Mark Cuban has opened on side husstles that he would undertake to earn some extra money if he was 16 years old again.
First, he’d learn how to write prompts for artificial intelligence language models like OpenAI’s ChatGPT or Google’s Gemini. Next, he’d teach his friends how to use those prompts on their school papers. “Then, I would go to businesses, particularly small- to medium-sized businesses that don’t understand AI yet,” says Cuban. “Doesn’t matter if I’m 16, I’d be teaching them as well," he told CNBC Make It.
The Shark Tank judge's choices for side husstles are different from his actual first job, selling garbage bags door-to-door to his neighbors outside of Pittsburgh at age 12 to save up for a new pair of basketball shoes, said CBNC's report. He further continued to earn extra cash as a teenager by selling collectibles like baseball cards, stamps, and coins, eventually helping him pay to attend Indiana University. There, he bartended, hosted parties with cover charges and even picked up work as a dance instructor.
After a brief career in banking following college, Cuban fully transitioned into entrepreneurship. He sold his first company, a software startup called MicroSolutions, to CompuServe for $6 million in 1990. His second venture, the audio streaming service Broadcast.com, propelled him to billionaire status when he sold it to Yahoo for $5.7 billion in 1999.
Today, Cuban's net worth is estimated at $5.7 billion by Forbes. He dedicates much of his time to advocating for his online pharmacy, Cost