Sunday, January 13, 2008

How To Know If You Have Got What It Takes

Everyone’s talking about it and giving it a try. You’ve heard numerous success stories of people earning so much more than they used to at the comfort of their own homes. You’re almost tempted to leave your own job and embark on the home business venture yourself – but you’re not quite sure you’ve got what it takes.

The thing is, a home business isn’t for everyone. Many succeed in it, but there are just as many – maybe even more – who fail. They either ventured into a home-based business too quickly and very unprepared, or they just couldn’t handle its demands. In the end, the promise of the rewards of a home-based business was nowhere in sight.

Don’t make the same mistake. Here are a few questions you can answer to help you find out if you’ve got what it takes to start a home-based business.

Do you think you can really mind your own business?

Once you start your own home-based business, you’ll be literally minding your own business, a you’ll probably be working alone, which means there’ll be no more lively discussion with officemates around the water cooler, and no more chatting about last night’s TV shows over lunch. If you’re the kind of person who relishes and thrives in such kinds of social interaction, chances are, you’ll find that working on your own home-based business might be quite a bore.

Of course, you can also think of it this way: with a home-based business, you’re trading in office interaction with family interaction. If you’d rather spend time with your kids and your spouse than with a co-worker, then a home-based business might just be for you.

Do you need someone else to motivate you to reach your goals?

Do you find yourself playing the role of “follower” instead of “leader” more often, and are you quite happy with such a situation? If so, you might not be cut out to start a home-based business of your own. Being your own boss means you’re going to have to motivate yourself to reach your company’s goals, and if you’re more comfortable and efficient taking orders from someone else than doing the ordering around yourself, it’s best you keep your day job.

Are you happy and content with your current job?

As the saying goes, “if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it”. If your current job is able to pay for the bills and allow you enough time for yourself and your family, then there’s probably no need for you to start out from scratch by putting up a business of your own.

In the end, only you can tell if you’ve got what it takes to start a home-based business.

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