Posts Tagged ‘ self-employed


   

My Approach to Stay at Home Employment

successful home business My Approach to Stay at Home EmploymentI get many questions on which system I use or what approach I take when speaking to others about stay at home employment. I use many methods, but have found that my direction comes from within me. Honestly, willingness, courage and self discipline are things that make me successful.

Honesty – The first thing you have to do is be honest. Honestly ask yourself if you can do it. For most people it is a quick yes or no and that’s that. Making the choice to work at home is a big decision; you can’t afford to be rash. When being honest about things, you need to look at the different angles, put yourself into different scenarios, and “see the big picture.” When you have done these types of things, you can know in your heart that you have came up with an honest answer.

Willingness – So having honestly asked yourself and came up with an answer, you next have to be willing to make stay at home employment work for you. It takes willingness for anything you do. Getting up out of the bed in the morning requires willingness. Willingness leads to action. But, procrastination can be a big road block. However, I have found when I become willing and begin to take action, the action takes care of my sloth. Without willingness there will be no action, and without action stay at home employment will not work for you.

Courage – Human beings are creatures of habit. What is the first thing you do when you get out of bed? There is a big chance it’s the same thing. Stepping away from the crowd requires courage. We have spent most of our professional lives working for someone else. You can be who you want to be with stay at home employment. If you look at any person that has ever made history, courage has played a big part.

Self-Discipline – Self-discipline is probably the most important principle for stay at home employment. Remember, you aren’t working for someone else anymore. Set your tasks and goals and meet them. Self-discipline comes over time, it doesn’t just happen. People who participate in marathons train several weeks before running 26 miles. Through self-discipline they reach their goals. You have to work to reach your goals if you are going to be successful with stay at home employment.

These principles can stand alone, but they work better used together. Do you see to be honest, I have to be willing? That self-discipline begins with courage? I have an experiment for you: Get a sheet of paper, list the principles and what they mean to you. Notice I said write. Having something on paper will enable you to see what the basics of stay at home employment really mean to you.

Click here to find out where James McGee learned to do business online. Visit James McGee’s blog to read reviews and information about the tools he uses for stay at home employment.

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How to Determine Which Web Design Projects to Take

300px M T4 My Approach to Stay at Home Employment
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Web designers who work for themselves will constantly face difficult decisions as they have to determine if they should accept or pass on a client’s project. Since there is no shortage of designers out there, many designers feel that they should accept every piece of work that comes their way, but that is not true.

One of the main reasons that you should not accept every project and every client is simply that some of them are not willing to pay what you need to get for your time. If you’re spending all of your time on low paying jobs it will prevent you from taking other work. Of course, there are many other reasons as well, which we will get in to.

In this article we’ll look at five factors that should be considered by designers when they are evaluating a potential client and project. Taking the wrong projects can be a detriment to the designer because it means they will be unable to take other work in it’s place if a better opportunity comes along.

1. Price

One of the first things you will evaluate is the amount of money that you can charge for the project. Is the client willing to pay a fair price, something that will adequately compensate you for the time that will be required by the project?

If the client is working with a very limited budget that doesn’t fit into your normal pricing scale, they should be willing to make some compromises that will reduce the amount of time required from you, or you should probably pass on the work. You may also consider having a package especially for clients who have less-than-ideal budgets. This would allow you to capture some business from clients that you would otherwise have to pass on.

2. Timeframe

Deadlines are an everyday part of life as a web designer. Some projects may me more flexible with deadlines and others may have multiple milestones that need to be met on the way to an overall deadline. Even in situations where the deadline is not set in stone, getting the work done in a timely manner is important to keep clients satisfied.

If a client has a time line that simply isn’t possible for you, let them know that it isn’t going to work. Tell them when you think you would be able to get it done and see if they can accept this deadline. Otherwise, you could increase your pricing for the rush job, or walk away.

3. Match

Most likely there are some specific areas of design and development that are your strong points, and others where you could improve. Taking jobs that are challenging and teach new skills are good to have in your schedule, but most of your work should be a good fit with your own strengths.

4. Interests

In addition to having some specific strengths and weaknesses as a designer, you’ll also have some types of work that you prefer and others that you really would rather not be involved with. Once you know the types of projects that you enjoy working on, make an effort to make this a higher percentage of your workload.

5. Workload

One of the best ways to drag down the quality of your work is to try to do too much at once. Taking too many clients and projects is tempting because it may pay more, but you will soon find that you would have been better of to push that project back to a later date.

If you don’t have the time to add a new client to your workload, talk to them to see if they are in a position to wait a few weeks or months, whatever the case may be, until your workload will be more conducive to a new project.

Steven Snell runs a popular web design blog that includes a job board for web designers to help designers find work, and to help companies find the right designer.

 My Approach to Stay at Home Employment

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