A partnership is a sinking ship.
I'll just skip out back to the money tree.Why would you want a partner?
Capital? Business acumen? Someone to share/spread the workload?
If it's the latter, better just to hire a manager or employee and keep the working relationship well-defined.
If it's the former, then what do you bring to the table? Why isn't the partner just hiring you as an employee?
Agreed, that's probably the biggest factor in my hesitation.I went from working for a company to opening my own, servicing what I used to sell. Since I had a good reputation with my clients, I didn't have to bang on a lot of doors to get positive cashflow started.
However it was a specialty market. The "Me Too" market can be brutal.
If you invent a new product, patent it and start manufacturing in Canada does the Canadian government assist you when copies start coming ashore from the Pacific rim?I’m not sure there is any market left without competition. Truly niche businesses are rare .
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Not exactly. They have a dedicated graft program though. You go to the government and whine that your product is amazing but isn't getting respect because you don't have a major customer yet. Government of Canada will buy your product first so then you can advertise that the government bought it. There is probably a viable career path running that loop over and over and never bother trying to sell to others. Just take the government money and run.If you invent a new product, patent it and start manufacturing in Canada does the Canadian government assist you when copies start coming ashore from the Pacific rim?
Might be best to buy an old one and renovate?How about running a storage locker business? I've always wondered about those businesses. They seem like they'd be easy to run and wouldn't take too much of your time. Does anyone know more about how to get started? I guess you'd need a decent sized property just outside of town but not too far away, then you'd need to pay someone to build all the lockers. After that your only expense should be taxes, insurance, and probably the occasional minor maintenance. I guess profitability would depend on how close you are to big population areas. Anybody know more?
Yeah if you can find one, but people probably aren't gonna be selling theirs if it's in a location that makes good profit.Might be best to buy an old one and renovate?
Depending on where. If you build proper structures for mega bucks after zoning and impact studies it's one thing. A person with vacant land can bring in a bunch of clapped-out shipping containers and laugh at the costs. A couple hundred a month and the box is paid for in a year. Then it's gravy.How about running a storage locker business? I've always wondered about those businesses. They seem like they'd be easy to run and wouldn't take too much of your time. Does anyone know more about how to get started? I guess you'd need a decent sized property just outside of town but not too far away, then you'd need to pay someone to build all the lockers. After that your only expense should be taxes, insurance, and probably the occasional minor maintenance. I guess profitability would depend on how close you are to big population areas. Anybody know more?
Decades ago I ran the numbers for an entrepreneur that was considering a carwash or storage business. Short answer was based on the information I had, the economics sucked. Like many things, the real profit came from the use covering the expenses to allow you to hold the land for decades and at that point you cash out and make bank.How about running a storage locker business? I've always wondered about those businesses. They seem like they'd be easy to run and wouldn't take too much of your time. Does anyone know more about how to get started? I guess you'd need a decent sized property just outside of town but not too far away, then you'd need to pay someone to build all the lockers. After that your only expense should be taxes, insurance, and probably the occasional minor maintenance. I guess profitability would depend on how close you are to big population areas. Anybody know more?
I'm in industrial automation maintenance/management. Have you considered teaching at your local college? 5yrs experience in the field needed usually. Career change sometimes crosses my mind as well and noticed openings at Loyalist and Flemming near me this year in electrical, instrumentation, etc.)I've been in industrial automation sales/management (vacuum, pneumatics) for most of my career.
Always enjoyed the challenge. Last year I suddenly lost my job due to the US company pulling Canadian operations. Found another job and it's going ok, but no where near where it should be sales wise. I think I'll be back on the market by 2026 unless we see a uptick in manufacturing.
Long story short, I think my time in industrial automation is coming to an end, just growing tired of the hustle, travel and the new ghosting trend.
Has anyone here actually gone through a major career change. What advice could you give, what lessons did you learn and would you do it again if you could do it over?
While there may be openings is specific courses, in general, colleges are a blood bath right now. Losing half (or more) of their international students meant they were over staffed and more importantly had gotten used to the easy money and have become bloated. They are all fighting for survival.I'm in industrial automation maintenance/management. Have you considered teaching at your local college? 5yrs experience in the field needed usually. Career change sometimes crosses my mind as well and noticed openings at Loyalist and Flemming near me this year in electrical, instrumentation, etc.)