The pros of the side job…
Having a side job can obviously be lucrative but perhaps the biggest advantage of sticking a toe in the entrepreneurial waters while you’re still employed isn’t the extra income but the extra skills and contacts you gain, which can both help you decide if entrepreneurship is for you, and act as an insurance policy should something go wrong.
Perhaps that’s why having a side job is more popular with less experienced workers. “The people that are confident in their skills and have built a strong trusted network (usually people with more than eight years of career experience) generally take a clean break and become full-time independent workers,” says Gene Zaino, CEO of MBO Partners, an American consultancy that provides services for solopreneurs. “Those that are less confident tend to do side gigs.” This two-income-stream model is a popular approach. In the US, for example, there are 12.1 million part-time freelancers and 60 per cent of this group has a traditional full or part-time job, according to MBO’s figures.
Serial entrepreneur Emma Sinclair notes that having a side job isn’t just good for your skills portfolio but will also benefit you as a human being, broadening your horizons and boosting your motivation which can actually benefit your engagement with your day job. “Thinking about other people’s challenges or something other than yourself will do you and your career wonders. It provides perspective, it adds skills you otherwise might not develop, and it allows you to communicate and resonate with people on a far more human level,” she has written.
And if you’re worried that starting with a side job make your business less likely to succeed, fret not. Recent research indicates that businesses that began this way actually have a 33 per cent higher chance of surviving than those whose founders went all in from the start.