Surviving the Financial Strain of a
Home Business
When you start a
home business, it's all too easy to get overwhelmed
by all your new obligations: keeping your customers
happy, earning enough money to live, and so on and so
much more. Being in
such an uncertain financial situation is stressful, but
many home business owners simply ignore this stress,
instead of dealing with it. When you're worrying
about money, you
tend to be worrying about everyone else and what will
happen when you let them down. What I'm saying is don't
forget yourself.
Stability, You Need To
Adjust
Many people get very
upset a few months after they quit their job and start their
own business, feeling like
they threw away the financial stability they had in their job,
to chase a dream. Think of
this way, though: just how stable were you in your job to
begin with? Did you
constantly have to avoid saying or doing the wrong thing, for
fear of getting fired? Did
it always feel like you were one bad project away from the
end?
Well, you are in almost all 'real' jobs, when
hiring and firing is at the whim of your
manager. At
least now you work for yourself you can't lose your whole job
-- only individual clients. I know many people,
especially medical professionals, who feel far
more stable
working at home than they ever did in their job. They know that
there will always be at least enough people coming to
them for them to survive.
Living With
Financial Strain
You knew this was going
to be hard on you financially when you started -- it's no
excuse to give up. Talk to any home business owner
and they'll tell you how much stress they're
under. It's
part of the way of life. Big companies are designed to take
financial strain away from
individual employees, since everything is decided by
committee and it's the investors who are
going to be losing out anyway. You don't have this
luxury.
The only advice to give here is that you
shouldn't take any more financial risk than
you're
comfortable with -- decide in advance just how much you're
willing to lose before you throw in the towel.
You should agree this point with your family before you
start, though, and don't let them pressure you into
giving in before you've reached it.
Keep Good
Records
The absolute worst and
most stressful thing is not to know exactly what your
financial situation is from day to day. While you might
think you don't want to know, things are
never really
as bad as they seem when you've got the numbers in front of
you. It's when you leave it to
your imagination that things really start to seem
bad. The simplest way to keep records for
yourself is to use a simple accounting program,
or even just a spreadsheet. Enter what you
started with, and then record everything
you spend and everything you earn.
Remember: it's never that
bad.
No More Sick
Days
It can be all too easy to
take 'sick days' when the only person you answer to is yourself
- when you feel stressed, the natural reaction
is to hide away and ignore whatever it is
that's making
you stressed. You'll only make your financial situation worse
if you do this, so it's important
that you only stop working when there's something
actually wrong with you, not just when
you feel low.
Worst Thing
That Can Happen?
Think of it this way:
what's the absolute worst case scenario, the thing that you're
most afraid of financially? There are very few
situations that couldn't be solved by selling a
few of the things that have accumulated in your
house over the years (you probably don't
even use
them), or by selling your car and getting a smaller one. Do you
really need all those things you
subscribe to monthly? Newspapers, cable TV, and the rest
could all go in an emergency,
right?
When you run a home business, you might have
to make a few sacrifices to get
yourself out of financial trouble. I guarantee you,
though, that you will find it very
difficult indeed to completely crash
and burn.
Home Business
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