When job hunting is riskier than going solo
(c) Copyright 2002, Cathy Goodwin, Ph.D.
Many people start a business to "be my own boss" or "find
meaning in my work." Yet increasingly I talk to clients who
realize they are more likely to find success by starting a
business than by starting a job hunt.
Let's say you join a company, degree in hand, at entry
level. You move up the ladder for fifteen, twenty, even
twenty-five years. Now you're a senior manager in your
mid-forties or early fifties. And your job disappears.
2008 "Top Picks" Work at Home Earn $10 to $75 per hour part time, We offer Work At Home listings that have been investigated and approved by a large community of researchers. We offer a fair review of the best work at home programs.
|
Or you've established a high profile. You may be a
politician, a senior bank official or a broadcaster.
Following your much-publicized firing, you can't just show
up on a corporate doorstep to apply for a job. If you're
not invited in, you'll be left in the cold.
Despite the siren call of business ownership, I find
clients often resist the idea. "I just want another job,"
some say. "With benefits."
Risk-averse managers focus on the numbers: "Ninety percent
of businesses fail. Most don't last five years."
True. But these days, your next job may not last five years.
"Carlene," a fifty-year-old sales manager, lost her job
following a merger. A truly gifted salesperson and manager,
she does not have an entrepreneurial bone in her body. She
held three jobs in the next five years, all shaky, all a
step down, all miserable. She continues to haunt the
headhunters.
Most people who fit this profile also haunt the therapists
and the pharmacists. Being knocked down repeatedly can be
hazardous to your mental health.
There are ways to reduce risk of business failure: plan
carefully, choose your market wisely, don't panic. You
remain in control. And if you fail, you've gained valuable
lessons for the next venture.
If you are lucky enough to land in a job, use the
opportunity to begin planning your own venture. But don't
kid yourself. You may find yourself earning more money,
faster, than you will through a job hunt. Even a small
amount is better than zero.
Benefits are hard to lose and society has not caught up to
what Daniel Pink calls the Free Agent Nation. We need
legislation to support those who start businesses following
job loss, whether their soul is entrepreneurial or
corporate. For some of us, writing to our senators may have
longer-lasting benefits than writing to personnel managers
with resumes attached.
The days of "a job to fall back on" are long gone. In the
twenty-first century, your safety net comes from what you
can do on your own.
It's a hard lesson, and many resist. Yet nearly everyone
says afterward, "I wish I had done this years ago."
You go through a tunnel, but yuu emerge stronger, firmer in
purpose, and ultimately happier. And you wish you could
tell everyone how you survived, and let them know that they
can, too.
--------------------------------
Cathy Goodwin, Ph.D. is an author, speaker and career coach
for midlife, mid-career professionals who want to make a
fast move to career freedom. Visit her website
http://www.movinglady.com/
Subscribe to her free Ezine:
http://www.movinglady.com/currnews.html
Email: cathy@movinglady.com Phone: 505-534-4294
-----------------------------------------------------------------