
Here's how several creators earn money as nano influencers on Instagram and other platforms.And some have turned their social-media hobbies into part-time jobs or side hustles."Nano" influencers are generally defined as having fewer than 10,000 followers on Instagram.But the sterilisation is the most important and the education If you can teach kids to treat animals better that's the ultimate. "People are not that interested in the sterilisation part because people really like to see dogs having amazing recoveries and stuff like that. But you really should turn the taps off which is the sterilisation. A lot of people spend their time mopping up the water, which is the puppies coming out, helping the dogs. He said: "There's a really good analogy that it's like a bath that's overflowing. Niall, who has written a new book titled Hope about his dog rescue mission, said spay and neuter programmes and education are key to ending the issue. "Stray dogs around the world are kind of voiceless so I want to really rally their cause and kind of eradicate street dogs around the world and champion people to look after dogs better." I said at the start 10,000 dogs but I want to make it bigger because I just see how big the problem is. He said: "I want to improve the lives of millions of street dogs around the world. The dog lover, who spends around £15,000 a month of his own money plus donations, eventually wants to tackle the problem of strays worldwide. They're hard stories, but I try and make them positive." Niall has racked up 418,000 followers on Instagram, 274,000 on TikTok and 126,000 on Twitter where he posts regular updates on the dogs he rescues. Other recent rescues include a dog called McMuffin, who was covered in cancerous tumours, and another named King Whacker, who had been hit around the hit with a pickaxe. "They'll get little scraps of food but they have no medical care, they breed, there's no system to look after them, and as a result they have a hard life." They're on every street corner, outside every restaurant. "There are eight million stray dogs from Thailand so it's a huge population of stray dogs. Then I'll come home and do a bit of social media and go to bed and get up again. I wake up at half five and then I'll be on the go.



"I genuinely don't do anything apart from the dogs. "It's tough but it's a million times more rewarding. I love dogs and helping their welfare is the most important. "So I was like I need to go and do something that's important that I love. And then your life flashes in front of your eyes and if you had died it kind of felt meaningless. "I was like I've been doing my whole life worrying about getting a new car or materialistic things.
