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When I look around at the older people I work with I wonder why they still work here and than I realize they can't afford or risk making a big move. That's why I need to figure it out right now. |
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Thanks Nick. |
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We didn't need to partner to open up the business but it helped. One person can run the business but right now it's more of a "When I eat, my people eat" approach. You can have all the money in the world but if you have no friends to enjoy it with than what's the point of even living? - And don't say Porsche's lol.. |
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Thanks for insight. |
Just another data point. Partnerships always seem get complicated at some point or another.
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I heard a motivational speaker say buy a house that if you push the key into the front lock too hard it will punch out the back windows. Spartan lifestyle even at 24 when most kids don't see the importance. You can weather a lot of crap that way. |
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Only thing I will choose to pay off will be only for building credit. If I can't buy it out right I will not be buying it. I'm not 100% I understood you correctly, but you are saying I should live pretty minimalistic right? With the motivational speaker reference. edit: Google'd Spartan lifestyle meaning. I understand and agree. That's why people probably wouldn't guess I was an engineer living the way I currently do. |
Some very good advice,
Have you thought about taking on short term freelance engineering contract work not working a full week or working say a 3-6 month contract. If there is enough work around you should be able to switch on/off your day job income to suit your business I'm a freelance design engineer and this is my approach but I choose the interesting jobs before chasing the last dime. Last summer was spent at home building, now I'm working 12 hr days which don't feel that long as I'm enjoying work. This plus 2hr commute, having a family, weekends man cave building, holidays abroad leaves me no spare time, just how I like to live, Also maybe think about ditching some of your other distractions (not including your girlfriend) while you concentrate on building your business and day job as/when required. Spreading yourself too thinly will just mean you'll be doing everything badly. You're only 24, got a whole life of time ahead of you so as others have said you have time on your side. |
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But after my day at work I do cross fit. I have exercised 5-6 days a week since 15 years old. I still have a 30" waist and my last doctors check up in September my BP was 117/69 and my resting heart rate was 56 BPM. I'll work a 35 year old under the table. |
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They seems to be very happy, and feel that marriage was the best financial and lifestyle move they ever made. |
Itza,
You don't come off as an engineer. You seriously have an ME degree? If your business is not making money, it's a crappy business. No offense. Most people pursue stupid ideas since they have drank the KoolAid of "Be your own boss", without looking at the downside. If your business sucks, you will enjoy a life of being constantly broke and stressed out. Just because you're 24, you should not go do stupid things. This is the time to build your career and net worth. Not chasing bad ideas that don't make money. You're a classic bottomfeeder. You like buying cheap garbage just because it's cheap (just like you posting about $3k rusted out carcasses that you have zero chance of ever fixing up) Tell us more about this business that does not make money. So, what, you're re-selling refunded and broken stuff no one wants? Who do you sell this overstock to? Sounds like this business is just some extension of your bottomfeeding hoarding tendencies. Re-selling cheap junk is a race to the bottom industry. You don't want to compete in a race to the bottom. If I had to flip a coin, I say keep your day job. Close up the business. Enjoy the gym and car flipping in the evenings |
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Quit the side job. Go run a marathon. Salaried job means you have 5 hours a day to do whatever you want. And weekends. |
If you don't feel like you're giving your business the attention it deserves, go for it! I know from my own experience of doing multiple things that being distracted by other things I wasn't realizing the full potential of what I could do by focusing on one. Once I zeroed in on construction equipment and was able to give it my full attention, it took off. I was able to make secure more suppliers and was able to give my customers the attention needed to make the business grow.
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I have seen it lots of times. Way back in 1982, I ran across a guy in his late 40's early 50's who owned an eye glass frame business, next to a spoon shop I frequented down in Laguna Nigel. He didn't look to happy and had just purchased a brand new corvette. I saw him having a drink in a bar restaurant a week or two later and thought ummm this guy is really depressed. Two weeks later I found out he had a HA and died, it really didn't surprise me that much. . It left me thinking that he bought the Vette because he thought it would make him happier, when he fulfilled his dream and it didn't make him happier he died. |
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If only he waited until 1984 and the C4. |
At 24 I was starting out too...lived a "techie's dream", worked for peanuts for a few years...
An older guy had a saying back when I wuz a youngin'.... "I'll work days or I'll work nights....but I won't work daze AND nights..." Life's a journey...make your own path imo. Are you an engineer or about making $? I did the corporate gig for 25 years and "retired"...next chapter....turn the page. Best of luck...go kick butt and follow your gut instincts...you will make some mistakes....have FUN doing what ya do...if not...fix it...jmho. |
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I've never REALLY leveraged credit.... Being debt free is "freedom".... was for me! I haven't owed a cent in a couple of decades....how are YOU gonna get off your merry-go-round? Some can't or don't want too.... I had a blast along the way too....balance. |
You have a business, but someone else is in control of the money. Anything on paper ? Do you know what ship is the hardest to sail? A partnership. Sooner or later, people's opinions on what is fair will differ. Usually you won't know that if you aren't on top of the books.
Don't quit your day job until your night job pays so much you can't walk away from it. |
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Don't do what I did. Trust me in that friendships are not strong enough to weather business partnerships. I love my partner like a brother, and we have still managed to stay good friends, but I would never partner with him, or anybody again on anything. We have different ideas of how to operate . When it comes time to make big changes/decisions, the waters start getting mucky . |
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My wife bought a small desk from a lady that buys, as she described it, "Amazon pallets". This must be a thing like buying storage bins and reselling was a few years ago.
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We need a HOT subforum then....
Heathens Off Topic! We'll make Runnie the moderator :) |
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Definitely interested, thanks for the advice. |
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Lightly roasting myself right now but I'm not the most book smart person ever and my personality is definitely not one of a usual engineer. Me even obtaining these engineering jobs and easily handling them makes it pretty clear that acquiring another one in the future if need be shouldn't be an issue. Quote:
Salaried job means waking up in the dark and leaving back home in the dark when its the colder season. Means having to ask another human being for permission to take time off work to do normal life things. List can go on. |
This thread reminds me of the other 24 year old guy asking us if he should spend 100K on a Porsche. lol
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I have a time frame in mind and will be dissecting the details before then. All the $ is on paper. But that is about it. |
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When you've paid your dues and are rolling in dough, you can change that reality. Until then, you do what you have to do. If you want to get ahead faster than just punching a clock, expect to put in a lot more hours and suffer in your work/life balance. Apart from the fact that you can't stand your day job and feel like your work/life balance is off, I haven't heard much from you. I haven't heard how cutting the day job will create additional bottom line income. I haven't heard an analysis of your business that suggests it needs more of your labor and that's the only option to fill it. I haven't heard any real numbers, which makes it impossible to judge what's going on. Etc. |
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Honestly talking to you guys definitely made me realize several things. Especially about the business. Maybe it lacking the organization I'm used to with going through schooling and my engineering jobs that it's stressing me out. I will spare you all the details. Cutting the day job won't increase my bottom line income but I will be able to survive, while doing my normal hustle that could bring me basically the same $ as my salary job while putting in much less time. I can hire someone for $10/hr that would take care of some of the stuff I've been wasting time on at the business and focus more on the #'s. There is no huge need for me to be there full time, but when I leave work and there is stuff waiting for me to get done, it gets annoying. I signed myself up for it though, so can't complain. I just need is structured. |
As Fred and others have advised, get the legalities of the business in order now. Decide how you are structuring(partnership, LLC, S Corp, etc) and get it done. Get the business filing with your sec of state, get your operating agreement, speak to your accountant to make certain you have all of the bases covered. The operating agreement you will be working under is key to protect everyone and all contingencies. Make certain you and your partner(s) understand it isn't personal, it is business, because everything may be going great until it isn't.
Make certain you are willing to commit--running your own business isn't easy--there isn't anyone to pass the buck to, and you must be accessible. It can be stressful because it is your responsibility to make sure everything is right. When you are working for someone else, you can leave some of that stress and responsibility at the office when you leave--when it is your business, you carry that with you 24/7. |
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