- Deciding what to spend money on to start up a business is scary, yet exhilirating. Software, supplies, courses, professional associations; there are plenty of places to spend it. What's the strategy?
- Continue to hone skills and knowledge about trends in your industry.
- Writing down your values and goals is crucial.
- Create boundaries between work and home life, especially when your office is 20 feet from the laundry room.
- Creating informal and/or formal "mentor relationships" - people who will listen, encourage, and play devil's advocate.
- It's ok to say no. Stand up for what you want to do, and where you can best use your strengths.
- A trusted accountant is worth every penny - and even better, may give guidance for free.
- Pass it on - if it is work you cannot do or are too busy to do, refer a colleague.
- Your business goals are just as important as the goals of the potential client with whom you are negotiating.
- It's impossible to be in four places at once.
- Being a consultant is a "real job", despite when people ask when you will get a "real job again."
- Have a backup plan. Sometimes clients offer you a job via email and then back out four days before it is supposed to start, though you've already filled out tax paperwork for them.
- Establish a system for recordkeeping, invoicing, and other accounting tasks.
- Not everything has to be perfect right out of the gate. Sometimes a genuine conversation about potential opportunities is the best way to start - websites and blogs can come later, for example.
- With great risk comes great reward.
- Those who say being a consultant means never having to deal with corporate politics must have not ever been a consultant. Now I deal with politics in multiple corporations, simultaneously!
- Believe in yourself. When you falter in that belief, surround yourself with others who believe in you.
22 March 2010
Reflections Upon 1 Year of Entrepreneuership
After six months spent consulting part-time in addition to working more than a full-time job in the corporate sector, I decided to try my hand at being a full fledged entrepreneur by forming a limited liability corporation. Here are just a few brief musings, learnings, and reflections upon the trials and tribulations of my first year as a "solo-preneuer."
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Congratulations to a true professional! Smart, dedicated, creative, conscientious, and fun. A client couldn't ask for more. You are the 'go-to' person for many. Thank you. May your entrepreneur light shine for many more successful years to come.
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