7 Financial Strategies for Transitioning
from Salaried to Solo
by: Nina Ham
A 40’s something woman was talking to me the other day about
her growing sense of frustration with “working for someone else”
and her longing to “do my own thing, drive my own wagon”. But,
she said with consternation, “I have family counting on me and a
standard of living I don’t want to sacrifice.”
Everyone has to decide for themselves what level of sacrifice
and risk they’re willing to undertake in order to enjoy the
satisfactions of working independently. Knowing some strategies
for managing the risk will allow you to make a well-informed
decision.
Of the seven strategies included below, the first two suggest
ways to gradually transition from salaried to solo, instead of
diving off the edge. The second two are ways to stretch the
dollar; and the final three are ideas for getting started
without stopping.
1. Continue to draw a (reduced) salary
Leaving your current employment in order to develop your new
business may look like the only option, based on an assumption
that you won’t get approval for reducing your hours. While this
may prove to be the case, asking yourself why and how your
company will profit from retaining your skills and experience
for a transitional period can provide the basis for approaching
your employer. Be sure to do your homework first, however, and
be able to back up your request with a solid rationale.
Also consider the issue of timing. You want to weigh
informing your employer of your wish to leave with being
prepared to leave if the answer to your request is no.
2. Develop another income stream
If you need to leave your present employment, is there a
skill in your toolbag that you can resuscitate and put to work
without a significant expenditure of time or energy? Is
moonlighting or freelance work an option? Virtual e-lancing
websites (such as
eWork.com, Guru.com,
and e-lance.com)
may be worth looking into for short-term professional services
opportunities.
Examples: A community mental health worker transitioning to
private practice used his conflict resolution experience to sell
a training package to public schools. A woman transitioning out
of an insurance brokerage created and sold seminars on long term
care financing at local retirement centers.
3. Reduce expenses
Apart from fixed expenses - mortgage, taxes, insurance, etc.
–are discretionary expenses that make up the larger part of
budgets. Doing a careful analysis of these expenses and choosing
what you can forego for awhile can often save thousands per
year.
Carefully analyzing hidden expenses – credit card interest
rates, bank charges, late fees, auto debits, phone plans – or
“lost money” from low interest rates on savings may generate
several thousand more per year.
4. Borrow
It isn’t necessary to wait to borrow for start-up costs until
you have a well-documented idea to submit for a business loan.
Refinancing a home or taking a line of credit are relatively
low-cost ways of generating capital. Depending on your credit
rating, you can also get time-limited low-interest loans from
credit card companies.
If you choose this option, applying for loans or refinancing
packages while you’re still employed is strongly advised. Your
rating as a borrower declines quickly once the regular paychecks
stop.
You don’t have to wait!
Get started on your new business idea while you’re still
employed. Several of the all-important first steps (below) can
be started while standing in the grocery line or running on the
treadmill. They involve asking yourself some questions and doing
some informal research to get crystal clear about your idea.
This can take weeks off your actual start-up time.
5. Identify your niche.
Think about the services you’re uniquely qualified to
provide, as well as the ones you most enjoy providing. Be
specific! Write them down! Then think about what group of people
would get benefit from those services and have the ability to
pay for them. Again, be specific: age, where they congregate,
habits and values, how they define the problem your services are
going to solve. If you don’t know, ask. Find someone who fits
your “ideal client” profile (s/he may be on the treadmill next
to yours at the gym) and get permission to ask some questions.
People generally love to be helpful.
6. Create your marketing plan.
Don’t be intimidated by the term “marketing plan”. While what
you need from a marketing plan will get more sophisticated as
your business develops, for now it simply means answering the
question, How is my business going to make money? What is the
product or service you’re going to sell? How will you describe
it so people quickly recognize the value? How will you package
it? (fee for service? by the project? on retainer?) How will you
price it? (What’s being charged for comparable services? What
“feels right” to you?)
7. Manage fear!
For most people, anything involving money involves some level
of fear. It’s important to acknowledge to yourself and to others
that you are taking a risk, and you’ve decided it’s a risk you
want to take. So consider the fear natural, and find ways to
manage it.
Getting support from people who believe in you and in what
you’re embarking on is #1 in fear-management tactics. Don’t
assume that you’ll get it from the people closest to you, or
that if you don’t have it you shouldn’t proceed. They’re
probably the ones most impacted by your decision and so may be
least ready to offer support. Their consent – a willingness to
go along with your plan – is helpful, but support may have to
come later.
It’s also helpful to set a goal (and a date for completion)
that’s key to your new venture – arrange financing by a
particular date, or sign a lease – and announce it to at least
one person. You’ll find that making that commitment, saying it
out loud, and following through will in turn generate more
confidence and more forward momentum.
To all of you who are tired of marching to someone else’s
drum and are eager to go solo, these strategies should help you
take prudent but positive steps toward realizing your goal. Good
luck!
Copyright 2005 Success from the Inside Out |