coupon code: 22222 (five 2s). Limit one use per person, agency, company, group, or org. Can be used for multiple plans/packages, but all must be used in 2022, and there is maximum discount of $222. Does not apply to writing services or social media promotion or other add-ons. Cannot be combined with any other promotion or discount.

Coupon/offer expires March 2, 2022 and no credit will be applied to orders not properly entering coupon during checkout (discount will clearly be shown when coupon entered) and cannot be applied to any prior or existing orders. Use of this coupon will be for no rush push time, with 48-hour turnaround from approved copy submission (e.g., news approved Monday, would push Wednesday, not same or next day; news approved Tuesday would push Thursday, etc.).

View current plans and pricing at: https://www.send2press.com/services/price-list.shtml

View current client projects at: https://www.send2press.com/wire/

All pricing is per release issued and not a subscription or membership. All content accepted subject to our Acceptable Content Policy (ACP).

About Send2Press:

Send2Press, founded in 2000, offers affordable press release distribution, writing, and social media marketing. Send2Press was named best overall of the top six press release services in 2020 by Fit Small Business. Send2Press is a dba of Neotrope, founded in 1983 in California.

Neotrope has been an innovative content development, publishing, audio/video, public relations (PR) and marketing company since Jan. 1983. Neotrope was an INC. 5000 listed company in 2009.

The company was co-founded by author, artist, journalist, musician and marketing/PR expert, Christopher Laird Simmons, and the late Dr. JL Simmons, PhD, a best-selling author and respected university professor.

Send2Press Newswire offers:

Learn more at: https://www.Send2Press.com/

LEGAL NOTE: Send2Press and Neotrope are U.S. registered trademarks and service marks. Neotrope is a registered trademark in Europe.

News Source: Neotrope

To view the original post, visit: https://www.send2press.com/wire/send2press-announces-22nd-anniversary-celebration-with-22-off-its-press-release-distribution-services/.

This press release was issued by Send2Press Newswire on behalf of the news source, who is solely responsible for its accuracy. http://www.send2press.com.

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Send2Press Announces 22nd Anniversary Celebration with 22% off its Press Release Distribution Services - Digital Journal

How to turn your hobby into an income stream – The Guardian

Do your research

Find out what the market is like for the product or service you are offering. How many other people are offering the same, or similar? Do they seem to be busy? How much do they charge?

Some particularly profitable hobbies include making quality bespoke goods such as jewellery, wall hangings, buying and reselling vintage fashion, or services such as music or language tutoring and gardening.

Think, too, about where you see these services advertised. Etsy, for example, is a great place to sell crafts but sites such as Fiverr and TaskRabbit are better for selling skills, such as home improvement or writing services.

Make sure you are clear on any regular costs incurred by selling your services or products on these platforms.

Etsy charges 15p for each listing and asks for a 5% fee when you sell. If you make a sale directly through its offsite advertising, it charges a 15% fee.

It is free to set up on TaskRabbit it adds a standard service fee on to your clients invoice, as well as any VAT.

Fiverr, meanwhile, takes 20% of every transaction and charges your clients a service fee.

Does the cost justify the profits you stand to make or would it be easier to sell via social media, on sites such as Facebook Marketplace?

Dont sign up to anything that costs money until youve considered your options. The last thing you want is another bill that adds to your monthly expenses rather than helping alleviate them.

Deciding on the perfect price point is key to the success of your side project. You want to charge a figure that is competitive, will satisfy your customer, and bring in the money you need to make a profit.

To do this, consider your costs for making a single item or providing a service. How much will raw materials, posting and packaging, travel expenses and more, add up to? Can you lower these costs by buying some items in bulk or exploiting supplier discounts?

If you are selling something you make, consider, too, how long it takes and your level of experience. If, for example, it requires days of work to make a single piece, the price should reflect that.

Consider what the price you are thinking of charging converts to as an hourly rate, and decide if that is reasonable. If you are providing a service, this will be more straightforward and easier to compare with the market.

If in doubt go over, rather than under. It is far easier to reduce the price than it is to increase it.

Think about who your typical customer is likely to be and where they might look for a product or service you are selling. Are they social media users or using search engines such as Google to locate what they need quickly? Do they live locally, or are they spread across the country?

It can make sense to do your marketing and sales in one place. For example, if you set up a storefront on Instagram or Facebook you can grow your audience on the same platform via hashtags and content. These are free to set up and launch.

If you want to upgrade for greater reach and management options when you become more established, there are a number of pricing plans via software companies such as Ecwid that allow you to do so from 19 a month.

Alternatively, you can set up your own website for free via sites such as Wix.com and use social media tools purely for marketing purposes.

Take advantage of classic PR and marketing opportunities by offering comment to journalists looking for information about your products or areas of expertise, sending samples, or guest blogging for sites that target the type of audience you are trying to reach.

Local free magazines and forums are a good place to get your name known.

Dr Nikki Ramskill turned her hobby of blogging about personal finances into a small coaching business, the Female Money Doctor, which she runs alongside her main job as a GP. She charges 1,050 for a bundle of six money coaching sessions, as well as providing free resources and low-cost planning advice to those who need it via her website.

Stay organised, she says. Dedicate a time to work on your project, and do a little towards it every day, even if it is just posting a listing on Etsy. Be gentle with yourself and realistic about how much you can achieve around your main job.

She also recommends keeping marketing and admin tasks small and not letting perfect be the enemy of good.

Master a handful of things first, she says. No one is amazing at social media straight away, it evolves as time goes on and you adapt. It doesnt have to be perfect either. Dont spend hours choosing a colour for your logo, for example. You can always adapt it further down the line.

Set up an account for your hobby to separate your earnings from your personal finances, and consider using digital tools to stay on top of your taxes.

Any side business earning upwards of 1,000 a year must be declared to HM Revenue and Customs, and you need to complete a tax return at the end of January each year or face penalties and fines.

Enzo Ottens is a co-founder of the fintech app Earnr, which allows you to track how much income tax you owe as you earn before you earn 3,000.

One of the main things we try to warn people about beforehand is to think about whether to set up a limited company, he says. Mainly because of the additional admin that comes with that the balance sheets, the statement of accounts and the hundreds you will end up paying an accountant to manage it. We recommend setting up as a sole trader first.

We also see a lot of our customers register with HMCR too early even before theyve made 1,000 in sales. And then they have to do a tax return even though they may not yet have made those sales.

Other products aimed at those running small businesses include NatWests Mettle account, which allows you to create and send invoices on the go and prepare your accounts for taxes, and the SumUp app, which creates payment links you can send to customers and clients. Both are free to set up.

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How to turn your hobby into an income stream - The Guardian

Spirituality, simplicity & sound: How brands can keep up with the shifts on social | shots – Shots

Above: 117.8 million people in the US listen to podcast each month, with the medium becoming a trusted media source.Simpler social

In a period of chaos, we have seen a yearning for simplified social in our collective consciousness.Nostalgic conventions have made a return, such as the creation of collages, journaling and the Y2K aesthetic, coupled with new trends like ASMR and mukbangs.

A simplified content and connection approach is a welcome shift in a social world where more was more for so long. It will allow brands to take a step back and rethink their content strategy to connect with what audiences are craving.

Simpler social can be an opportunity for brands to connect, or reconnect, with both young and older generations through nostalgic activations and become relevant through these born-again, simplified trends.

With40% of Gen Zand Millennials trusting podcasts more than traditional media sources and117.8 millionpeople listening to podcasts monthly in the US alone in 2021, the rise of the more intimate, audio-focused features such as Twitter Spaces will continue this year. In fact, the platforms are betting on it.Meta is in the process of building an audio product to rival Clubhouse's 2021 success, and LinkedIn announced the launch of a similar product, Audio Rooms, in 2022. Podcasts and audio-led social interactions continue to be a key source of entertainment, information, and advertisement.

Having an audio channel embedded into a brand's strategy will be a key point of development. Brands have started creating sponsored Twitter Spaces rooms or interacting in popular audio-chat rooms such as #SingYourDialect (which attracted 300,000 listeners over two nights). But this is only the beginning.

In the UK specifically, for brands who are affected by the new HSFF regulations [high in fat, sugar and salt] coming into effect later this year, podcasts will be one of the only mediums that are untouched by these new marketing regulations.Yet, despite consumers now spending a third of their media time with audio, according to a recentWARC LIONS Intelligence study, most brands spend less than 10% of their media budget on it.

2022 needs to be the year of audio investment and getting the right size of media investment as part of that.

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Spirituality, simplicity & sound: How brands can keep up with the shifts on social | shots - Shots

The New USSR: The Union of Socialist States of Red | Opinion – Newsweek

The nation's foreign policy focus has turned to how to contain Russian President Vladimir Putin's ambitions toward Ukraine, and his underlying goal of finding ways to reconstitute Russia's control over neighboring states, as he pines for the old days of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR). Whether Putin will use military force or other forms of continued intimidation tactics, there is little doubt he is haunted by the dissolution of the USSR and is looking for some way to reconstitute Russian influence and control over Ukraine and other key former Soviet republics.

In the United States, while it goes unrecognized, we have our own USSRa collective of red states that are bound together in our union benefitting from the very socialism they claim to disdain, but which is so apparent they must be termed "The Union of Socialist States of Red."

What do I mean by that? Well, let's turn to Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell and his quite ridiculous but repeatedly used term to attack Democratic policies as "socialist." McConnell and the Republican chorus have lambasted the Biden Build Back Better bill and its components by stating that if adopted, the United States would devolve into a state of "permanent socialism." Their critique is that the redistribution of wealth through renewing child credits, increasing access to child care, providing for pre-kindergarten education, or broadening Medicare coverage, are not vitally important policy initiatives but rather tenets of Democratic plans to create a socialist republic.

However, the real champions of redistributing wealth in a way that takes money from those who pay a much bigger share of the federal tax burden and channels it to those who shoulder considerably less in federal taxes are Mitch McConnell and his Republican red state "comrades." It is the blue states like New York, California, Connecticut and Massachusetts which pay into the federal government far greater amounts of federal tax revenue than what they get back from the federal government. Moreover, it is states like McConnell's home state of Kentucky that pay far less in taxes to the federal government than what they actually get back.

According to the Rockefeller Institute of Government, which measures so called state balance of tax paymentshow much each state pays in taxes to the federal government versus what the federal government grants and spends in each stateover a 5-year period New York taxpayers, for instance, have paid in $142.6 billion more to the federal government than they have gotten back from the feds in money distributed to the state. In 2019, alone New York's balance of payments with the federal government was that it received almost $23 billion less in federal expenditures relative to what it paid in.

On the other hand, taking Mitch McConnell's Kentucky, that state received $63 billion more in payments from the federal government than its citizens paid in taxes to Washington. To break that down on an individual citizen basis, on average a New Yorker is paying $1,172 more to the federal government than is being spent by the federal government per person in the state; whereas, in Kentucky on a per capita basis they are getting $14,153 more per capita returned to the state than they are paying in federal taxes. This red state favorable balance of payments redistribution whereby the state gets more back than it pays in, benefits big and small red states alikefrom the biggest one like Texas, to midsize states like Louisiana, to smaller ones like North and South Dakota and Wyoming.

There is nothing new about this data. It has been true for a long time. What is remarkable is that even states like Texas with a huge economy get back more than they send to the federal coffers. Yet, Texas Senator Ted Cruz throws around the "socialist" attack on blue state Democrats as much as anybody. So, one can surmise the way Republicans see it, as long as you are redistributing income back to their state disproportionally it is not wealth redistribution socialism, but if it is money going to lower and middle-class citizens as part of a social safety net then it is.

This also raises the question why Democratic response to the use of the socialist attack has not been squarely aimed at pointing this out. That if Republicans were truly anti-socialistusing their own concept of socialism that redistribution of significant wealth subsidizing those who pay in far less to the governmentthen Republicans should be willing to readjust all kinds of federal expenditures, and become advocates for far more money being spent in states like New York, New Jersey, Massachusetts, California, Connecticut, Minnesota and Colorado, the blue states that are on the short end of the balance of payments stick.

Democrats ought to be far better deflecting the all too often used "socialist" attack with the compelling argument that their party stands for fairness for working families, while red state Republicans are advocates of diverting federal funds under a socialist game plan. However, given that key swing states Democrats need are beneficiaries of how income tax revenue is currently redistributed, the argument would need to be put forward in a way which simply points out Republicans in fact support the very "socialist" practices they criticize. This disproportionate levying of taxes on blue states relative to what they get back is one of the key policy arguments in favor of allowing high tax blue states to get a federal tax deduction on their state and local taxes, though at this point that seems like a dead issue.

Red used to be a descriptor referring to communist states like Russia. Now, of course, red is a descriptor for that part of the country that supports Donald Trump, himself a great devotee of the Russian president. Red also represents the embarrassment Republicans should feel for their hypocrisy in actually being unabashed partisans for socialist redistribution.

If the "socialism" label is going to be thrown around in such a silly fashion and applied to federal policies that are intended to benefit those who need the most help, let's make sure socialism is called out everywhere it applies; and, that McConnell is clearly understood as being the biggest socialism advocate of all, and his state of Kentucky the number one balance of payments welfare recipient in the Union of Socialist States of Red.

While Democrats and Republicans appear largely united in expressing resistance to Putin in his attempts to bring Ukraine back into some USSR era zone of influencehow about Republicans also joining Democrats in tearing down the USSR in the USA, and abolishing this Union of Socialist States of Red, by advocating blue states getting back from the federal government as much as they pay in?

Tom Rogers is an editor-at-large for Newsweek, the founder of CNBC and a CNBC contributor. He also established MSNBC, is the former CEO of TiVo, currently executive chair of Engine Media and is former senior counsel to a congressional committee.

The views expressed in this article are the writer's own.

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The New USSR: The Union of Socialist States of Red | Opinion - Newsweek