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  • Six of One, Half a Dozen of the Other

    Author: Elena Fawkner
    You've read many articles I'm sure about the advantages and
    disadvantages of working for yourself from your own home.
    Many of them I've written myself, in fact. But how many
    articles have you read that give equal time to the advantages
    of working for someone else compared to working for yourself?

    This article seeks to redress the imbalance by comparing and
    contrasting the respective pros and cons of running your own
    home-based business and working for someone else.

    COMMUTING

    When you work for yourself from home, your commute is,
    at most, a few steps from one end of the house to the other.
    When you work in a traditional paid "job" your commute may
    be a five minute drive or it may be an hour and a half or worse.
    Both ways. That can add up to a substantial chunk of time
    over the course of a week, a month or a year.

    CHILDREN

    If you work from home, you can be around for your kids. If
    you work outside the home, you may be spending a fortune
    on childcare if your kids are too young for school and worrying
    about what they're up to between the end of the school day
    and when you get home if they're not.

    On the other hand, having kids around while trying to run a
    professional business from home can be a major distraction
    and constant source of interruption. You may find you need
    to use childminding services occasionally to take care of
    business undisturbed.

    INDEPENDENCE AND AUTONOMY

    When you work for yourself, you call the shots, you make the
    decisions and you do it without anyone looking over your
    shoulder and breathing down your neck. When you work
    outside the home, you are subject to the decisions (good and
    bad), whims and control of your boss. Your boss dictates your
    regimen.

    On the other hand, along with decision-making autonomy
    comes an awful burden. If you get it wrong, you may not make
    any money this week.

    WORKING HOURS

    When you work for yourself, you can set your own hours -
    both the actual hours you work and the number. When you
    work for a boss, you work when and for how long you're told
    (within limits, obviously).

    Although setting your own hours may sound like freedom
    to you, all too often working your own hours translates into
    working all hours so you need to be able to set limits for
    yourself.

    Also, when your boss dictates your hours, that may or may
    not fit in with your body clock. One of the real advantages
    of working for yourself is that you can choose to work during
    your peak concentration time and not at all during your
    sluggish times of the day. If your peak time is 5:00 am
    through to 10:00 am, you can work those hours and another
    couple sometime in the afternoon catching up on brainless
    type tasks. If you work for someone else, you work when
    you're told and if that doesn't work with your body clock, too
    bad.

    STATUS

    If you're a professional in the paid workforce, you may enjoy
    a certain status and prestige, if that's important to you. On
    the other hand, working for yourself you may find it difficult
    to be taken seriously at all. Again, whether that's a relevant
    factor depends on how important things like "status", "image"
    etc. are to you. If they are important, take this seriously.
    Although it may sound shallow, if it's going to be a thorn in
    your side, give it some serious thought.

    BOUNDARIES

    When you work for someone else, you have a ready-made
    structure. There is a time for work, and there is a time to go
    home. When you work for yourself, these boundaries can
    become blurred over time, so much so that you may find
    you have difficulty turning work off since you are, after all,
    living in your work environment and vice versa.

    PERSONAL DISCIPLINE

    If you're a personally disciplined person, working from home
    will probably suit you very well. But if you find it difficult
    to motivate yourself to do what has to be done and you
    find yourself procrastinating over starting a particular work-
    related task, you may find the distractions of being at home
    particularly difficult to resist. If you find yourself doing laundry
    and gardening when you should be working, this may be a
    problem for you.

    CASH FLOW

    This is one of the biggies. THE big advantage of working
    for someone else is that you have a regular paycheck coming
    in. Leaving aside any worry of downsizing, assuming you do
    your job competently, you can reasonably expect to receive
    a certain, known amount of money at regular intervals. When
    you work for yourself, however, the amount of money you make
    and when you receive it can be, at best, spasmodic.

    On the other hand, the money you make from working from
    someone else is limited to your salary. When you work for
    yourself, the sky's the limit provided you are successful at
    what you do.

    EXPENSES

    When you work for someone else, your boss is responsible
    for capital expenditure and day to day expenses and you
    don't have to worry about it or even think about it, for that
    matter. When you work for yourself, however, you're responsible
    for buying your capital equipment (computer, photocopier, fax
    machine) and paying for repairs as needed. You're responsible
    for paying your own electricity and phone bills, printing costs and
    advertising expenses ... you name it, it falls on you.

    BENEFITS

    Similarly, when you work for someone else you get to participate
    in your employer's pension plan, you get paid health insurance
    and vacations as well as numerous other benefits. When you
    work for yourself, to get any of these things you have to pay for
    them out of your own pocket.

    RISK MANAGEMENT

    Your employer pays for various insurances to protect the
    business unit from risk. The types of insurance taken out will
    depend on the nature of the business but will include, at a
    minimum, products liability, business interruption and the like.
    Again, as a home business owner, you must foot the bill for
    this expenditure.

    LICENSES

    Your employer is responsible for ensuring that the business
    obtains and maintains all necessary business licenses. If
    you're the boss, this is your responsibility.

    VACATIONS

    When you're an employee, you get paid vacations. When
    you're self-employed you don't. And even if you decide to
    take a couple of weeks off, who's going to run the business
    in your absence? Can you really just walk away for two
    weeks? In reality, when you work for yourself, true vacations
    are a thing of the past.

    TAX

    As an employee, the most you have worry about is paying
    your state and federal income tax and claiming whatever
    credits you're entitled to. When you're an employer
    you have to think about all of that as well as self-employment
    tax and a myriad of other business-related tax issues. An
    accountant becomes an absolute necessity. Also, as a self-
    employed person, no-one's withholding tax from your checks.
    Make sure you put enough aside to pay the tax bill!

    SECURITY

    Security is relative. For some, security comes only from
    working for someone else. For others, this is merely an
    illusory form of "security" since none of us really knows
    what's around the corner. We could be next to be laid off.
    For some, real security can only come from being in control
    of their own destiny and that means working for oneself.

    SKILL SET

    As a self-employed person you need a broad skill set. Not
    only must you be able to perform the main skills inherent
    in the business you have chosen for yourself, you must also
    be able to handle the myriad other jobs around the office
    that your secretary would otherwise do for you if you were
    in the paid workforce. This forces you to be something of
    a generalist which in turn dissipates your focus from the
    central core of your business. When you work for someone
    else, you are generally more able to specialize in a particular
    area and, over time, develop something of an expert status,
    increasing your marketability in the workforce.

    WARDROBE

    In the corporate work-world, you have a certain professional
    image to uphold. When you work for yourself, at least
    on days when you don't have to meet with clients, you can
    wear what you want, even your rattiest sweats, if that's what
    you feel most comfortable in.

    HARD WORK

    Some people think that leaving the paid workforce to work
    for themselves from home means they will work less hard
    and fewer hours. The reality is usually the opposite. In the
    early days of a home business you will probably find you
    need to work harder and longer, only to make less money
    than you did in your paid job. This will get easier over time
    but in the early days, expect to have your nose to the
    grindstone.

    RETIREMENT PLAN

    Who's going to provide for your retirement when you work
    for yourself? You've got it, you! No more employer-funded
    pension plans for you.

    GETTING PAID

    When you work for someone else you get paid like clockwork,
    even if your employer hasn't yet been paid what he or she
    is owed from clients. When you work for yourself, whether
    your client pays often determines whether YOU get paid. So
    you need to be diligent in following up slow payers and take
    appropriate action in response to non-payers.

    OFFICE POLITICS

    When you work for yourself you can kiss goodbye the
    endless office politics that used to drive you crazy. On the
    other hand, you're also out of the loop.

    ISOLATION AND LONELINESS

    Along with being out of the loop comes the isolation monster.
    Although the early days of your home business may be an
    absolute luxury compared to the rigors of your corporate work-
    life, over time you may find you start missing the office
    politics and lunches with colleagues.

    OUT OF THE LOOP

    Once you leave the corporate life for home-business
    entrepreneurship you may find it hard to get back in, if that's
    what you decide to do. Many employers will label you as
    "not corporate enough" if you've been out of the workforce for
    any length of time. They may also, however unfairly, figure
    that you couldn't make it in the corporate world which is
    why you left to start your own home business and now that's
    failed too.

    These are just a few of the issues you need to think about
    when deciding whether working for yourself or working for
    someone else is right for you. It's crucial to be brutally
    honest with yourself about your particular strengths and
    weaknesses, as well as your emotional and mental make-up.
    A good way to dip your toe in is to consider moonlighting -
    starting a home business on the side while you continue to
    work your full-time job.

    Sure, this will mean some both-ends candle burning but better
    that than making the break and then finding out you made a
    mistake. Another alternative that may work well for some is
    to telecommute. Work for someone else out of the comfort
    of your own home. These types of positions are pretty rare
    and usually can only be negotiated by long-term employees
    in positions that lend themselves to individual, as opposed to
    team, projects. But don't let that discourage you. If you
    have particular expertise in a field that lends itself well to
    telecommuting and your boss won't go for it, start looking
    around for companies that will hire you on this basis.

    FURTHER READING

    This article touches on some of the major areas that you
    need to think about when deciding whether the self-
    employed or employed option is best for you. For a more
    detailed treatment of these and other issues, check out
    the following articles at http://www.ahbbo.com/articles.html :
    => And Never the Twain Should Meet
    => Checklist for the New Home-Based Business
    => Entrepreneurship: Do You Have What It Takes?
    => Flipping the Switch: How to Turn Off Your Business and
    and Turn On Your Life
    => Focus Your Light
    => Getting Paid ... Minimizing Bad Debts in Your Home Business
    => How the 9 to 5 Grind Could Be Costing You More Than You
    Earn
    => Look Before You Leap ... Is a Home-Based Business REALLY
    For You?
    => Moonlighting's Greatest Challenge ... How to Beat the Time
    Crunch
    => One Foot in Each Camp
    => Overcoming Isolation in Your Home Business
    => Overcoming Procrastination in Your Home Business
    => Putting Theory Into Practice ... A Personal Perspective
    => So You Want to Be a Freelancer
    => The 9 to 5 Home-Business Tug O'War
    => The Telecommuting Alternative.

    About the Author

    Elena Fawkner is editor of A Home-Based Business Online ... practical
    home business ideas, resources and strategies for the
    work-from-home entrepreneur.
    http://www.ahbbo.com

    ...

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