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New Work Paradigm Project

June 19th, 2009 by Yank Elliott | 1 Comment | Filed in business

Here is a new business model made possible by Internet technology.

It enables one to devote a small amount of time each week and gradually build a business that will give great flexibility in a few years.  It has the power to provide an income in six figures.

So, if your job is terminated, if you are laid off, if you become ill, or you just get tired of the hassle, so what!  You don’t need to work for anybody but YOU!

You could call it “Health, Wealth and Happiness” insurance.

This paradigm, which I call the “Turnkey Business Plan”,  requires just a few hours a week.  Maybe 2 to 5 hours.  The monetary investment is negligible, a minimum $29.95 a month.  You will share profits of the entire organization,  about one million (and quickly growing) , so it’s quite possible you may have no cost at all.

Now, at no cost, your business is going to grow slowly (unless you put in a great deal of personal effort).  This is why you need to start now, so you have plenty of time for your business to grow.

And your business, after you get it started,  will continue to grow, whether you do anything or not.  This is great flexibility and security.  What if you should become unable to work, for some reason?

Now, many professional people, doctors, lawyers, dentists and such, carry disability insurance.  That’s great, but the amounts are fixed.  The “Turnkey Business” continues to grow.  It is a powerful side income for anyone.

I know that everyone is not going to see the vision and how this business really works.  A doctor, making perhaps in the hundreds of thousands of dollars each year is likely to scoff at the ability of $29.95 per month to make any kind of serious income.

But, when you consider the market clout of several million people, with thousands being added every month, and that the compensation plan allows you to share in the money made by all those people, the possibilities are awesome.

 E-mail is recognized by most people as the most effective means of promoting any business.  It also has the stigma of SPAM, unsolicited commercial e-mail. Since there are millions of voluntary participants in the “Turnkey Plan”,  SPAM is not an issue.   They have all given their permission to receive regular e-mail. The business power  this gives is unbelievable. No one else has this ability, on such a large scale.

Please do yourself the favor of looking at this plan.  You can find it here. 

 

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This is the final entry for this particular paradigm. This has been an experiment with different ways to distribute information. If this is successful, we may have more. Thanks for helping.

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No Jobs For You? It’s Your Opportunity.

November 30th, 2008 by Yank Elliott | 2 Comments | Filed in Positive Attitude

“My job just went away. Now I have all the time I want to do whatever I want. Oh Boy, I’ve been laid off!” Unfortunately, for most employees that’s not how it goes. With the need for multiple wage earners in the home loss of a job is a catastrophe. A layoff is more likely today than it has ever been. Years ago an infrequent mass layoff of workers might occur when a business went bankrupt and there have always been seasonal temporary layoffs. I once worked for a company where there was a lot of overtime early in each year to prepare for Christmas sales. Then, come October or November, many employees were out of work until after the New Year. It seemed these workers became used to this schedule and actually welcomed the time off during the Holiday Season.

 

Now unexpected terminal layoffs have become a normal business practice. In addition to the old bankruptcy and seasonal issues you have worker reduction to improve operating income, as a result of downsizing, or outsourcing work to other companies. This attitude used to be a move of last resort for CEOs, something they really disliked because there was some loyalty to their workers. With increasing pressure from stockholders for bottom line results and faced with all these other new issues, terminating workers is now considered by most top managers as something you just do. Regardless of what companies say about valuing their employees there is no more loyalty to them. Job security is no more for those who work for any company large or small.

 

To get an idea about what is going on in your workplace read these three books about working for others— you won’t want to after reading any one of these:

 

Uchitelle, Louis. The Disposable American: Layoffs and Their Consequences. Vintage.

LeRoy, Greg. The Great American Jobs Scam. Berrett-Koehler.

Bogle, John C. The Battle for the Soul of Capitalism. Yale University Press.

 

Among the ideas in these books is that top managers now mostly look at themselves as successful leaders who deal with the situation as it actually is at any time. This means they are no longer averse to layoffs at any time to improve financial position. In the past, managers often tried to avoid anything as drastic as a layoff in hopes things may change in the near future. Now they see things as bad right now and disregard what may or may not happen down the road. This is a major cause of increasing job insecurity.

 

Another consequence is that a layoff for most people is a tremendous blow to a person’s ego and lowers self-worth. A layoff cuts them loose from their foundations and often they never completely regain a satisfactory new sense of themselves. The elaborate ideas of recent years involving “lifetime learning” are mostly developed to soothe anger and frustration of workers subject to layoffs. Whatever skills are learned are usually of no value to local job openings.

 

Our materialistic view of the world where we all want the best for ourselves and our families, and we want it right now, has made all employees who work for others something close to a slave of former days. Two articles in the April, 2004, issue of Fast Company Magazine discuss the personal tragedies of a group of employees caught in the outsourcing flood which was big news at that time and is still a factor in layoffs. If you read “Into Thin Air” and “Look Into Their Eyes” in this issue of the magazine you will see the devastation brought to 40 people. Nine of them were still unemployed after a year. In this situation they were actually living in conditions worse than when slaves were the property of owners. At least the slave owners fed them, furnished a place to live, and took care of them if they became ill. Now when you lose your job you have lost your home, your health insurance, and your ability to feed yourself and your family.

 

Dependence on your employer gets worse as you begin to near retirement. A Merrill Lynch survey released in May, 2004, shows why people enslave themselves to employers for life. 54% of those surveyed say they intend to continue working at some level after age 65 purely for financial reasons. In addition, what happens if they are forced to retire because of some disabling disease? What about the ever-increasing cost of health care as we grow older? The survey showed average accumulated savings is $51,000! That’s not much if you live into your ‘80s or ‘90s as you are expected to do. This is why most are terror stricken when that pink slip comes.

 

What can you do to survive losing your job? Here  are some ideas about defensive actions you can take. CNN Money says to be aware of what is happening around you. This is kind of like the Homeland Security admonition to be aware of your surroundings. Some handwriting on the wall clues would be expense reduction programs, a freeze on hiring, reducing travel, resignations of managers in your company, and seeing your competitors doing the same things. Any of these could be an indication of bad things to come. When you detect any of these actions, recognize it is time to change careers; you should immediately begin looking for another place to work (you ought to be doing this from your first moment at any new job, and never stop). In addition, begin to gather everything you know about all your contacts and your network of friends and business associates. When you get the bad news be sure to not burn any bridges behind you; everyone could be a link to a new job!

 

After your job is over you will be faced with psychological problems as well as financial difficulty. This may be overwhelming but there are things you can do to get going again. A quite different view of a layoff is to consider it as a sabbatical! The dictionary defines a sabbatical as “any extended period of leave from one’s customary work, esp. for rest, to acquire new skills or training, etc.” This is exactly what you need to do: step back and review your personal skills and abilities, then think about ways you can use what you have to move forward with your life. You don’t have to take a trip. With no job you can just as well do that at home. The important thing is to develop goals for your sabbatical and always keep your hopes alive. It may seem like the end of the world but eventually things will work for you.

 

Keep faith in yourself; we all have a tremendous ability to survive and everyone can emerge against great odds to ultimately be successful. People who emerge from extreme adversity, like a  layoff, have the ability to rebound, they have enough strength to withstand adverse conditions, and they have the wisdom to learn from mistakes. These people will persevere, focus on their new life, and quickly move on to better things.

 

Rather than concentrating only on working for another company, and risk a layoff again in the future, you should also consider the opportunity to become self-employed, especially in one of the home jobs available. See if having your own business will be good for you, meaning you must research all the risks and benefits, good and bad. Then decide what you want your life to be? If you want regular hours with no weekends you may decide you are not cut out to be an entrepreneur. Should you decide to start your own business try to get into an industry you know something about or at least one that is of interest to you—it is imperative for you to be passionate about what you do. While doing your research you need to remain objective which could be hard after a layoff. Talk to others outside your immediate family; use local resources like community college and knowledgeable friends. They will help you avoid mistakes from being too close to your situation.

 

Now look at an example of how new jobs can be developed for home based entrepreneurs. Placer Dome Mining Company took a unique approach when forced to terminate employment for 2,500 employees at its South African mine. They put a lot of effort into locating these former employees who dispersed to their homes all over South Africa. They wanted to find these people and bring them into a program designed to place 70% of them back into gainful employment. In addition to regular job placement counseling, Placer Dome developed a small business training program figuring a business of their own would be a wonderful opportunity after a layoff. Some of the home based businesses developed included electronics repair, local vegetable growing, and small markets (sort of like convenience stores) within the home to save people from having to walk miles to the nearest store. The fact that people from this poverty-prone area could come up with these ideas and make them work speaks much for the entrepreneurial spirit that lurks within us all. It often just needs the shock of a job termination to let it loose. This is why a layoff is YOUR OPPORTUNITY.

 

Entrepreneur Magazine, in a December, 2006, article “A New Chapter, Why Retire,” discusses more positive results after a layoff:

 

There was a 60-year old man who always wanted his own business but could never do it because his wife was adamant about a “real job” with a regular paycheck. She died before his layoff so she never knew the truth about “real jobs.” Termination of his job gave this man the opportunity he had always wanted—after thorough research he took a chance, put up most of his financial assets, and bought into a franchise which worked just fine for him. It was too early for him to retire and when the paycheck stopped what other choice did he really have? You see, there is often OPPORTUNITY IN A LAYOFF.

 

And here is the story of a 43 year old woman who had worked for a number of businesses and they all ended up going out of business or terminating her employment for unknown reasons. She finally realized that all those years were spent receiving praise for her good work but without realizing one penny of reward for herself. Another example of the opportunity provided by a layoff, it gave her the chance to step back, look at her past life, and realize all her disappointments had finally given her the chance and the courage to go into her own franchise business.

 

Our last example is about the man who spent 25 years as a successful regional VP of a national fast food chain. His pink slip came after a successful quarter for his region and was entirely unexpected with no reason given. That would be quite a jolt for anyone. He did what every person in that situation should do—he talked to a knowledgeable acquaintance who was outside the immediate situation. This person advised him to get away from the corporate world (always good advice if you can do it). He decided to run a fitness center and now looks at his layoff, although for reasons unknown, as the means to get him out of his comfort zone and showed him he has better things to do by changing careers.

 

About 12% of the people who were laid off because of the outsourcing we previously discussed did start to work for themselves. Unfortunately they all seemed dissatisfied because of what they consider as the insecurity of running their own business. Wouldn’t it have been much better if they had begun a home based business on the side years ago? They would have been able to learn how to operate their business comfortably rather than being rudely dumped into the situation of having to do something they really don’t like.

 

The fact is we must all work  at something to survive (or be born wealthy). We have seen that today most of us want too much and save too little to get away from the self-imposed slavery of work. Some people will look at self-employment as just another spin on slavery. My answer is, “Isn’t it a lot better for the profits you earn as a slave to go to you as the slave master than giving a large part of it to an uncaring slave owner?”

 

If you should have your job terminated don’t view it as a disaster. Step back, take a long view of your life from what it was to what you would like for it to be, seek reliable advice, and find out everything you can about the possible opportunities ahead for you. Even after you do this always begin to look for better jobs even if you are working for yourself. You may see a niche you can operate alongside a “real job” or in addition to your own business. The point is you must never become complacent and think you are in the best place you can be. There is always something better.

 

A layoff can be exactly what you need to put yourself in another gear outside your comfort zone and really achieve the great things you want from your life.

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