Start Your Own Business

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Recently I watched an interview with an electrician who had just been laid off.   He said “I am 50 who will hire me?” my reaction was – I will.  Why does he need to look for another corporate structure to allow  him to work?  Allow him now and fire him later as the only asset companies do not value is their employees.
Value yourself!  Hire yourself!  Consider opening your own  business.

Is this the right time?  Any time is the right time for the right business.  Not all businesses do badly in a recession.   Last recession chocolate stores did very well.   I observed at Valentine’s  Day 2009 that chocolate sales were up over last year.   Tropic vacations may not be selling but Bed and Breakfasts close to large cities may do well.
Organic pet foods and pet toys are still selling very well.

Is it frightening to start a business?  Of course but so is unemployment and working in a firm under threat of layoffs.

There will be pooh-poohers of all kinds.   Most do not know their assets from their elbows.   Be polite but ignore them.   Only listen to other entrepreneurs and professionals.
Our electrician for example will  hear  ”you are too old who will hire you?”.
Instead of feeling “small”  when faced with this antiquated and muddled logic he could cheerfully respond that he will be in his own business for at least 20 years and it will not take quite that long to wire their new dryer.   His age is an asset not a deterant to his level of service!

Is it risky to start a business?  Of course, but you are taking a risk on you not depending on a company.

Why would I hire the electrician?   He has decades of skill and experience, a work ethic from before the post millennium
“I’m not responsible economy”

and he has done more than the narrow range of trades work  common on cookie cutter housing developments.  My bias (reinforced by work just done on my home) tells me that he will be polite, able to form clear factual sentences when responding to my questions and will be considerate of my work time by showing up on the agreed upon day.

Please visit womenlikeme.ca and read the articles on starting your own business.
Entrepreneurship is the new security!

How to Survive a Recession

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Another recession – been there, done that; couldn’t afford the T Shirt. If you can think of surviving a recession as a skill it may help to lower the small panic you feel after each frightening newscast. If this one comes to pass it will be my third. I am not happy about it but I think I am better at it.

I would like to offer this blog series as a how to for new business owners about to survive their first recession and as a refresher course for those with recession experience.

As an entrepreneurial speaker I have had a front row seat to watch how people react, who survives, who does well in a recession and what the major mistakes are.

In the early nineties the recession began just like this time. The economy had been very good giving people the idea that this was normal. People were affluent and used money instead of effort for everything. Houses were selling for sums way beyond their value following bidding wars. Forty-five per cent of all meals were eaten in restaurants.

Stories of layoffs in the news did not alarm middle class people as they thought of themselves as career people. Job instability was a traditional blue collar problem. The short amount of time it took for the recession to move from the front page to your front door was startling.

Many told me that business did not slow down; it just stopped. Store doors did not open; phones did not ring.

2008 has more potential for a rapid recession. The middle class has been under attack for a decade. The fallout from the mortgage horror has only just begun to bring a nuclear winter to the economy. Plus we appear to have a generation that does not know how to grocery shop or cook. The cashier in my food store often asks me to identify vegetables for her so she can look up its code.

Many do not prepare by changing their thinking to suit a leaner time.

The $600.00 handout in the US intended to save the floundering economy brought this reaction from one woman-
I will buy new summer clothes.

It reminded me of an interview from the last time with a young professional couple. They outlined their suffering this way-

“we have been forced to waste our time on comparison shopping and we have to re heel shoes rather than just getting new ones”.

I hope this series will make you solidly and comfortably prepared.

Here are the titles for the blogs for the next few weeks.

Have a staff planning meeting with yourself

The Two Biggest Mistakes

Tighten Your Belt -It Will Look Good

Looking Okay

How People React

Taking Care of the Company Asset -You!

The Bank

What Will Sell? Never Mind the Logic!

Handling Long Term Stress

Who Will Not Make It?

Your Image Make Cutting Back Cool

Dress for Success on no Budget

Sidewalk Advice

A Few Surprises

Housework – The Real Dirt

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I vowed to be consistent with the blog, to let readers follow the theme of Time Can’t Be Managed step by thinking step.

But I haven’t had the time. Have you stopped laughing? May I continue? The project that consumed my life will be featured in 2 weeks. The last blog entry discussed time attitudes that can be managed, now lets look at activities.

The work that brings time, attitude and activity together in a daily stress mess is housework. Please click here and read Housework: The Real Dirt.

Time for Innovation

People think innovation is a Eureka moment experienced only by a great genius or the work of the sanity- challenged scientist in the isolated castle. In reality innovation is the entrepreneurial skill of an individual who can take trends and technology already available and use them in a new profitable way. Henry Ford did not invent the machines needed to produce cars. He did not invent the car. He did invent the assembly line that used raw materials, labor and machines efficiently to produce mass production cars that many people could afFord.

A recent study found that great innovators think differently. With a minimum of information they can use it to reach a unique conclusion- sort of a new math 1 +1= 3. The study also found that non innovators could not make the leap no matter how much relevant information they had.

Innovation in this economy is the key to success and survival: fortunately it is a skill that most of us can develop.

It is a skill that flourishes when information is shared through a supportive network, with inspiration from innovative achievers and through introspection – time to let the your mind quilt the pieces of information and inspiration into your first or next success pattern. Our minds are brilliant but we do not allow them the time to ponder, evaluate and make the innovative leap.

The Women Like Me site will provide up to the minute information on new technologies, success skills and emerging trends.

Women Like Me, The Women’s Business & Networking Directory will give you a varied support network .

The blog will profile Innovative Women Achievers and comment on the economic and social trends behind their work.

You must provide the Time.

Are We Lost in the Myths of Time?

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The myths in our society influence how we as women use our time. How much of your household labour has little to do with the well being of the family and a lot to do with an image of a good mother found in the dusty corridors of your mind.

It is now mid July. Are you ready for Christmas? Fill in the appropriate demanding celebration from your own culture.

If you want it to be perfect you should have started by now.

The myth of the perfect Christmas haunts women for months. I read an article by a male author who stated that birthdays and Christmas festivities are a female invention. Is it possible that we make ourselves miserable with the stress of impossible goals for things that the people we care about care about very little?

Real Life Example

My neighbour was a home economist before staying home with her 2 boys. She was known for her elegant, trendy unforgetable entertaining.

When her son was turning 5 she asked him what he wanted at his party. He asked for hot dogs, orange drink, and pointing at the ceiling and swirling his arm he indicated that he wanted crepe paper streamers.

She came to me very upset. What about the shrimp tree she had seen in a magazine, the Titanic theme etc. ? I asked her what would make her a better mom giving a 5 year old a party that made him happy (cost almost nothing and took little time) or serving a shrimp tree to the parents that made every mother in the room feel inadequate and an unorganized failure?

Her head said of course give him his party but I could see that some part of her wanted to show how much she cared by exhausting herself, spending tons of money and giving the child a party he did not want.

Time can’t be managed but attitude and activities can.