Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I started my own business at age 50. Probably should have stayed at my day job, though. It was easier and paid more.
considering doing this, can ou share more about your experience?
Sure. It took 3 years of many 16 hour days to make a profit, and a small one at that. I'm exhausted and burned out, and being my own boss is not even a tiny bit fun anymore. Getting noticed and getting business and ranking on Google was the easy part. My product is great and sells itself, and I'm at good at selling anyway, and marketing, and pretty much anything creative. The hard part is the finance and organization part. I just really have no idea what I'm doing and can't figure out how people make a living doing this (but they do). I have a whole bunch of degrees and credentials and thought I'd be able to learn it because I'm so smart and all, but I'm failing and maybe not that smart and now wish I'd just gotten a regular job with actual benefits and guaranteed pay. Unless you are in an industry with really high profit margins and have a ton of money and business experience, I can't really recommend this route.
Did you network with other business owners before starting this business?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I started my own business at age 50. Probably should have stayed at my day job, though. It was easier and paid more.
considering doing this, can ou share more about your experience?
Sure. It took 3 years of many 16 hour days to make a profit, and a small one at that. I'm exhausted and burned out, and being my own boss is not even a tiny bit fun anymore. Getting noticed and getting business and ranking on Google was the easy part. My product is great and sells itself, and I'm at good at selling anyway, and marketing, and pretty much anything creative. The hard part is the finance and organization part. I just really have no idea what I'm doing and can't figure out how people make a living doing this (but they do). I have a whole bunch of degrees and credentials and thought I'd be able to learn it because I'm so smart and all, but I'm failing and maybe not that smart and now wish I'd just gotten a regular job with actual benefits and guaranteed pay. Unless you are in an industry with really high profit margins and have a ton of money and business experience, I can't really recommend this route.
Anonymous wrote:I quit a very big corporate job at 38 and did consulting for a couple of years hoping to find my niche. I joined a small company, eventually became president and ultimately made far more than if I had stayed in a big company. I loved being involved in the detail and making stuff happen, not just being a bureaucrat. But, at 38 I had three kids 5 and under and I look back now and think was I crazy?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I started my own business at age 50. Probably should have stayed at my day job, though. It was easier and paid more.
considering doing this, can ou share more about your experience?
Anonymous wrote:I became a librarian. Got my MLS at age 46.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Was asked to join a retained executive search firm + then ended up heading the office
This sounds cool!
Anonymous wrote:Two friends of mine finished law school around 40, worked for other people for a bit, and then started their own practices doing trusts and estates. Before the law school, one used to be in IT and the other in investment banking. Both moms of two.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A friend left corporate America to become a speech therapist in her 40s, and never looked back.
My cousin was working in Hollywood (and actually somewhat successful) but then changed to become a speech therapist in public schools. She loves it, and her acting experience is very helpful.
Do you know what the educational path is?
I become a speech pathologist in my 30s! I spent a year taking a handful of "leveling courses" (aka the speech pathology undergraduate courses you need as prerequisites to apply to graduate school), two years of grad school for an MS, and then a yearlong, full-time, paid Clinical Fellowship Year (kinda like an internship). Then I was fully licensed.
I was able to work full time while taking my leveling courses and then part time during the first year of grad school (doable, but only because it was flexible. most of the ppl in my cohort didn't work at all in grad school).
It is an amazing career path and I'm so glad I took the leap and went for it. Prior to becoming an SLP, I worked in corporate finance. Let me know if you have any other questions.
Did you do any of your coursework online? There are many places that offer the prerequisites online..
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A friend left corporate America to become a speech therapist in her 40s, and never looked back.
My cousin was working in Hollywood (and actually somewhat successful) but then changed to become a speech therapist in public schools. She loves it, and her acting experience is very helpful.
Do you know what the educational path is?
I become a speech pathologist in my 30s! I spent a year taking a handful of "leveling courses" (aka the speech pathology undergraduate courses you need as prerequisites to apply to graduate school), two years of grad school for an MS, and then a yearlong, full-time, paid Clinical Fellowship Year (kinda like an internship). Then I was fully licensed.
I was able to work full time while taking my leveling courses and then part time during the first year of grad school (doable, but only because it was flexible. most of the ppl in my cohort didn't work at all in grad school).
It is an amazing career path and I'm so glad I took the leap and went for it. Prior to becoming an SLP, I worked in corporate finance. Let me know if you have any other questions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A friend left corporate America to become a speech therapist in her 40s, and never looked back.
My cousin was working in Hollywood (and actually somewhat successful) but then changed to become a speech therapist in public schools. She loves it, and her acting experience is very helpful.
Do you know what the educational path is?
Well her undergrad was in theater so she had to take some extra classes first, then apply to her masters. She did a masters and an internship/on the job training. She did her masters in a big city so she was able to do some commercials on the side for extra money,
Lots of schooling to be come a speech therapist!Anonymous wrote:I started my own business at age 50. Probably should have stayed at my day job, though. It was easier and paid more.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A friend left corporate America to become a speech therapist in her 40s, and never looked back.
My cousin was working in Hollywood (and actually somewhat successful) but then changed to become a speech therapist in public schools. She loves it, and her acting experience is very helpful.
Do you know what the educational path is?
Anonymous wrote:Two friends of mine finished law school around 40, worked for other people for a bit, and then started their own practices doing trusts and estates. Before the law school, one used to be in IT and the other in investment banking. Both moms of two.