It’s a dream shared by millions around the world –turning
their hobby into a business; actually making money from
doing what they love. It’s what journalists and authors do
when they write. It’s what mechanics do when they tinker on
motors and get paid for it. It’s what artists do when they
draw, sculpt, or paint.
When you’re in a business that you
love – it’s more like “pleasure” than “work.” The difference
you’ll feel leaving “working for a living” for “doing what
you love” is astounding. Imagine what the person who loves
to bake feels when they bring the loaf out of the oven and
smell the overwhelming aroma of fresh-baked bread, hear the
customer exclaim “mmm,” and hear the cash register go
ka-ching at the same time.
Tiger Woods once said, “I get to play golf for a living.
What more can you ask for - getting paid for doing what you
love.”
Back when I began my career, I was skeptical about being
able to survive as a writer; because I’d heard so many
‘starving writer’ stories. My first job was as a secretary,
but in my personal time, I wanted to research things and
write books, articles, poetry, songs—anything. People were
always coming to me to write their resumes and speeches, to
help with their essays and reports, or to fill out their
paperwork. Yet, I was actually in my 30s before I finally
got around to believing that my real love and talent—writing—could
become a viable career and a business.
Maybe you’re one of those people who have discovered that
your hobby is expensive to maintain, and you’d like a way
simply for your hobby to ‘pay for itself’. That’s the case
of a man I know who loves flying his airplane, looking at
all different types of airplanes, and talking about
airplanes (this man has miniature airplanes on his “second”
Christmas tree). After retiring from his “real” job, he
merged his work with his hobby, and now he gets paid to
manage the airport where he keeps his plane. Many businesses
and careers have been started for that reason.
Business savvy individuals and tax attorneys may share
with you a semi-guarded trade secret: You can deduct hobby
losses from your main income if you can prove the hobby is a
legitimate, profit-motivated business. That means you must
be engaged in the activity “for profit.” If you want to go
that route, you will need to set your hobby up as a
legitimate business with: business cards, a separate set of
books, a separate business bank account, advertising,
business cards, etc.
You should also make sure to obtain all the required
business licenses and permits. For those of you, who love to
travel, consider how nice it would be to have your travel
and entertainment expenses deducted from your taxes as a
business expense. It happens every day, all around the
world.
Two great resources for further information are: Home
Business Tax Deductions: Keep What you Earn by Stephen
Fishman, and Women Biz Mentors, where experienced business
women mentor other women who want to start their own
business.
You may be someone who engages in your hobby part-time
and you “accidentally” made income from it. That’s how a lot
of hobby businesses start too. You sold a friend some
outdoor furniture you made in your hobby shop; word got
around; and soon, you were making money on the weekends,
just because you liked woodworking.
The guy who loves exotic sports cars may broker the sale
of a few each year just to support his own “passion” for
cars. Nuts for Cars, one of the businesses I write for,
began because three friends were searching for car events to
attend one weekend and couldn’t find anything in the local
newspapers or magazines. Later on, they learned they’d
missed a big car show that was near them. So they solved
their problem – and in the process, created a viable
business—by getting together to create an auto event club
and online directory of auto events.
Could it be that Shakespeare was really enlightened when
he said:
“This above all: to thine own self be true; And it must
follow, as the night the day, Thou canst not then be false
to any man.”
Take a few minutes today to consider what you love to do.
Do you find yourself always talking about your hobby or
favorite interest? Do other people say you’re really good at
a particular skill or talent? Whether you use your
hobby/talent/passion as a tax shelter; use it simply to make
your hobby pay for itself; or use it to make your fortune,
it is worth your time to consider making your hobby a
business today. Life is too short to spend it in a miserable
job if you don’t have to, and you give your best to the
universe when you operate within the sphere of your primary
talent.