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The Self-Employment Survival Guide

Proven Strategies to Succeed as Your Own Boss

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Anyone who opts for self-employment quickly learns that succeeding as your own boss is no walk in the park. While professional freedom has many, many joys, it also involves significant risks. If you're considering self-employment, or you're already self-employed, The Self-Employment Survival Guide: Proven Strategies to Succeed as Your Own Boss alerts you to the challenges involved and provides proven strategies for surmounting these obstacles and succeeding. You'll also learn what you need to put in place before taking the leap to being your own boss to help assure your success.
Working for yourself offers personal freedoms and rewards, but the road can curve or travel uphill at times. Here, Jeanne Yocum shares eight key behaviors that impede success and provides proven solutions for the various obstacles that might cross your path, including unreasonable client demands, slow payers, unexpected client defections, daily schedules, health and financial planning, and the feelings of isolation that can sometimes accompany working on your own.
Unlike many books that provide only a rose-colored view of self-employment, this book gives a full, realistic view of what being your own boss is actually like. By learning about the ups and downs that come with being in charge of your own livelihood, you will be better able to handle the demands of self-employment and succeed on your own terms.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      March 5, 2018
      PR consultant and ghostwriter Yocum (coauthor of New Product Launch) offers straightforward advice and coping strategies in this helpful guide to self-employment. It’s the right choice for many, she writes: in 2015, 15 million Americans were self-employed. It’s also a choice to make with “eyes wide open,” and Yocum begins by sharing challenges she faced and straightforward suggestions for dealing with them. Throughout, Yocum’s guidance is simple but useful: “discipline is required,” “set expectations with clients,” and “be willing to listen.” Yocum addresses financial matters, from tips for adequate preparation when starting out to getting the inevitable “deadbeat clients” to pay up. Readers will be most eagerly interested in the section on retirement, but it unfortunately lacks substance. Still, Yocum doesn’t shy away from exposing some of the challenges of self-employment—paying for health insurance, avoiding burnout, and dodging common behavioral traps such as perfectionism and “clinging to your comfort zone.” Salaried employees wondering about taking the leap and becoming their own bosses will find answers to many of their questions, and plenty of encouragement, in this well-written primer.

    • Booklist

      March 1, 2018
      Yocum's guide is practical, intuitive, and based on her decades of experience as a solopreneur, a self-employed professional. She has been there, seen it, done that. A PR expert and ghostwriter-coauthor of other business books, she lays bare the inner and outer souls of those 10-plus million people working for themselves, with good insights and remedies to solve almost any issue. Short chapters focused on one singular aspect of the business?selling, time management, continual learning?describe the situation, then provide coping strategies, while other voices chime in from sidebars to confirm the solution. One example that plagues many self-workers: fluctuating workloads. As Yocum admits, it's either too heavy or too light?and never just right. Sound familiar? No remedies here. Instead, she advises: What you need to focus on during slow times is not painting the spare bedroom but rather new business activities that will bring in more work. Misery might love company; then again, company prefers success.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2018, American Library Association.)

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  • Kindle Book
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Languages

  • English

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