Everybody's
Doing It (Starting a Home Business)
Donna Schwartz Mills
My hometown newspaper (The Los Angeles Times) has
a regular business feature called "Career Makeover." The
concept is simple: A reader who is contemplating a change of profession
is matched with a panel of experts which devises a game plan for making
the move.
What I always find fascinating is the number of people
I would call "successful" who are not feeling satisfied
with what they've achieved.
Some of these folks have had life changes that have
prompted them to re-examine their careers. Others are disillusioned
or burnt out. And others simply want to have more fun!
I guess I find it reassuring to see that I am not
the only one who has changed my career direction midstream.
One profile that really hit home was that of a doctor
whose earnings were in the low six-figures. He confessed that he only
went to medical school to please his parents and now that he is in
his forties, he yearned to try something else.
He had an idea for a product that could be marketed
as a hangover cure, and wondered if it was something he could someday
generate enough income with it to quit medicine.
A career counselor helped him evaluate his background,
abilities, likes and dislikes. Marketing experts advised him on the
pitfalls of bringing a new over-the-counter drug to market -- such
as getting FDA approval and fighting for retail shelf space.
In the end, the experts concluded that entrepreneurship
was not for him, and the good doctor was pointed in another direction.
I don't know if I would have dismissed his idea so
easily. His instinct to market a product related to what he knows
was a good one. In fact, I've come across several health care professionals
who are enjoying a substantial extra income by doing just that.
Of course, you can't assume that a course of action
that works for one person is the same one for you. An assessment of
your interests, abilities, likes and dislikes is a good first step
in finding your direction... and thanks to the Internet, you don't
have to spend a fortune finding a consultant to do it for you. Here
are some starting points:
Professional career guidance counselors swear by
the Princeton Review Career Quiz. There's no charge to take the pared-down
online version of the test.
http://www.princetonreview.com/cte/quiz/quizoverview.asp
The Keirsey Temperament and Character Web Site measures
these two components of your personality to give you a rough indication
of where you stand.
http://www.advisorteam.com/temperament_sorter/register.asp?partid=1
Try running a Self-Directed Search to see if your
individual type matches your chosen field. You can take this professional
quality test in its entirety for $9.95.
http://www.self-directed-search.com
Life is too short to spend it toiling away at something
you don't enjoy. Sometimes you need to figure out what your alternatives
are. You owe it to yourself to do it!
Donna Schwartz Mills writes about the specific needs of work at home
parents at her website, http://www.ParentPreneur.com
, "For Parents Who Want Choices, Not Office Politics." Tools,
free tips and support to help grow your home based business while
raising a family. For more articles like this one, visit Donna's other
site, http://www.Family-Content.com
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