Business Fit Magazine May 2019 Issue 1 | Page 22

Business I’m in favour of people starting their own business, but I also recognise it’s not for everyone. I’ve become tired of the anti-job rhetoric on social media not giving a balanced view. What You Need to Know about Freelancing Jodie Cook Should you quit your job to go freelance? Maybe, but think it through. I’ve been on both sides and seen people go freelance and it work out amazingly and it not work out for others. I recently read Choose Yourself by James Altucher. In the book he directly addresses those in employment, telling them how easily they could replace their salary by going freelance. He said a salary was the minimum someone could buy your time for and employers knew this, so paid the lowest they could get away with. The anti-job rhetoric over social media seems stronger than ever, with constant memes stating: “You can do better! Take back control, quit your job!”. There are others, about building other people’s dreams when you could build your own, 9-5s being a form of modern slave labour, and so on. Who’s behind these messages? Some are by self-employed people who have been successful and want to tell others. There’s a genuine reason there, albeit a very self- congratulatory one. But, more often, it’s someone selling a course on how to access an amazing lifestyle based on working freelance. A course that’s worth $15,000, available for the one-time-only price of $997. Or they are posts written by companies selling products for freelancers. It’s in their best interests that more of them exist. Don’t go ahead without doing your research 22 Whatever you decide, it must be a decision that’s right for you, and definitely not made on a whim from your last conversation or after seeing a meme on Instagram. Here are the important considerations to help your decision: How do I want to spend my time at work? What are you really good at doing and is this what you are leaving your job to do? If you’re a journalist leaving to become a freelance copywriter, you might love the writing itself and are the best person in your company at it. As a freelancer, it’s not enough to be good at the work; you need to be good at finding it. That means the 100% that was spent on writing might now be 75%, the rest of your time is spent winning the work, self-promoting, networking, providing case studies, meetings, chasing payments and … yes… selling. How much of your time do you want to spend finding ways to market yourself and your services? A good friend called Lee now runs his own office fit-out and interior design company. Previously, he was working as a sales person for a firm doing something similar, but Lee’s background was furniture making, he had a passion for every aspect of the work – from the networking to the sale right through to the design of a workspace. Just selling wasn’t enough and the move from employment to self-employment suited him perfectly. He’s risk-averse, so he talked through the best and worse-case scenario and knew what he was getting himself into. It paid off. What is success? If going self-employed goes well, what do your life and business look like? What does your day-to-day involve? How much do you work? What kind of clients are you working with, how much are you invoicing each month? What happens next? When I started hiring I had more than a full-time job’s worth of freelance work, I loved working with my clients, but it was hard switching between being creative and transactional, so 23