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You Don't Need A Job to Make a Living By Valerie Young Original
title: What Your Guidance Counselor, Career Counselor, and
Own Mother Probably Never Told You... You Don't Need A Job to Make a
Living As
someone who rolled out of bed this morning at 8:30, I'm here to deliver
the good news: there is. Or,
more accurately, faulty thinking about what it means to "make a
living." I'm
no exception. For a long time I thought before I could take the leap to
self-employment, I had to first figure out a venture that would
generate the same amount of income as I was then earning. Develop Multiple Profit Centers Winter
is an enthusiastic advocate of what she calls "multiple profit
centers." Instead
of thinking in terms of a single income, i.e. a "job," Winter
recommends aspiring entrepreneurs develop several income sources. Bob
lives on 80 acres in rural Plainfield, MA where he's parlayed his life
passions into his livelihood. When not running New England Bob's
Snowmobile Tours of Quebec snowmobiling tours throughout Quebec (one
covers nearly 1,100 miles) this vintage car enthusiast specializes in
buying and selling antique car and truck parts out of his barn. For
example, a few years back I put on a big seminar in the Rocky Mountains
with Barbara Sher (Wishcraft, I Could Do Anything If I Only Knew What
It Was, Refuse
to Choose), and Barbara Winter (Making a Living Without a Job). I
had the entire four-day event recorded and have been selling the 24-CD
Making Dreams Happen audio program ever since. Now
I'm asked to deliver my How to Feel As Bright and Capable as Everyone
Seems to Think You Are for such diverse organizations as Daimler
Chrysler, Intel, American Women in Radio and Television, Harvard, and
MIT. In
case you are not familiar with affiliate programs work… basically every
time someone clicks on a link from my site to one of these products or
services and makes a purchase, I receive a referral fee of anywhere
from $20 to $500. To
learn more how you can earn passive income from affiliate programs,
check out my interview with one of the top affiliate program experts at
Changing
Course /asktheexpert.htm From
there they pay a low monthly member fee to continue to enjoy password
protected access to monthly Teleclasses, a private member forum, and
more. Membership
sites are a great way to create a steady income stream – something I
know is important to anyone transitioning from a regular paycheck to
self-employment. What
fascinates me is how much money people are making in such unique niches
as embroidery, wrestling, and guitar playing. To learn more about how you can generate a regular cash flow with membership programs read my 2-part article series A Little Knowledge Can Go a Long Way: How to Generate a Steady Cash Flow Using What You Already Know. Keep Your Day Job When
traveling to San Francisco, I stay in an apartment in a lovely hilltop
home in the Ashbury Heights section of the city. The owner is a Bay
area native who, in addition to teaching reading to grade schoolers
(which she absolutely loves), has set up several additional sources of
income. For
weekend and summer time income, she parlayed her knowledge and love of
the city into a personal tour guide business with a steady stream of
customers right in her own home. She even takes in a few extra bucks
renting videos to her overnight guests. Say
your long-range goal is to make $50,000. You don't need to be a math
whiz to know there are different ways you can slice and dice this. For
simplicity sake, though, let's say you decide to set up five income
streams, each generating $10,000. Since you'll be building your
multiple income streams while you're still gainfully employed, starting
two side businesses simultaneously is probably about your max time-wise. If
making $20,000 a year seemed daunting, Winter says, psychologically
earning $200 is more feasible: "Knowing what your financial goal is
makes it easier to determine what action you'll need to take to
accomplish it." ~ ~ ~
"Turning
Interests Into Income" expert Valerie Young abandoned her corporate
cubicle to become the Dreamer in Residence at ChangingCourse.com, a
career change website for people who want be their own boss and work at
what they love. Her career tips have been cited in Kiplinger's, The Wall Street Journal, USA Today Weekend, Woman's Day, and elsewhere and on-line at MSN, CareerBuilder, and iVillage.com. An expert on the Impostor Syndrome, Valerie has spoken to over 30k people at such diverse organizations as Chrysler, Boeing, Intel, Harvard University, and American Women in Radio and Television and is the author of an upcoming book on the subject with Crown Publishing. Go to Changing Course to get your free report on how you can make a career change that lets you work from home or wherever you like. Also
see more articles
by Valerie Young and
articles by Barbara
Sher and Barbara
Winter. ~ ~ ~ make
a living without a job
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