How to Make Money on Blogger: AdSense, Multiple Blogs & Selling Sites
How to Make Money on Blogger: AdSense, Multiple Blogs & Selling Sites
By Aveline Marlowe
The Value of Time for Crossdressers
Every crossdresser values time — the time where we can fully embrace our feminine alter ego. And so do I. At the moment, I’ve set myself a small but meaningful goal: to spend at least four days a year living as my female self. Four entire days where I can slip into my femininity, wear the clothes I love, and simply be.
It’s not a lot of time, but it’s a start. Yet if I’m honest, it doesn’t feel like enough. I want more. I crave more. Maybe that makes me greedy, but I know I’m not alone. Many of us look at the women around us — in their smart trouser suits, their heels, their carefully chosen makeup and jewelry — and think, that could be me.
The Struggle with Conventional Work
In my current role, I have the flexibility to work from home two days a week. On paper, that’s perfect. In reality, there are limitations.
Yes, I could technically rent a co-working space, set up my laptop, and spend the day as a woman. No one there would know me. I’d just be another professional working quietly, sipping coffee, blending into the background.
But there’s always that lingering fear. What if I’m suddenly asked to attend a site visit? What if I need to meet a client face-to-face? The idea of hastily changing back into my male self feels stressful and undermines the freedom I’d hoped for.
That’s when I started thinking seriously: maybe conventional employment will never give me the freedom I truly want.
Why Blogger Came to Mind
So where does Blogger fit into this story? For me, it represents possibility. A path toward independence.
Blogging has been around for decades, but it’s still relevant today. Millions of people read blogs every single day, whether they’re looking for style tips, career advice, or simply personal stories they can connect with. Blogger, being a free and simple platform, removes many of the barriers to entry. You don’t need hosting fees, complicated coding, or endless setup. You just start writing.
Could this be the answer? Could blogging actually become a route to self-employment — one that allows me to live authentically?
Can You Really Make Money from Blogger?
The first question people ask is always the same: But can you actually make money from blogging?
The short answer is yes — though it takes time, patience, and strategy. The most common income stream is Google AdSense, where ads are placed on your blog and you earn revenue when people view or click them. It’s not a get-rich-quick scheme, but it’s a foundation.
The key is to think of blogging like fishing. No fisherman casts just one rod and sits back hoping for the best. They use two, three, or more rods at once. Each one increases their chances of catching something. Blogging can work the same way.
One Google account allows up to 100 blogs. Of course, writing for 100 different sites is ambitious (and maybe a little insane), but the point is clear: the more quality content you put out into the world, the greater your chance of building an audience and generating income.
The Idea of Selling Blogs
But then another idea struck me: even if I don’t personally manage dozens of blogs, what if I create them as assets?
Think about it. Many new bloggers quit within months. Why? Because it’s overwhelming. Setting up the design, learning how to format posts, waiting for Google to index your content — it all takes time. Most people don’t want to deal with the technical frustrations; they just want to write.
That’s where selling blogs comes in. If I build blogs with a few quality posts, get them indexed, and then sell them as “ready-to-go” platforms, I could tap into a completely different market.
In fact, age matters online. Older domains and blogs are often valued more highly because search engines trust them more. So even a blog with modest content but a few months or years of history could be desirable.
It’s essentially digital real estate. Some people flip houses — I could flip blogs.
A Lifeline for Others Too
The more I thought about it, the more I realized this isn’t just about me. Blogging can also be a lifeline for others.
Take disabled people, for example. Many struggle to fit into the rigid schedules of traditional employment. But blogging doesn’t care when you work. You can write at 2 a.m. if that’s when you feel your best. You can spend an hour on a post, then rest, and come back later. There’s no boss breathing down your neck, no commute to worry about.
For those who crave flexibility, autonomy, and a creative outlet, blogging could be not just a hobby but a real form of income.
My Personal Dream
For me, this vision is about more than money. It’s about freedom. It’s about walking into a co-working space in a fitted trousers suit, makeup on, laptop in hand, and knowing that I’m working for myself — not for someone else. It’s about building a life that matches who I am on the inside.
Will it be easy? No. Blogging is competitive, and success takes time. But every post I write, every blog I experiment with, brings me closer to the possibility of self-employment on my own terms.
Final Thoughts: Watch This Space
So, can Blogger really be a business? I believe it can. Whether it’s through AdSense, multiple blogs, or even flipping ready-made sites, the opportunities are there.
For me, it’s more than just business. It’s a potential pathway to authenticity, freedom, and living the life I’ve always dreamed of.
Watch this space — because with a little determination, I might just make it happen.
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