Debunking fears of self-employment (Part 4)

Part of our continuing series on the fears that hold people back from being self-employed.

What if I don’t make enough money?

Here’s something to consider: if you currently work for someone else, you probably aren’t making as much money as you’re worth.

Think of it this way: if you work for a salary, you are effectively selling your time at a bulk discount.

To make the math easier, let’s say you make $50,000 a year at your job. (I’m always in favor of making the math easier.)

A good living, right? After all, median household income in the U.S. is $53,000. So $50,000 is a pretty decent middle class income.

But to get that $50,000, you need to put in 2,000 hours of work. So for each hour, you’re getting paid $25 (before taxes). And look at how little you have left after taxes – let’s say you pay 25% of total income in taxes (federal, state, local). That leaves you with $19 an hour. So every day for eight hours of work, you take home $152. (This doesn’t include the various withholdings for health insurance and other benefits – like I said, I’m all about making the math easier.)

But here’s the thing – what if you were self-employed and had the flexibility to take on multiple, smaller projects that paid more – much more – per hour?

It seems to me that with the way the job market is going, it’s easier to get more than one job than it is to get “a” job. It’s easier to find multiple smaller paychecks on a project basis than it is to find one “old-fashioned” salary-and-benefits job.

Some people see this situation and feel nervous and insecure – “what if I can’t find a job?”

But I think, in the future, more people are going to embrace this reality and see it as an opportunity. You don’t need “a” job anymore – the Internet makes it easier and more efficient than ever to find multiple (smaller) project-basis jobs. (And if you’re good, you can charge a much higher hourly rate for your work than you used to make at your salaried job.)

If you’re salaried, there’s a ceiling on how much you make in a year. Your salary is set in advance, you put in your 2,000 hours, and unless you’re the CEO, your annual pay raise will barely keep up with inflation. The big boys at the top make the big bucks and the rest of us scrape by.

If you’re self-employed, you have the freedom and flexibility to adjust your market value as you go along. You can take more work when you really need it; you can turn down projects if you’re swamped. You can make as much money as you want. You’re not bound by the artificial constraints of 2,000 hours a year.

The more I think about this, why would anyone NOT want to be self-employed?

Debunking fears of self-employment (Part 3)

Part 3 in our continuing series on debunking some of the common fears that hold people back from being self-employed.

I won’t have any time off.

Paid time off is one of the best parts of having a job. There’s nothing better than spending a week on vacation – and getting paid for it.

A lot of people think that self-employment means that you never get to take any time off. How can you ever get away from “the job” when you’re “the boss?”

Giving up paid time off used to be one of the reasons why I was reluctant to be self-employed. But then I realized that I was thinking about things the wrong way.

You see, when an employer gives you “paid time off,” they’re really just forcing you to forego some extra income.

Think of it this way. If you make $50,000 a year at your job, and you have two weeks of paid time off each year, technically, if you were to save all two weeks until the end of the year and then resign from your job on Dec. 31, you would be owed an extra two weeks of pay. ($50,000 divided by 250 working days = $200 per day, times 10 days equals $2,000.)

So by “giving” you two weeks of paid time off each year, your employer isn’t really “giving” you anything – they’re just choosing how to apportion your income. Your employer chooses to keep two weeks worth of your pay in a special “account,” and then at the end of the year when you use up your time, your “account” is empty.

When you work for yourself, you can decide how to apportion your money – all of it.

What if you want to take a month off? (This can be hard for most self-employed people to do, but it can be done.)

Or, what if you don’t want to take the time off, and you want to make even more money instead? (Most self-employed people don’t take a lot of time off – they work longer hours and more weeks per year than they did when they worked for a company – look at me for example; I’m typing this post at 5:41 p.m. on a Saturday night, and I love it.) I think the reason most self-employed people work so much is not because they don’t have a choice, but because they actually ENJOY their work.

For example, I love doing work for my freelance clients. I love it. I think about freelancing all the time. I’m always thinking of new ways to word things, new ideas to share with my clients, new ways to bid on projects and win new business.

So for me, I don’t mind working on holidays. I don’t mind taking the laptop on vacation. As long as I enjoy the work, and as long as I’m actually going to make money from the time and effort I put in, I’m happy to do the extra work.

I don’t worry much anymore about “not having paid time off.” Because compared to working in a cubicle, every day of self-employment feels like a paid vacation.

Debunking fears of self-employment (Part 2)

Part 2 in our continuing series on debunking the fears of becoming self-employed…

If You’re Self-employed, Health Insurance is too Expensive.

(Note: This blog post does not apply to aspiring entrepreneurs in Canada, Britain, Australia, Western Europe, or any other advanced nation that provides universal health insurance as a basic expectation of citizenship. This is a problem only in America.)

I hear this one a lot. And it’s true – health insurance is tough. I’ve been through the experience of applying for a federal security clearance, and I can honestly say that applying for health insurance is worse.

If you want to be self-employed, you’re going to pay a lot more for health insurance than you used to.

But here’s the thing: it’s not like your employer-sponsored health insurance is FREE.

Your employer isn’t “giving” you health insurance – they’re taking it out of your salary.

Providing health insurance is not a humanitarian gesture from your employer; it’s just the result of America’s screwed up employer-based health insurance system that was cobbled together over a century of…

  • Historical accidents (during World War II’s labor shortages, unions couldn’t negotiate for higher wages so they settled for insurance benefits instead)
  • Defeated compromises (President Nixon was going to sign a universal health care bill in the early 70s, but the Democrats wanted to hold out for a better deal) and…
  • Stupidity (one reason why the U.S. didn’t get universal health insurance in the aftermath of World War II is because white racists in the racially-segregated South didn’t want to give up their precious whites-only hospitals).

So how should we think about health insurance for the self-employed?

Look at it this way: When you pay a health insurance premium every month, you are in effect placing a bet that something bad is going to happen to you.

So how big do you want that bet to be?

For example, let’s say you have a family of four and a monthly health insurance premium of $750, with a $2500 annual deductible.

This means that every month, you are betting that your family will spend MORE than $950 on health care – and you would have to do so in order for this plan to be a good deal for you.

But most people don’t get sick that often. In fact, if you’re in good health, there’s no reason why you couldn’t go months without needing to see a doctor or get a prescription. And even if you do have some kind of ongoing health condition, the costs are often predictable and manageable – or at least, can be managed in a better way than shelling out $1,000 a month on premiums.

So if you’re self-employed, it seems to me that the best way to look at health insurance is in terms of total out of pocket costs.

This means: choose a plan with low monthly premiums, higher deductibles, and a manageable total annual out-of-pocket limit.

I’d rather pay for the “little things” along the way – doctor’s office visits, prescriptions – as long as I know there’s a limit to how much I will have to pay over the course of the year. I’d rather pay for medical care when we actually need it, rather than throw money away on high premiums every month.

The fundamental purpose of health insurance is to protect against financial catastrophe – not to pay for every little thing along the way. Lots of us who work for employers with “good health insurance” get spoiled – we get used to paying $20 for an office visit and $20 for a prescription, even though the actual cost of our health care is largely hidden (and still truly being paid by us).

If you’re self-employed, you can still have peace of mind and good medical care for your family; you just need to think differently about health insurance. Pay for the small stuff. Make sure you’re covered for the possibility of big expenses (emergency room visits, hospital stays). And even though your health care might be more inconvenient or more apparently costly than it was when you were an employee, consider it as part of the price of freedom – because freedom isn’t free.

Debunking fears of self-employment (Part 1)

There are a lot of people who might want to start their own business, but it sounds too scary. I can relate to this. I think it’s important to examine some of these fears and figure out a new way of thinking about them.

For example:

  • Being self-employed is too risky.
  • Being self-employed (in America) makes it too hard to get health insurance.
  • Being self-employed causes you to make less money than you would make working for a company.

Let’s look at these assumptions…

Self-employment is Too Risky.

It’s true that if you’re self-employed, you don’t have a steady paycheck. Every dollar you make has to come from the sweat of your brow; it’s not like working for a company where it’s possible to just coast for a while without working too hard, and then on payday you collect your full paycheck like every other week.

However, especially in “this economy,” working for someone else is pretty risky, too.

After all, if you work for a company, you can get laid off. At any time. Often for reasons that have nothing to do with whether or not you’re good at your job.

Worst of all, if you spend too long at one employer, you run the risk of your skills becoming stagnant. There’s nothing worse, especially in the fast-paced information economy that we are living in now, than to be stuck with obsolete skills and a mindset of inertia and helplessness. If you spend 30 years working for a company and then get laid off at age 55, and all you know is an increasingly narrow band of knowledge that only applies to what goes on at your specific (former) company…well, that’s a terribly difficult spot to be in.

Which risk would you rather take? The risk of trying to do something you care about and working for yourself (and possibly failing and losing your house), or the risk of “playing it safe” by working for one employer (and possibly ending up with less money, less fun, less worthwhile experience…and still being stranded at age 55 with few marketable skills, and still losing your house)?

I’m 30 years old. In the past year, two of my high school classmates died. (One after a lifelong struggle with cystic fibrosis, the other from a sudden-onset infection of antibiotic-resistant pneumonia.) The point of mentioning this is – life is unpredictable. There are no guarantees in this world. Why do you want to spend your life doing something you hate, only to drop dead at your desk three days before retirement?

Sometimes the riskiest move is to keep playing it safe.

Be a Squid for Knowledge

If being insatiably curious and eager to learn makes you a “sponge for knowledge,” then what do we call people who are always eager to comment, brainstorm, and share ideas?

How about: a “squid” for knowledge.

Maybe it sounds goofy, but hear me out.

Squid are always spraying ink around, right?

So maybe, in some small way, if you’re the kind of person who always comments on blogs, gives feedback on articles, and is a generally engaging member of an audience (wherever that audience may be), then I think we should name this behavior “being a squid for knowledge.”

Be a squid. Spray some ink.

The Year Ahead

I’m feeling optimistic about 2010.

I know, I know. The economy’s still a mess. The world is full of peril. Religious fanatics are trying to blow up their underwear on planes.

But I feel that there are a lot of great opportunities out there, for those with the skills, energy and ambition to reach for them.

The economic pie might have shrunk a bit during the recent recession, but it’s still a pretty big pie. (With flaky, sugary crust.)

Happy 2010. May you have a prosperous, busy year loaded with opportunities and fulfillment.

Gratitude

I still can hardly believe it, but it’s true…

I am the Grand Prize winner of the Elance “New Way to Work” contest.

There are about 1,000 people that I should thank. There are so many people who have encouraged me and inspired me and influenced my thinking as I’ve made this journey toward self-employment.

There are so many bloggers whose success made me think, “Maybe I could do that, too.” So many authors and thinkers and visionaries that made me wonder, “Is there a better way to work?”

I’m grateful to all of my clients on Elance – thank you for hiring me, paying me on time, and including me in the co-creation of some great work. You all are inspiring and innovative people, and it’s been so much fun for me to be part of what you do.

I’m grateful to all of my co-workers, past and present – I’ve learned so much from everyone. Every single job I’ve ever had has helped lead me to this moment. Every bit of work experience matters – I’ve drawn upon the full breadth of my career background as I’ve built up a client base on Elance.

What a great day. Wow. I’m still in shock, a little.

Cubicles are the Phone Booths of the Future

Note: This post won the Grand Prize in the Elance “New Way to Work” contest.

I’ve hated almost every job I’ve ever had.

OK, “hate” is too strong of a word.

Let me put it this way: I have often felt deep frustrations and resentments toward every job I’ve ever had.

I haven’t hated the work itself or the people that I’ve worked with, or even the organizations that I’ve worked for. I’ve done really good work and had some great times with some really great people.

But what I’ve hated are the limitations and confinements and pointless restrictions of the “job” itself.

I don’t like having to work “standard hours.” I don’t like having to show up at 9 a.m. (or earlier) and work the same amount of time every day. I don’t like never getting to see daylight (my office has no windows). I don’t like the enforced idleness – I hate those days where even if there’s not enough work to do, you still have to sit there for three more hours, just to “put in your time” and keep up appearances. I don’t like having to get all my groceries and run all my errands at night and on weekends – what if I want to go to the store at 10 a.m. on a Tuesday? What if I want to play with my child in the park on Thursday at 3 p.m.? What if I want to go jogging on Wednesday at 1 p.m.? I can’t do any of that when I have a “job.”

Most of all, I hate having a cubicle.

Think about it. Do you know of anyone who truly likes their cubicle? Do you like your cubicle? If you had a choice, would you ever in a million years choose to work in a cubicle? Isn’t there something fundamentally pathetic about the way so many of us spend the majority of our waking hours, hunched inside these fabric-padded boxes, peering at computer screens, eating our sad little microwaved lunches off our desks?

This is America, right? “Land of the free, home of the brave” – but this “old” way of working in a cubicle – the isolation, the sensory deprivation, the bad lighting, the walling-off-of-oneself from the wider world – doesn’t feel very “free” to me, or very brave.

Fortunately, I believe that we are on the cusp of something better – much better – than life in a cubicle.

With Elance, I’ve discovered the start of a new way of work – and a better way of life.

Cubicles are the phone booths of the future.

Someday, people are going to look back at cubicles with the same sense of disbelief that today’s kids have when they look at phone booths.

When was the last time you used a phone booth? (When was the last time you even saw a phone booth?)

It sounds absurd, right? Who needs a phone booth in this day and age, when everyone carries phones in their pockets? Imagine, having to sit in one specific spot and use one specific phone just to make a call!

Well, someday – probably sooner than most of us expect – people will look at cubicles the same way.

(“Wow,” future visitors to the Cubicle Museum will say, “you had to sit in that thing all day, just to earn a living? You couldn’t go work at the park in the middle of the day, or sit with your laptop by a sunny window at the library, or work from your home office while your children are sleeping?”)

It’s true that there are some jobs where you need to be on-site and work set hours. If you’re a 911 dispatcher, you definitely need to be on call at set hours each day. If you’re an attorney or consultant who works on a billable hour basis, you need to put in a set amount of time to demonstrate your productivity (although the billable hour system is under pressure, as clients look to rein in costs). If you’re a retail store manager or a restaurateur, you need to be where your customers are. If you’re a waiter in a restaurant, serving food, or if you’re a nurse in a hospital helping patients, you need to be “there” in order to do your job.

But for most of us who sit in cubicles – those of us who are “knowledge workers,” who work with information and numbers and words and ideas – there is no “there” there anymore.

You’ve heard of this thing called the Internet, right? You’ve seen some of the smart phones that people are carrying around?

Questions for managers everywhere:

  • Why is it so important to you to have your people sitting in their cubicles for an arbitrary length of time each day? Why is 8 hours so important? Why not 7.569 hours? Why not 3 hours? Who cares, as long as the work gets done?
  • If the only way you have to measure your people’s productivity is the amount of hours they spend at work, shouldn’t you find some better metrics? (This is 2009 – we have the Internet – everything is measurable now. We are all effectively “on commission.”)
  • If the only way you can be sure that your people are working is to force them to sit 10 feet away from you in a cubicle all day, why did you hire them in the first place? (If you’re hiring real professionals, they shouldn’t require such close supervision – don’t you trust your people? And if not, fire them and hire someone better – there’s plenty of great talent in the labor market right now.)

Now more than ever, it’s possible to be available – and highly productive, and totally engaged – while still having the freedom and flexibility to choose when and where and how we work.

With the New Way of Work on Elance, we can work for clients worldwide, and we can do the work from anywhere. Who needs a cubicle?

Elance has changed my life.

Ever since I started my freelance writing business on Elance, I’ve worked with clients in Australia, Tokyo, England, Canada and the Kingdom of Jordan. (As well as all corners of the U.S. – from Seattle to Cleveland to Orlando to Los Angeles.)

I hold conference calls via Skype – for free – with clients whose time zone is 15 hours ahead of mine.

I send draft documents to the client via e-mail before I go to bed at midnight, and I get feedback from the client when I wake up the next morning.

I make much more money (on an hourly basis) working for myself, from home, than I’ve ever made working in a cubicle for someone else. I can make more money in two or three hours than I make sitting in a cubicle for eight hours.

Best of all, I love the work. I should have started doing this five years ago. The work is fun, it’s creative, it’s full of variety and new challenges, and it’s for real customers who are grateful for the help.

Most big companies aren’t ready for the new way of work. (Best Buy is one exception – they’ve implemented a “Results Only Work Environment” at their corporate headquarters which allows employees to basically come and go as they please, as long as the work gets done.) But smaller companies, sole proprietors, and even some innovative larger organizations are going to realize some great benefits from hiring skilled professionals on a flexible, project-by-project basis.

It’s easier than ever before to use sites like Elance to find qualified, vetted, reliable professionals to help on almost any project. You can quickly and easily put a project out for bid and mobilize a talented team from all over the world – and it doesn’t matter that you aren’t all sitting in the same row of cubicles together.

Of course, not everyone wants to be self-employed. There are still going to be “cubicle jobs” for people who want the more traditional idea of job security, or who love working for a particular company. There are still going to be jobs that require a kind of group synergy that only results when everyone is on-site together, or that require a level of confidentiality that is hard to achieve via e-mail alone.

But for those of us with a certain kind of skills, energy and ambition – this is a new day, and the sky’s the limit. We can work for anyone, anywhere, all over the world. It doesn’t matter where you live – all that matters is your skills, your hustle, and your demonstrated reputation for delivering results.

Thank you, Elance for introducing me to the new way of work. I think we’re on to something big.

####

December 17 – UPDATE: Thanks to everyone for reading my post, and thanks for all the great comments and e-mails. The response to this post has been overwhelming, and I am grateful for everyone who took the time to reach out.

If you’d like to stay in touch:

  • Subscribe to my blog – the subscription form is on the right side of the screen; I promise not to send you spam or share your info with anyone.
  • Twitter: @benjamin_gran
  • E-mail: benjamin.gran@gmail.com

All the best,

Ben Gran

“Cubicles are the phone booths of the future.”

Things I've Done that Made a Difference

I was reading some of the news coverage recently about the death of Senator Ted Kennedy, and one of the op-ed pieces had a rather simple statement that stuck with me – it said, “He made a difference, and that’s not something that many of us can say.”

And I thought about that. What have I done with my life that I can look back on and say, “that really made a difference?”

Here are a few:

  • Raising a child. I’m a father. I’m raising a child. I’m helping to bring a little person up into the world with (hopefully) good sense and good morals and good values. Every parent who raises their children right is making a difference.
  • Teaching in Japan. The more I look back on it, spending that year living in Japan was a big difference maker in my life and hopefully in the lives of others. It’s a powerful experience to live abroad – every day, you’re serving as an ambassador for your home country and culture. Every person you meet is going to have an impression of your home country based on the impression they get from you. How often do we get to influence so many people in such a fundamental way?
  • Mentoring kids. I used to be a regular reading volunteer with the Everybody Wins Program, a reading and mentoring program for elementary students. I went every week to Capitol View Elementary School for four school years. The first three years, I read with the same kids – I was with them from 3rd grade through the end of 5th grade. I sometimes wonder what happened to the kids I used to read with. They’re probably in high school by now; I hope everything is going well for them. I think a lot about what can we do as adults and community leaders to help make things better for kids coming up through the school system, especially for kids who are from disadvantaged backgrounds and who are less likely to graduate high school, go to college and get a good job. The kids at the school where I used to volunteer are at higher risk for pretty much every negative outcome in life – I hope in some small way, I was able to help them visualize a more positive future for themselves.
  • Hosting international visitors. One of the other volunteer activities that I used to really enjoy, and one that we don’t get to do as often these days because we’re so busy with our baby, was hosting international visitors to Iowa with the Iowa Council for International Understanding. On various occasions, we hosted people from Kosovo, Ethiopia, Spain, Sweden, and Chile who were visiting Iowa on various State Department-sponsored junkets. I really love to travel and we don’t get to do it as often anymore, but hosting these international visitors was almost as good as traveling to those other countries. Just like when I lived in Japan, it’s a powerful thing to see citizen diplomacy in action. I still remember so many of the people I met and talked with during my travels in Japan and Europe, and hopefully I helped forge a positive and lasting impression of the U.S. (and Iowa) in the people that we hosted at our house.
  • Talking to students at Iowa State. Every fall I go to Iowa State University to give a talk to a class of freshman students in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences who are undecided about their majors. The class is taught by my former academic advisor (we’ve stayed in touch for the past 10 years), and it’s only one day but it’s one of the highlights of my year. I talk with the students about my career experiences and give them some ideas for “What Can You Do With a Liberal Arts Degree?” The students don’t always laugh at my jokes or ask a lot of questions, but every now and then I seem to get through to some of them. My goal in giving this speech is to give them some ideas and inspiration and reassurance – even though they’re freshmen at a big university who might not have a clear sense of direction, they will eventually find their path in life. Just like I did.

Most of us are never going to get to be Senators and Governors and Presidents of the United States. (And most of those people never really make as much of a “difference” as they claim to – look at Rod Blagojevich, Eliot Spitzer, etc.) But we can make a difference in some of these smaller ways.

I try to make a difference by being generous with my time, grateful for my life, and by engaging with the people in my life in a spirit of warmth, openness and patience. Sometimes that’s all you can do.

Why I Live in Iowa (part 2)

Okay, I’m going to take another shot at writing about “why I live in Iowa.”

Iowa doesn’t always get a lot of respect in the national media. We’re not the setting for a lot of movies and TV shows. Iowa doesn’t have a dominant image that immediately comes to mind for most Americans who aren’t already familiar with the Midwest – some of my college friends from the East Coast didn’t even know where Iowa was. (“It’s near Chicago, right?”)

Iowa is a small, predominantly rural state. The largest city (Des Moines) has around 200,000 people (although I think our “Metro Statistical Area” population is around 500,000, but I’m not sure if that really counts).

So why do I live here?

I live in Iowa because life is easy here.

If you live in Iowa, you don’t have to put up with all the hassles and traffic and inconveniences that you have to deal with in a larger city. You can afford a nice house in a good neighborhood without having to commute an hour each way and live like a work-a-holic. And there still are plenty of things to do. Back before we had a baby, my wife and I used to do all sorts of things – go to concerts, plays, bars, great restaurants. Just  because Des Moines is a small city doesn’t mean it’s boring and devoid of culture – far from it.

I like living in Iowa because of the friendly, community-oriented culture. It sounds simple, but it’s true – people are just really “nice” here. I think it goes back in some ways to Iowa’s history as a farm state – at one point in time, most people in Iowa lived on farms, in a community of equals. They weren’t really competing “against” each other, they were all selling their products to the market – so if one family had a good year, everyone had a good year. I’ve always felt a quiet sense of stability and abundance in Iowa – of course, there is poverty here, just like anywhere, but Iowa has always seemed to have a larger middle class than a lot of other parts of the country.

People in Iowa tend to be unpretentious and egalitarian. I don’t see nearly the kind of social pressure to go to the “right” school, the “right” country club, etc. that you always hear about in the big cities. There just isn’t that kind of extreme gap between the richest and the rest of us – and people aren’t as concerned about clawing their way up the social ladder. You can graduate from public high school and go to a state university and go on to have a good life.

Iowa is a great place for families. I remember one of my friends that I met in Japan telling me about his experience living in San Diego. He said, “San Diego is an adult playground. But I would NEVER raise a child there.” I don’t mean to pick on San Diego, but it’s a good contrast – Iowa would probably never be described as an adult playground. But it’s a generally clean, safe, stable, wholesome place for kids to grow up. (And if you live in Iowa, you don’t have to spend so much time commuting and scrambling to pay the mortgage, so you can actually spend time with your kids.)

The older I get, the more I realize that what I really want out of life is control over my time. I want to spend lots and lots of time with my wife and our child, with my family and our friends. I don’t want “work/life balance” or “quality time,” I want “quantity time.” And I can get it in Iowa – Iowa gives you time.

More than anything else, that’s why I live in Iowa.