| Hub You |
Hubs | Hubbers | Topics | Request |
| #1 in Business | Subscribe Email Print |
|
You are here: Home > Home Based Business > Home Based Business > Work From Home Job or Home-Based Business? |
|
Hub You - Work From Home Job or Home-Based Business?
Real Estate Marketing Online - The Power of Information isions, although with a franchise, there might be some decisions you had no control over. For example, you would have to decide how many employees you needed, who to hire, and when to schedule them. But Hamburger Heaven’s franchise agreement would require that you use their uniforms, signage, interior d?cor, menu, and prices, so you would not have control over these decisions. Because you are self employed, you are responsible for self-employment tax. You are also responsible for making sure your employees’ taxes and fees are paid (on time) and for carrying whatever licenses and insurance is required to operate your business.How to increase your real estate marketing success by offering informational reports through your website...Do you have a website? Do you have some basic research skills? If you answered yes to both questions, then you have the tools to take your real estate marketing program to an exciting new level.In fact, by the end of the week you could publish a highly enticing report and offer it through your website (in exchange for a newsletter subscription or some other form of lead capture).But like anything else in real estate marketing, you get out of it what you put into it. Some real estate agents use the free report method with great results. For others it's a waste of time. The difference is all in the approach.Here are some keys to success:1. It all starts with the report itself. You have to put a lot of valu A home-based business works much the same way. You will likely have to put out at least some money. If you become an independent consultant, affiliate, or franchiser for a company, you will have the support and training of that company to help you get started, but that is not a guarantee of success, or even of an income. There is likely to be some risk involved. You are the b How To Find A Short-Term Rental Apartment In this article, we are going to look at the difference between a work from home job and a home-based business. To help us illustrate the difference, we are going to create a fictitious fast food chain, Hamburger Heaven, and pretend that this national fast food chain is on every major street corner so that you can get a visual image of what I’m talking about.Are you going to be traveling out of your home country for business or pleasure? If so, you will need somewhere to stay. One of your best options may be to find a short term rental in the area that you are going to be visiting. This will allow you to have a great place to stay without having to get caught up in a long term contract. The only problem with a short term rental is actually finding one. Although this is not always the easiest thing to do, in today’s day and age it is simpler than ever before. All you have to do is take the time to find the short term rental that is best for your needs.Since you will not be in your home country you probably do not know much about the area you are traveling to. Some people see this as a drawback when searching for a short term rental, but this does not have to necessarily be the truth. The fact of the matter If you wanted to go get a job at Hamburger Heaven, you would expect certain things. For example, you would expect:
A work from home job should not be any different. It is still a job – the only difference is the commute is much shorter. Your prospective employer should still provide you with a work schedule based around your availability, and expect you to work your schedule. They should still provide you with a stated compensation package and pay you on a consistent and regular schedule. If you are expected to be “on call” during certain hours, you should be compensated for those hours even if no calls are received. If you are scheduled for full-time (usually over 35 hours a week) of work, you should discuss benefits that would be available to you in a regular job. And since you are their employee, you should expect to fill out a W-4, have withholdings taken out of your paycheck, and be provided with unemployment insurance and, if applicable, workman’s compensation insurance. And you should not expect an employer to charge you a placement fee or a fee for training; you should be paid for necessary training. If the charge is for necessary equipment or supplies, consider this in light of the Hamburger Heaven example above, and see if it would fly in a regular job environment. How about a home-based business? How does that differ? Well, let’s return to our Hamburger Heaven example. If you wanted to open your own Hamburger Heaven, it would be quite a bit different than getting a job there. You would either go to the Hamburger Heaven corporate office and purchase a franchise license, and then go about setting up your own restaurant from scratch using their guidelines, or you might find someone selling their already open and running Hamburger Heaven restaurant, and purchase that (called a turn-key business). Either way, there is likely to be some money required to get started (capital). While you would have Hamburger Heaven to help train and guide you, there would be no guarantee of success. You would be exposed to some risk. You might not make money right away, or even on a regular basis. You would be responsible for many of the day-to-day decisions, although with a franchise, there might be some decisions you had no control over. For example, you would have to decide how many employees you needed, who to hire, and when to schedule them. But Hamburger Heaven’s franchise agreement would require that you use their uniforms, signage, interior d?cor, menu, and prices, so you would not have control over these decisions. Because you are self employed, you are responsible for self-employment tax. You are also responsible for making sure your employees’ taxes and fees are paid (on time) and for carrying whatever licenses and insurance is required to operate your business. A home-based business works much the same way. You will likely have to put out at least some money. If you become an independent consultant, affiliate, or franchiser for a company, you will have the support and training of that company to help you get started, but that is not a guarantee of success, or even of an income. There is likely to be some risk involved. You are the b Six Steps to a Successful Vendor Management System he time you worked.
A vendor management system (VMS) promises freedom from the chaos that can be caused by juggling the vast array of components in a staffing supply chain. It does this by pushing everything through a central processing point. Yet the business side of making these transitions can be complicated and disastrous if not well planned. How do you ensure a successful VMS implementation? After spending months with companies and vendors in developing ContractCentral we’ve learned some valuable lessons about making the transition to vendor managment system.1. Know why you’re buying a VMS Organizations deploy VMS systems for different reasons. Will your VMS foster competitive bidding to lower staffing costs? Speed requisition broadcasts? Reduce the time it takes to find and manage contract workers? You’ll save time and money You would not expect to be charged to be hired or trained by the company. In fact, if training is required for the job, you should expect them to compensate you for the time you spend in training. There might be legitimate expenses involved in taking the job, for example, you might be required to wear shoes with non-slip soles, which would be your responsibility to purchase. The company might provide you with a list of vendors that sold such shoes, or they might have an arrangement with a vendor where you could order the shoes and have them deducted from your future payrolls. A work from home job should not be any different. It is still a job – the only difference is the commute is much shorter. Your prospective employer should still provide you with a work schedule based around your availability, and expect you to work your schedule. They should still provide you with a stated compensation package and pay you on a consistent and regular schedule. If you are expected to be “on call” during certain hours, you should be compensated for those hours even if no calls are received. If you are scheduled for full-time (usually over 35 hours a week) of work, you should discuss benefits that would be available to you in a regular job. And since you are their employee, you should expect to fill out a W-4, have withholdings taken out of your paycheck, and be provided with unemployment insurance and, if applicable, workman’s compensation insurance. And you should not expect an employer to charge you a placement fee or a fee for training; you should be paid for necessary training. If the charge is for necessary equipment or supplies, consider this in light of the Hamburger Heaven example above, and see if it would fly in a regular job environment. How about a home-based business? How does that differ? Well, let’s return to our Hamburger Heaven example. If you wanted to open your own Hamburger Heaven, it would be quite a bit different than getting a job there. You would either go to the Hamburger Heaven corporate office and purchase a franchise license, and then go about setting up your own restaurant from scratch using their guidelines, or you might find someone selling their already open and running Hamburger Heaven restaurant, and purchase that (called a turn-key business). Either way, there is likely to be some money required to get started (capital). While you would have Hamburger Heaven to help train and guide you, there would be no guarantee of success. You would be exposed to some risk. You might not make money right away, or even on a regular basis. You would be responsible for many of the day-to-day decisions, although with a franchise, there might be some decisions you had no control over. For example, you would have to decide how many employees you needed, who to hire, and when to schedule them. But Hamburger Heaven’s franchise agreement would require that you use their uniforms, signage, interior d?cor, menu, and prices, so you would not have control over these decisions. Because you are self employed, you are responsible for self-employment tax. You are also responsible for making sure your employees’ taxes and fees are paid (on time) and for carrying whatever licenses and insurance is required to operate your business. A home-based business works much the same way. You will likely have to put out at least some money. If you become an independent consultant, affiliate, or franchiser for a company, you will have the support and training of that company to help you get started, but that is not a guarantee of success, or even of an income. There is likely to be some risk involved. You are the b Internet Marketing As A Home-Based Business, Advantages And be any different. It is still a job – the only difference is the commute is much shorter. Your prospective employer should still provide you with a work schedule based around your availability, and expect you to work your schedule. They should still provide you with a stated compensation package and pay you on a consistent and regular schedule. If you are expected to be “on call” during certain hours, you should be compensated for those hours even if no calls are received. If you are scheduled for full-time (usually over 35 hours a week) of work, you should discuss benefits that would be available to you in a regular job. And since you are their employee, you should expect to fill out a W-4, have withholdings taken out of your paycheck, and be provided with unemployment insurance and, if applicable, workman’s compensation insurance. And you should not expect an employer to charge you a placement fee or a fee for training; you should be paid for necessary training. If the charge is for necessary equipment or supplies, consider this in light of the Hamburger Heaven example above, and see if it would fly in a regular job environment.Nowadays more and more people are thinking about taking a step towards additional income and financial freedom. Business opportunities are countless for those who would like to start their own home-based business. That is why it makes it so difficult to decide what exactly you would like to do and how and where you would start.Let’s talk about internet marketing as one of the great opportunities to work from home and make a part time or even a full time income for yourself and your family. As any other business, internet marketing has its advantages and possible problems you might face as a beginner.If you don’t have your own product or service, you can sell other people’s products or services. There is plenty of companies on the internet that you can become an affiliate for. In affiliate marketing, you simply send traffic to an end merchant, a How about a home-based business? How does that differ? Well, let’s return to our Hamburger Heaven example. If you wanted to open your own Hamburger Heaven, it would be quite a bit different than getting a job there. You would either go to the Hamburger Heaven corporate office and purchase a franchise license, and then go about setting up your own restaurant from scratch using their guidelines, or you might find someone selling their already open and running Hamburger Heaven restaurant, and purchase that (called a turn-key business). Either way, there is likely to be some money required to get started (capital). While you would have Hamburger Heaven to help train and guide you, there would be no guarantee of success. You would be exposed to some risk. You might not make money right away, or even on a regular basis. You would be responsible for many of the day-to-day decisions, although with a franchise, there might be some decisions you had no control over. For example, you would have to decide how many employees you needed, who to hire, and when to schedule them. But Hamburger Heaven’s franchise agreement would require that you use their uniforms, signage, interior d?cor, menu, and prices, so you would not have control over these decisions. Because you are self employed, you are responsible for self-employment tax. You are also responsible for making sure your employees’ taxes and fees are paid (on time) and for carrying whatever licenses and insurance is required to operate your business. A home-based business works much the same way. You will likely have to put out at least some money. If you become an independent consultant, affiliate, or franchiser for a company, you will have the support and training of that company to help you get started, but that is not a guarantee of success, or even of an income. There is likely to be some risk involved. You are the b Lessons of Trade Show Exhibiting t or supplies, consider this in light of the Hamburger Heaven example above, and see if it would fly in a regular job environment.If you are a company looking to make a splash at a trade show, listen to the words of Woody Allen who said that 80% of success is just showing up. Same applies to trade shows. If you want a major presence at a trade show, your company needs to show up on the trade show floor with a trade show exhibit. Otherwise, you will be conspicuously absent from the trade show arena.A case in point --at the CES show in Las Vegas in January, according to Forbes.com, Research in Motion had very little presence in Vegas, despite the fact that it seemed as if every one of the 140,000 people at the trade show had one of its products. By not exhibiting with a trade show booth, RIM made it difficult to believe its recent insistence that it was going after the consumer market with its BlackBerry Pearl.Instead, it appeared that RIM had given up on the race to get How about a home-based business? How does that differ? Well, let’s return to our Hamburger Heaven example. If you wanted to open your own Hamburger Heaven, it would be quite a bit different than getting a job there. You would either go to the Hamburger Heaven corporate office and purchase a franchise license, and then go about setting up your own restaurant from scratch using their guidelines, or you might find someone selling their already open and running Hamburger Heaven restaurant, and purchase that (called a turn-key business). Either way, there is likely to be some money required to get started (capital). While you would have Hamburger Heaven to help train and guide you, there would be no guarantee of success. You would be exposed to some risk. You might not make money right away, or even on a regular basis. You would be responsible for many of the day-to-day decisions, although with a franchise, there might be some decisions you had no control over. For example, you would have to decide how many employees you needed, who to hire, and when to schedule them. But Hamburger Heaven’s franchise agreement would require that you use their uniforms, signage, interior d?cor, menu, and prices, so you would not have control over these decisions. Because you are self employed, you are responsible for self-employment tax. You are also responsible for making sure your employees’ taxes and fees are paid (on time) and for carrying whatever licenses and insurance is required to operate your business. A home-based business works much the same way. You will likely have to put out at least some money. If you become an independent consultant, affiliate, or franchiser for a company, you will have the support and training of that company to help you get started, but that is not a guarantee of success, or even of an income. There is likely to be some risk involved. You are the b RV Financing Calculator - Take the Guesswork Out of the Picture isions, although with a franchise, there might be some decisions you had no control over. For example, you would have to decide how many employees you needed, who to hire, and when to schedule them. But Hamburger Heaven’s franchise agreement would require that you use their uniforms, signage, interior d?cor, menu, and prices, so you would not have control over these decisions. Because you are self employed, you are responsible for self-employment tax. You are also responsible for making sure your employees’ taxes and fees are paid (on time) and for carrying whatever licenses and insurance is required to operate your business.What is an RV financing calculator? Essentially it is a valuable tool that any individual can use to figure out the best way for them to purchase an RV before they even fill out the loan application or set foot on the dealership lot. It can be used for either a new or a used RV and can be found most easily on the internet.The RV financing calculator is usually offered at no cost to the customer or potential buyer and can be used to determine the affordability of any thing from the smallest travel trailer to the top-of-the-line diesel pusher.One of the most stressful parts about making any purchase of this size is “how are we going to pay for it?” A fear of the unknown can even stop some individuals from realizing their dream of owning an RV. But with the RV financing calculator, all of the fear and the guesswork of the loan amount and the m A home-based business works much the same way. You will likely have to put out at least some money. If you become an independent consultant, affiliate, or franchiser for a company, you will have the support and training of that company to help you get started, but that is not a guarantee of success, or even of an income. There is likely to be some risk involved. You are the boss, which means you will be responsible for many decisions. As an affiliate or franchiser, there may be rules you have to agree to with the company you align yourself with; this is something you want to consider before signing up under them. And regardless of whether you start your own business, buy a turn-key business, become a consultant, affiliate, or franchiser, you are self-employed, and responsible for your own (and any employees’) taxes, insurance, licenses, and fees. Now, that makes it sound like I am against home-based businesses. On the contrary! I own one myself! There are many benefits to owning your own business. For example, there is no limit to the income you can earn with your own business. Once you start a business and it takes off, your income quite often multiplies itself with the work others in your organization do or products you sell when you are not working (called residual income). With a job, your income is limited to the hours you work, and there are only so many hours in the week. With a business, you set your own schedule and adjust it on the fly to accommodate your son’s ball game or your daughter’s ballet recital. Try that with a job, even a work from home job, and you’ll soon find yourself unemployed. I just want to be sure you understand the distinction because being an entrepreneur is not for everyone. If you start searching for a work from home job and end up with a home-based business, you could be very unhappy. And if you are a free-spirit who hates working for someone else and wants to be in control of your own destiny, you will be just as unhappy with a work from home job as you are with a regular job. Once you understand the differences and can look at the advantages and disadvantages of each, you can decide which is right for you and your family, and adjust your search accordingly.
HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
Related Articles:Rapid Knowledge Development for Businesses Canada's Beautiful Fraser Valley - A Buyers & Sellers Market
|