Hey, I wanted to kind of start an open ended kind of thread and get some feedback.
I work 2 jobs right now - one is a small business and the other is "moonlighting". I am in teh midst of a second interview with a big company (household name like Apple or GE - you would have heard of them) to work in a position that requires travel M-F, but off on weekends. It kind of involves educating people on technical aspect of their job so it's "teaching", which I think I would really like, dig, and have experience.
The compensation package would be salary + car + benefits = total compensation to exceed 100K.
That is significantly higher than I make right now.
It's weird though - I must be addicted to being a small business person. I have never been in a position where I would feel so reliant on another person to "take care of me."
It's ironic . . .one of the reasons I got divorced (well, speaking as my ex-wife) was my "allegiance" to the small business and lack of a bonafide opportunity elsewhere for something more stable. My ex-wife constantly complained about me getting a "real job" and there really wasn't much that excited me, both compensation and job satisfaction wise to make me want to switch. Then 9 months post-divorce, this opportunity lands in my lap and then I am involved with someone who says, "Why would you want to be dependent on a company for your future?" She thinks change is bad and I should stay in my small business, let alone the travel away from family.
She almost thinks like me - that having your own business is the ultimate form of stability.
Still, the benefits look pretty good from here and her never having been self-employed, she doesn't know or understand how hard this country is on teh self-employed.
Worst comes to worse, I could always probably pick up per diem work as a licensed CAT scan tech if I am layed off/fired/downsized. The job appears to be "stable" as people don't like to travel.
I don't know - I'm rambling. I'd appreciate some psychological feedback from people who've been both self-employed and an employee and the transition. It's weird to be making it this close and in this economy.
I work 2 jobs right now - one is a small business and the other is "moonlighting". I am in teh midst of a second interview with a big company (household name like Apple or GE - you would have heard of them) to work in a position that requires travel M-F, but off on weekends. It kind of involves educating people on technical aspect of their job so it's "teaching", which I think I would really like, dig, and have experience.
The compensation package would be salary + car + benefits = total compensation to exceed 100K.
That is significantly higher than I make right now.
It's weird though - I must be addicted to being a small business person. I have never been in a position where I would feel so reliant on another person to "take care of me."
It's ironic . . .one of the reasons I got divorced (well, speaking as my ex-wife) was my "allegiance" to the small business and lack of a bonafide opportunity elsewhere for something more stable. My ex-wife constantly complained about me getting a "real job" and there really wasn't much that excited me, both compensation and job satisfaction wise to make me want to switch. Then 9 months post-divorce, this opportunity lands in my lap and then I am involved with someone who says, "Why would you want to be dependent on a company for your future?" She thinks change is bad and I should stay in my small business, let alone the travel away from family.
She almost thinks like me - that having your own business is the ultimate form of stability.
Still, the benefits look pretty good from here and her never having been self-employed, she doesn't know or understand how hard this country is on teh self-employed.
Worst comes to worse, I could always probably pick up per diem work as a licensed CAT scan tech if I am layed off/fired/downsized. The job appears to be "stable" as people don't like to travel.
I don't know - I'm rambling. I'd appreciate some psychological feedback from people who've been both self-employed and an employee and the transition. It's weird to be making it this close and in this economy.
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