Monday 11 May 2015

Turning Your Hobby Into a Business

It's time to move on...

My new website is now up and running and I'll be transferring my blog to:



This is the last installment of 'Idea-ism' as I know it - Come across to my much nicer and sexier blog for more pearls of authorpreneurial wisdom...



2015 is Authorpreneur Almanac year. 

Join me in my 365 Adventures in Writing and Entrepreneurship...


I love Pinterest. It's such a fantastic tool for collecting content and it appeals to my hoarding instincts. I can collect lovely things without filling my house with junk! 
It's also a powerful research tool, allowing me to access valuable information that may not be otherwise obvious in the endless ocean of the internet.

Here I am. Come and join me in the Pinterest playground:

Visit Amy Morse - Authorpreneur's profile on Pinterest.
 


During one of my recent cathartic pining frenzies, I came across this great article by Tilly of Tilly & The Buttons


http://www.tillyandthebuttons.com/2014/10/tips-for-turning-your-hobby-into.html#_a5y_p=3122964

In the post, Tilly offers 5 tips to turn your hobby into a business. It's packed with sensible and practical suggestion and a reality check.



For the past four years I've worked as an Enterprise Coach, supporting people facing just this dilemma; 'how to turn a hobby into a business'.

These are some of the the things I challenge people on when I first meet them:

One of the first questions to ask yourself before considering whether to take this step is "do you actually want to?"
The immediate response might be; "well yes of course, why else would I be here'?" but let's dig deeper...

Being self employed is not easy. It's much more difficult than being employed - where you turn up at an agreed time, do what you're there to do and get paid at the end of the month. It's a straight forward contract.

Another aspect to this is: if your hobby becomes your job, will you lose your passion for it?

Doing what you love sounds wonderful in theory, but when you're struggling to make ends meet and get regular work in, it's easy to start resenting it.

Let's assume that you've done this soul searching and addressed these questions before you seriously consider the move to self employment. The advice Tilly offers is great, however, I have 4 things to add:

1) Get help  

You definitely need to be a do-er, but you also need to recognise your own limitations.

One of the biggest mistakes I see starts ups making is trying to do everything themselves. Often, when they come to me for business advice it's because they went ahead and did things without considering the consequences and got themselves into a pickle or made expensive mistakes.

If I had a pound for the number of people who buy a limited company package off some dodgy website without understanding their statutory responsibilities, then I'd have... Okay, only enough for a round of drinks - but still it's a messy and expensive problem to fix. 

2) Learn about business 

(I don't mean a Business Studies qualification, I mean practical enterprise support) 

It's one thing being good at something, quite another to turn it into a business. And a whole other substantial step to make it profitable and sustainable.

Just because you have a brilliant skill or lovely product doesn't mean you can run a business. (tweet this)

A small business (and that includes being a one-person band or freelancer), has a multitude of different processes and functions. You're not just the maker, you will also be; the salesperson, the marketer, the quality controller, the manager, the bookkeeper, the designer, the health and safety person, the HR person, the credit controller, the administrator, the purchaser, the negotiator, the payroll person etc etc.

You can only learn so much by looking online, reading books and blogs etc. There is no substitute for going on a course or talking to a professional.

If you don't know what you don't know, how do you know you don't know it!

Recent research conducted by the Federation of Small Business, suggests that the second biggest reason businesses fail in the first year (after financial problems) is: not getting training or support

3) Be prepared to pay for some things

A bad homemade website (unlike Tilly's, which is gorgeous), some poor quality marketing materials you printed off on your bubble jet, emails filled with errors etc, all these things make you look like an amateur.

You can use favours from friends and family to a certain extent, but you may not necessarily be able to guarantee the quality or rely on them. And what if you get your mate to design your website and you don't like it? You didn't pay for it, so you can't very well complain (not without losing a friendship!).

In particular, with regards to printing, especially leaflets, business cards etc. they can use a lot of ink and cartridges for home printers are expensive. Often it works out cheaper to go to a local printing firm (some of the online providers have hidden costs, a bit like budget airlines!). It also has the advantage that you're supporting local business and can build a relationship for discounts etc. You can also actually speak to a human about what you really want, rather than being constrained by an online template.

4) Think business. 

This is an abstract one - here's an example:

My first venture into self employment was as Tom Cat Designs (hence the Twitter handle!). My husband and I were refurbishing properties at the time, and as a finishing touch for the rooms, I painted some big, bold canvases. I had lots of positive comments, people asked about the art and friends commissioned me to do art for their homes. Someone then suggested that I should put on an exhibition. I booked a gallery space, giving myself a deadline, and set about producing a series of paintings. When the exhibition opened, I sold several pictures and then some commissions for more work followed. I was churning out paintings and making money and it got to the point that I should declare the earnings, so I registered for self assessment with the tax office.

Then that was that...

At no point did it dawn on me that I was now, by the most basic definition; a business.

I didn't have the mindset of a businessperson. In my head, Tom Cat Designs was a hobby that made me some extra pocket money. As a result, I didn't do any research into the marketplace, my customers, competitors etc. I didn't have a plan or think about marketing, I didn't cost it out and didn't think about branding or assess my skills and look at areas for development.

With no direction, no plan and no goals, inevitably it fizzled out and I gave up.

If you want to turn your hobby into a business you need to be businesslike and that involves a shift in your mindset if you want to succeed.

I don't mean becoming some cutthroat, hard-nosed meany-pants about it, just to tell yourself; "Okay, I'm serious about this, let's do it properly."

I'm now on the next incarnation of my ambitions to work for myself, this time turning my lifelong love of writing into my Amy Morse, Authorpreneur business.


With two fiction titles already published... 

 

I'm now working on some business skills books. Look out for the first of these: 

'Operation Author: So You've Published a Book... Now What?' 






Business Skills for Creatives

I already give regular talks at events for creative entrepreneurs, and I'm available for more of this. 

I'm also working on a programme of Business Skills for Creatives. If you'd like to know more, check the website: 

www.AmyMorse.co.uk

or bounce me an email and I'll keep in touch: amy@tomcatdesigns.co.uk

What tips would you offer to people considering self employment?



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