America's Home
www.2Work-At-Home.com December 1, 2001

In this issue:

1. A Note From Sharon
2. In The Spotlight...
    10 ideas for starting your home-based business by Monte Enbysk
3. What's New At 2Work-At-Home.com?
4. Featured Article:
    How To Choose The Most Profitable Home Business
    by Grady Smith
5. Featured Article:
    Balancing Your Priorities with Your Search for At-Home Work
    by Angela Wu
6. Great Homebased Business Idea
7. Like This Ezine?



Earn $35,000-$55,000/yr. At Home Job !

We represent the largest Dental, Legal, Vision and Prescription Drug Card networks across the country. Earn an average of $35,000-$55,000 a year just calling back customers who have already requested details. Simply read a one-page script, answer any questions and activate out member’s accounts. We provide the names and free long distance.
For details E-Mail your name to WorkAtHomeJob1@aweber.com or go to www.rclarkservices.net.


1/1

A Note From Sharon

Greetings, and a warm welcome to our new subscribers.

As 2001 winds down, now is a good time to look to the year ahead-- and to start mapping out how you're going to be successful working from home.

To help you to this end, this month's issue provides all sorts of practical information to help you to achieve that goal. Our spotlight feature is "10 ideas for starting your home-based business", where Monte Enbysk offers some excellent ideas to help you get started. Plus we have two terrific articles from Angela Wu and Grady Smith.

I'd also like to send my heartfelt wishes for a safe and peaceful Holiday Season to you and your families.

Happy Holidays!

Sharon Davis
Editor, 2Work-At-Home.com
Sharon@2work-at-home.com


FREEDOM! Opportunity! More Time!
More Money! More Choices! Want it all?
Call us: E & M Nutrition
1-800-236-0406 (or) visit our website:
www.mannapages.com/EMNutrition (or) E-Mail: EMNutrition@mannapages.com

1/1

Back To Top

10 ideas for starting your home-based business10 ideas for starting your home-based business
by Monte Enbysk


Ready to join the pajama set - that is, the millions of people who run businesses out of their homes and can work in their pajamas until noon or later if they feel like it? Yes, trading the early morning rush hour for a commute from your bedroom to your home office does sound appealing. But running a home-based business isn't for everyone. "You have to have the personality for it," says Jeff Berner, a San Francisco-area author and consultant who has worked from his home for 33 years. "If you like to work in groups and need to interact with people on a daily basis, it may not be for you."

Such warnings haven't stopped a growing number of people from joining the home business set. The number of home-based businesses in the United States surpassed 20 million this year, and is expected to eclipse 25 million by 2003 (see table), according to the research firm International Data Corp. (IDC). The average household income of those with home businesses topped $57,000 in 1998, says the IDC. Think about this as you consider entering the home-business world: Nearly 8,500 new home businesses start every day, and there are no signs of a slowdown.

The Internet is largely responsible for this "no place like home" trend, offering more ways to do business at home than the telephone ever could. In 1996, only a quarter of the home-office households had Internet access, according to IDC. Three years later, more than 65% were hooked up. Last year, as a group, small- and home-office workers spent $52.2 billion on technology, a figure that will jump to $78.8 billion in 2002.

What kind of a home-based business will you start? Here are 10 ideas from Microsoft bCentral, compiled from interviews and from a host of lists by other writers and publications. The criteria to make our top 10 were based on high ease of entry, relatively low cost, high future demand and potentially high return. See if one of them sounds like you:

1.Internet sales and marketing. Yes, indeed, there are dot-com failures around us. But the Internet train keeps gathering steam. If you have a product to sell, this is very likely the way to sell it (or auction it). If you don't have a product, you can sell someone else's from the confines of your home. "Opportunities such as e-stores, e-auctions and site selling have moved this category into the No. 1 position - that and over a billion dollars in sales last year," writes Brian Delaney in HOMEBusiness Journal. Get a Web site built and you're off and running.

2.Children's products and programs. From toys and furniture to educational programs, this category sizzles with possibilities. The U.S. birthrate is stagnating, but median family incomes are rising and so are parents' efforts to do more while having less time for their children. "With so many working parents, after-school and summer programs with substance are desperately needed," says Marcus P. Meleton of Home Business Magazine. Children's furniture, painted murals and training and exercise programs are other items that will be in demand, he says. Profit potential is moderate, but you will be doing something important.

3.Information detective or researcher. Have a bit of Sherlock Holmes in you? You can make good money by sleuthing for information that corporate executives and others need but don't have time to search for themselves. Government regulations and intelligence regarding competitors are but two areas to pursue. Technology has made information gathering easier, but also has stockpiled the amount of information to plow through. "Solve someone's time problem by offering to locate and retrieve the information they need and you'll have people knocking on your door!" Delaney says.

4.Home inspector. Home sales are increasingly dependent upon the results of a professional inspection. The inspectors generally are independent contractors who are trained and certified, many also having past experience as homebuilders or in the construction trades. While that experience is helpful, it is not mandatory. But certification is necessary if you want to move beyond having your mother-in-law and best friend as clients. Not only do buyers need home inspectors, but real estate companies, insurance firms and banks do, too.

5.Internet webmaster. Get started by developing Web sites for your church, your child's school PTSA or your politician friend. But building sites for businesses is where the money is. Training is available through the Web (naturally) at low cost, but you will need a scanner, additional disk storage, a faster Internet connection and other equipment. But if this is a labor of love for you, and you know how to market yourself, you will never be out of work. "You can earn $50 and $100 an hour and hire out as a contractor to businesses for large [Web site] developments," says Meleton.

6.Personal assistant. For many business people today, time is more precious than money. You help them, not by unplugging their clocks, but by doing their shopping, running errands, chauffeuring children and doing other tasks that effectively give them more personal time. The most ambitious here will also see ways to become virtual business assistants by providing services such as word processing, newsletter writing, even digital photography or Web site design. "Serve your clients in as many ways as you know how," Claire Liston, 28, tells Entrepreneur magazine. Liston turned her in-between-jobs stint into a service business that could gross $70,000 this year.

7.Event planner and organizer. Life won't become one big party, but it could become many little ones. Talented organizers for weddings, bar mitzvahs, morale events and the like are in high demand if they are strong marketers as well. But it takes a creative bone, an entrepreneurial spirit and an indifference to the traditional workweek. Startup costs? Antonia Calzetti and Brenda Yagmin spent less than $500 to begin their home-based business in New York in October 1999. The two, who met at a small catering company, have helped build their clientele through direct mailings, press releases and other marketing efforts. Their new company's sales should reach $100,000 this year, they tell Entrepreneur. "We party every day," says Calzetti.

8.Home repairs and landscaping. Delaney, in his HOMEBusiness Journal article, calls this category, "Home equity enhancement." Cute name, but the real words here are "cleaning," "painting," "repairing" and "landscaping." The more you can do in increasing the value of a home in the real estate market, the more you can make. Selling yourself to real estate agents is a good first step. How can a PC help? New technology allows you to provide potential clients with a look at their home - with your improvements added.

9.Personal coach. Corporate chieftains, entrepreneurs and most everyone else could use an objective listener to identify and correct weaknesses. The key here is that you must possess the ability to help someone, from skills and experience you have developed in your own life. You also must be a good listener and a good self-marketer. Talane Miedaner used a personal coach in her job at a Manhattan bank - then followed his lead, enrolled in a training program and became one, too. She now has a business that works with 40 clients a month and is generating $150,000 a year in sales. "I love the commute," she tells Entrepreneur, referring to her home in New York's Catskill Mountains. "I roll out of bed and I'm coaching away."

10.Technical support. Those who troubleshoot computer system problems at businesses big and small will never be out of work. But you can build a similar business out of your home, offering training and support (even security consulting) to small offices, home offices and residential customers with PCs. Prerequisites (besides a demonstrated knowledge) include a passion for technology, a customer service bent, hourly rates and a flexible - but not too flexible - schedule.

But here's a caution from Azriela Jaffe, a noted author and nationally syndicated columnist on home-business psychology: "Individuals and couples must exercise great caution in pursuing home-based business opportunities simply because they show up on a top 10 list. The first and foremost thing that should be leading you to choose a business is your love for it and your skill in doing it."


Work From Home- With Benefits!

Thousands of "skilled and unskilled" positions are now available. Quality jobs, reputable employers and everything else you need to succeed!
Click Here To Find Out More


1/1

Back To Top



What's New?

Doing some online shopping this year? Want to avoid the crowds, the parking and the hassle of shopping?

Shop with us from home! We've put together a terrific assortment of shops including Hickory Farms, The Disney Store, Amazon, The Sharper Image and much, much more.

There are some great specials going on right now like free shipping from Amazon.com, Illuminations and Gifts.com, up to 85% off popular magazine subscriptions at eNews.com, plus a chance to win $1,000,000 from Fingerhut!

So, don't panic...there's still time left to do yourshopping online at The Mall.
Visit The Mall


Meet Our Forum Hosts!

These ladies generously volunteer their time to offer support and advice at our Message Board Communities. Please thank them for their efforts by visiting their sites. This month's featured Hosts:

Hypergurl: HTML Help
http://www.hypergurl.com

BugsyBiz: Link Exchange, Marketing Your Business
http://reneem.themomteam.com


Don’t get scammed! We’ve updated our Scam Alerts page to include several new ones to watch out for.

Be sure to check it regularly.
Scam Alerts


ATTENTION READERS:
If you're serious about writing that book, I strongly recommend you take a look at this site!
www.writeabooknow.com
1/1

Back To Top

Feature Article


How To Choose The Most Profitable Home Business  How To Choose The Most Profitable Home Business
Grady Smith
gradys@mountainhighpub.com

Get Rich Online!
http://www.mountainhighpub.com

So, you want to work from home. But what kind of business should you start?

With thousands of home business opportunities on the internet, many entrepreneurs find themselves jumping into home opportunities solely based on the amount they can earn.

But you have to remember, home business is still the real world. If you have a degree in marketing, you wouldn't even waste your time trying to repair computers unless you have a strong knowledge of the subject. But entrepreneurs continually leap into home businesses that require a skill they don't even posses.

What to do? Well, you need to first outline your strengths. Find out what you excel at and apply that to an field that would work from home.

For instance, your friend might be making $16,000 a month using MLM programs. You think, great, I'll join under him and make $16,000 too! But your friends skills include a persuasive personality and a passion for talking on then phone. You're more hands on, and enjoy being a little more creative.

You take up your position under your friend and really crash and burn. Maybe the landing is so hard that you tell yourself you're never going to invest another minute in creating a home business opportunity.

But if you had played on your strengths, and instead wrote an ebook on crafting, you may have well exceeded your friends earnings if you'd only taken the right direction for you.

So, how do you find what home business is right for you? I have found that home business opportunities generally fall into three categories. Someone that's good at marketing would probably prefer and shine doing MLM, while someone that loves to help people would do better in a service position.

Look at the following three classifications of working from home, then find which would serve you best.

The first is marketing. While every business does require a small amount of sales know how, some weigh their entire profitably on possessing the skill. You need to be able to convince readers to buy and have a marketing savvy to make a nice profit.

Second, is creativity. Creating your own e-books is one example. If you can't write a lick, then you really aren't going to make much of a profit writing your own booklets and reports.

And the third kind of opportunity is service. These can include allowing others to pay you directly for your strengths. Examples would be consulting, web design, construction, machine repair, etc.

So, to find the right home business, outline your strengths. Search, or create, the perfect job that relies heavily on traits or training you posses. If you find a job that is a close match, try it and learn other traits necessary to make it profitable. In time you'll find the most comfortable, and financially rewarding opportunities are the ones that you were meant to do.

**********************
Grady Smith made a huge online profit without spending a dime in only 5 days! Get his FREE High Profit Secrets to discover how. Go now http://www.mountainhighpub.com


Make money from the comfort of your own home
Get a FREE copy of Home Business Connection Magazine and learn how! Check it out
Click Here!
1/1

Back To Top

Feature Article


Balancing Your Priorities with Your Search for At-Home Work
Balancing Your Priorities with Your Search for At-Home Work

(c) Copyright 2001, Angela Wu



Once you've surfed the web, you can't help but notice all the ads and websites meant to hook the hordes of "work-at-home wannabes".

Understandably, there's no shortage of people who want to make their living from home. Many parents want to be able to stay at home with their children while contributing to the household expenses. Others want to ditch the world of long commutes and corporate politics. Still others have disabilities that may prevent them from working a 'regular' job.

Regardless of the reasons, "work at home" is undeniably a hot topic. The International Telework Association and Council (ITAC) states that 19.6 million teleworked in Q3 1999. By 2003 that's projected to be a whopping 137 million worldwide!

Two ways to pursue a career from home are to either telecommute for an employer, or start your own home based business.

As the editor of three newsletters, I regularly come into contact with people looking for at-home work. A large percentage of them prefer to work for an employer -- they like the idea of having well-defined responsibilities and a regular pay cheque. They're not interested in the ups and downs of building a business.

Thus many websites have sprung up claiming to offer telecommuting jobs. While it's possible to land one of these highly competitive positions, it's certainly not easy.

One of the problems is simply oversaturation of the market. Many people seeking at-home work are looking for clerical or administrative jobs; yet when I look through posted telecommuting jobs, I see primarily technical positions available. That said, would you be willing to go to school to get an education that may improve your chances of landing a work-at-home job?

Telecommuting positions are usually 'perks'; something offered (or hard-won) by employees with proven track records.

Consider working in an office first in order to reach your final goal of working from home. If all goes well, you can present your employer with a telecommuting proposal after you've established yourself -- perhaps just one telecommuting day per week first, then gradually build up to several days a week. An excellent site for help on how to create a telecommuting proposal is http://www.telecommutingproposal.com.

Of course there are companies that hire telecommuters from outside as well. Be aware, however, that some of these companies (not all) may take advantage of the desire to work from home - for example, with low pay and few or no benefits.

Keep your options open! You may have to consider jobs that you otherwise would not. Consider freelance or contract work in addition to 'permanent full-time' jobs. An excellent site for freelance jobs can be found at http://homebasedwork.com/freelance.html .

It all comes down to what your priorities are. Telecommuting can be a wonderful thing for many people, but you may have to 'sacrifice' some things in order to get it. How much work are you willing to put into your desire to work from home? What are you willing to give up in order to achieve this goal?

I'm not saying that you can't find rewarding telecommuting work at a company for which you've never worked before ... far from it! However, it's highly competitive and employers can afford to be choosy. And if you're the entrepreneurial type? You may be able to find more success or satisfaction with your own business.

Be prepared, stay open to new possibilities, and do your research!

_______

Angela is the editor of Online Business Basics, an exclusive newsletter for eBusiness beginners. She spent several years in the corporate work force before building her home-based business. Visit her online at http://onlinebusinessbasics.com/article.html OR businessbasics@workyourleads.com for a series of 10 free reports on building a business on the web.




Working from home has never been easier!

Imagine working from home, being your own boss,and enjoying the new millennium lifestyle.

Visit MakingMoneyFromHome.net

1/1

Back To Top



A Great Homebased Business Idea

Account Activators Needed
Finally, a Work at Home Job that Actually Delivers a Paycheck! We have been in business for over 10 years and have thousands of people just like you working from home earning an income. Email workfromyourhome@getresponse.com

For 100's more great ideas, visit the Ideas pages. We've added lots of new ideas!

For more Business Opportunity ideas, visit the Business Opps section.

Back To Top






Like This Ezine?

Please take a few seconds to rate this Ezine...
Click Here

Why not share it with a friend... Click Here To Recommend It.

To Advertise With Us


Get Your Message Out to Over 18,000 subscribers!

**Your Ad will be seen....we’re 100% opt-in
**Highly targeted advertising
**We limit the number of ads so you get maximum exposure

Click Here For the Details

Back To Top | Read Last Month's Issue | Home



*DISCLAIMER: The appearance of advertisements in this ezine does not constitute an endorsement. Readers accept full responsibility for exercising due diligence before purchasing a product or service, or joining an opportunity.




Important Legal Notice | Privacy Policy
Advertise Here | Site Sponsors | Link To Us
© Copyright 1999-2001 2Work-At-Home.com

Site Quick Links