By Lucy · March 2026

    I Tried 5 Platforms to Monetize My Advice — Here's What I Learned

    So here's the thing. People DM me questions constantly. Career stuff, how I got started, what tools I use, whether they should quit their job — real questions that take real time to answer. I was spending hours every week on it.

    I kept seeing creators talk about monetizing their DMs and figured I'd actually try it. Not in a "I'm a thought leader" way. More like — if I'm going to spend 30 minutes writing a thoughtful answer, maybe it shouldn't be for free?

    So I signed up for five different platforms over the course of a few weeks. Here's what actually happened.

    1. Cameo

    I signed up thinking maybe I could do paid advice through video responses. The signup was fine. But the whole platform is oriented around shoutouts — birthday messages, pep talks, "say hi to my friend." The people browsing Cameo are looking for a fun video, not a real answer to "should I take this job offer?"

    It's great for what it is. But I'm not a celebrity and I don't want to record videos of myself saying happy birthday to strangers. I want to help people with actual questions. Didn't stick with it.

    2. Intro.co

    Intro does paid video calls. The idea is cool — someone books a 15 or 30 minute session with you, pays upfront, you hop on a call. The problem: I had to apply and wait for approval. And once I was in, every session required scheduling across time zones, finding a quiet spot, looking presentable on camera.

    I did a couple of calls. They were fine! But it felt like taking on freelance consulting work, not just answering the questions people already ask me. Also they take 25%, which is steep.

    3. Clarity.fm

    This one bills by the minute for phone calls. I set my rate, shared my link, and waited. Got a couple of calls. The per-minute format is weird — the caller is rushing because the clock is ticking, and I feel pressure to talk fast instead of think carefully. A lot of the questions people ask me really just need a clear written answer, not a live phone call.

    Also, the platform feels like it hasn't been updated in a while. It works, but the energy is very 2018.

    4. PaidDM

    Simple concept: set a price per message, share your link, get paid when people DM you. I liked the simplicity. But there's no tiered pricing — every message costs the same whether someone asks "what laptop do you use?" or "can you review my entire business plan?" That felt off. A quick answer and a deep one shouldn't cost the same.

    I used it for a bit. It's fine for very simple paid messaging. But I wanted more structure.

    5. Nudge

    Nudge is async text Q&A with tiered pricing. Set up took about five minutes. I created three tiers: $5 for a quick take, $15 for a detailed answer, $40 for a deep dive. Put the link in my bio.

    This is the one that clicked for me. People ask a question, I answer from my phone whenever I have a few minutes. No scheduling, no video, no per-minute clock. The tiers are nice because someone can get a quick opinion for $5 or pay more if they want me to really dig in.

    The first question came in within a day. It was someone asking about whether to switch careers into tech. I would've answered that in a DM for free anyway — but this time I actually got paid for it.

    What I Actually Learned

    The biggest surprise wasn't which platform was "best." It was that people genuinely want to pay for personalized advice. Like, they prefer it. The questions I get on Nudge are way more thoughtful than the ones I used to get in free DMs. Turns out when someone pays $15 to ask a question, they actually think about what they're asking.

    The other thing: I was overthinking it. I thought I needed to be some kind of certified expert or have a massive following. I don't. I just have experience in things people care about, and I write decent answers. That's it.

    If you're in a similar spot — people ask you stuff all the time and you want to actually get paid for the time you spend answering — just try it. Pick one platform, share the link, and see what happens. You can always adjust later.

    The Quick Summary

    CameoGreat for shoutouts and entertainment. Not for real advice.
    Intro.coGood for high-ticket consulting. Too much scheduling overhead for casual Q&A.
    ClarityPer-minute phone calls feel rushed. Platform is stale.
    PaidDMSimple but too simple. No tiered pricing, flat fee per message.
    NudgeThe one I stuck with. Async text Q&A, tiered pricing, 5-min setup.

    Want to Try It Yourself?

    Takes about 5 minutes. Set your prices, share your link. See what happens.