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10 Really Good Reasons to Quit Your Job and Start Your Own Business

Copyright © 2005 Michael J. Katz
Blue Penguin Development, Inc.
http://www.bluepenguindevelopment.com/


It's been five years since I made the decision to leave my
corporate job and start my own company.  No question about it,
leaving nice coworkers, a stable paycheck and 12 years of tenure
with one company was the scariest thing I'd ever done.  And yet
looking back, it was the defining moment not only of my career,
but of my personal development as well.  The fact is, I am now
so enamored of blazing my own trail that I could never go back
- I am hopelessly, incurably, unemployable. 

As a result, I receive a steady stream of, "Can I buy you a cup
of coffee?" invitations - from old colleagues, new friends,
complete strangers - anybody who is considering a change, and
who wants to know, "Why should I start my own business?"  This
is what I say:


1. You'll dance to your own music. - There's a lot of noise in
   the corporate world.  Not physical noise, but opinions,
   rules, history and a whole lot of, "that's the way we do
   it around here," always just an inch or two below the
   surface.  In such a setting it's hard to find your path,
   or as I like to say, "hear your own music."

   Once you're on your own, you'll suddenly begin to hear
   what's there, and the more you can hear it and have the
   courage to follow it, the more enjoyable and yes, profitable
   your life will be.  The fact is, there is no right way to
   live, to act or to grow a business. 


2. You'll never have to retire. - Retiring is a strange concept
   to the satisfied, self-employed person.  It implies that work
   is something you want to be done with, something you wish
   were over.  When you truly find your passion however, the
   concept becomes meaningless.  Do painters stop painting? 
   Do musicians stop playing music?  Do comedians stop being
   funny just because they've reached a certain age?  Not if
   they are doing what they truly want to be doing.  Sure, you
   may slow down or change focus as you get older, but the game
   is never over, since the game and your life will be one.


3. You'll put your money where your mouth is. - I never planned
   to start my own business, and I always secretly believed that
   I didn't have the guts to be successful on my own.  When I
   look back now, I'm not even sure how I managed to convince
   myself to leave the perceived safety of living within the
   protected walls of a large corporation.  When I finally
   jumped however, I was surprised by the number of friends,
   former co-workers and family who remarked on my "courage." 
   Frankly, I'm not any braver now than I was before, but I
   know with certainty that I don't need a corporation to take
   care of me (and neither do you).


4. You'll no longer live in two worlds. - I used to be two
   people: "corporate Michael" and "home life Michael." 
   Corporate Michael was less friendly, less intuitive and a
   lot less interesting.  I found it easy to switch back and
   forth between the two Michaels, and for a long time it
   didn't even strike me as odd that I would make decisions
   at work based on a completely different set of criteria
   regarding what was fair, what was smart or what was worth
   doing.  That's over - I'm now one person no matter what I
   do, and I have a more balanced, more humanistic approach
   to business.


5. You'll know your own power. - Swept up in the turmoil of
   working as part of a corporation, there's a tendency to
   blame others, wait for others, think that others are making
   things happen.  Working alone you'll realize how much control
   you actually have (and have always had). That realization
   will give you the courage and drive to do more things than
   you ever dreamed of when you saw yourself as an insignificant
   part of a big machine.  You'll have nobody else to blame,
   and even more importantly, you will see how much credit you
   really do deserve for everything you've created.


6. You'll be free to walk away. - When you first start out on
   your own, you will probably be grateful for whatever business
   comes your way.  The thought of  "walking away" from a client
   may seem suicidal.  It isn't.  As your reputation grows,
   people will approach you, ready to hand you their money and
   have you begin work.  That's terrific.  However, in some
   cases, the fit won't be there - something in your gut will
   tell you it's a bad match.  You will learn that you can say
   "no thank you" and walk away.  Nobody assigns projects or
   clients or teammates to you anymore.  You and only you decide
   who you work with and on what terms, and if it doesn't feel
   right you need only say so.


7. You'll make new friends. - If you've been with the same
   company for a long time, you've probably developed several
   close relationships.  You may be afraid that you'll be lonely
   and isolated out here in the "cold cruel world."  Nothing
   could be further from the truth.   Starting your own business
   gains you immediate entrance into a collegial world of fellow
   sole proprietors and entrepreneurs, eager to have you along
   for the ride.  We hold meetings, we have events, we meet for
   lunch, we talk on the phone - we share ideas, support each
   other and hang out together.  Price of admission: a friendly
   demeanor and a willingness to help other people find their
   way.


8. You'll pick the players. - Wherever you sit in a company,
   you've got people you interact with every day.  Your boss,
   your direct reports, the head of the legal department, the
   desktop support guy, the receptionist.   Hopefully you like
   and get along with most of these people, but whether you do
   or not, you're stuck with each other.  When you run your own
   company on the other hand, you pick who's on the team.  You
   get to choose your attorney, your accountant, your landlord,
   your printer, your partners, your clients - everybody in
   your daily life is there because you decided to put them
   there.  You get to choose.

 
9. You'll have real problems, instead of imaginary ones. - In a
   corporate setting, your happiness and success is dependent
   upon dozens of intertwined relationships and handed-down
   decisions, any one of which can change your world in ways
   you may not anticipate or even understand.  With so much out
   of your control, it's hard not to spend time "What If-ing"
   and worrying about the future: "What's my boss really think
   of me? What if I don't get put in charge of that new project?
   What if they cut my budget next year?"  Fear of what might
   happen can become worse than the situation itself - imaginary
   problems.

   When you're building your own business you're immersed in
   reality.  Sure, you may have days where you worry about
   paying the mortgage, but you'll be in the game, fighting
   the good fight, and no longer obsessed with the possibility
   of being blindsided by an unforeseen shift in the corporate
   winds. 


10. You'll find your purpose. - You didn't come here to follow
   somebody else's vision or sit on the sidelines watching the
   clock tick away until retirement. But somehow, somewhere
   along the way, you forgot.  Now, after so many years of
   following the pack, you've come to see work as a place you
   go to earn enough money to do the things you really want to
   do.  It doesn't have to be that way.  Working on your own
   will give you the freedom and focus to find the exhilarating,
   balanced, self-directed career you've always dreamed of.   


One of my favorite quotes is from the book, The Artist's Way,
and I've had it taped to the top of my computer monitor for the
last five years:  "Leap, and the net will appear." Go ahead,
I'll be waiting for you.



-----------------------------------------------------------------
Michael J. Katz is Founder and Chief Penguin of Blue Penguin
Development, Inc., (http://www.BluePenguinDevelopment.com) a
Boston area consulting firm that helps clients increase sales by
showing them how to nurture their existing relationships, and
that specializes  in the development of electronic newsletters.
He is the author of the book, E-Newsletters That Work.

 




 


 





 

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