‘Mumpreneur’: Love It Or Loathe It?

At first, I was happy to call myself a mumpreneur. After all, it is a combination of 'mum' and 'entrepreneur' and I'd be proud to call myself either. It meant I was stepping off the career treadmill and doing my own thing.

Then I discovered that other mums in business didn't like the word. When they think of a mumpreneur, many people have an image of a woman running a little hobby business to keep her busy while she's a stay-at-home-mum.

The reality for most mums in business is very different. Ask around and you hear stories of mums looking after children all day and then working into the small hours to keep their businesses going. Of having little alternative but to work for themselves because they can't afford childcare. Of refusing to miss out on their children's early years, yet still wanting (and often needing) to earn a living.

In her post What sort of mumpreneur are you? Antonia Chitty asks 'Do you see ‘mumpreneur’ as something that helps mums who own businesses, or something that is holding us back?'. Probably a bit of both, I think.

But what interests me is how come we have a label that is meant to bring us together, yet divides us.

In my pre-baby days I never had to prove I was equal to the men I worked with. True, some women are still grappling with a glass ceiling and fighting to get equal pay, but generally most women are now seen as being as competent and motivated as men.

That's until you have children. Bam, you're back in the land that time forgot. A land of stereotypes and assumptions. A world where the only way to prove your brain hasn't turned to mush is to work full-time and put your baby in a nursery five days a week. Which of course makes you a bad mother. The alternative is to risk becoming a nobody by being a stay-at-home-mum or to apply for a badly-paid part time job.

All stereotypes (except for the badly-paid part time job, sadly). Is this what has contaminated the word 'mumpreneur'?

There are no easy answers. Sometimes I feel like I'm the latest generation in an experiment that started over a century ago, where we still have a long way to go before we learn how to be truly equal.

I'd love to see people respecting the working choices made by mothers. (And the choice to not work.) To support and encourage, rather than to divide and judge.To ditch the stereotypes.  And for the challenges of being a working parent to be shared equally between women and men.

Then maybe we'd all be proud to call ourselves mumpreneurs?

What do you think? Leave me a comment below.

Photo: egor.gribanov

Review: Mum Ultrapreneur – Susan Odev and Mark Weeks

What’s a Mum Ultrapreneur? After reading this book, I know that she’s someone who wants an alternative to the corporate life. To embrace the strength, determination and creativity that mothers have always had and build a business with it.

The book takes an original approach by being made up of several sections that you can use in any way that works for you. The sections include interviews with mumpreneurs, an action plan to help you get your own business idea and Gemma’s story, a fictional account of a mum who starts her own business.

The acronym ‘SPARKLES’ is used to explain the qualities you need as a mumpreneur. ‘SPARKLES’ is the theme that weaves the different sections of the book together. (But I’d be giving too much away if I revealed what the letters stand for!)

The interviews with mumpreneurs are excellent. They show these Mum Ultrapreneurs are ordinary mums who went out there and just did it. That the difference between thinking about starting a business and being a successful business mum is really just about taking action.

Gemma’s story didn’t really click with me –  I’d have preferred a more straightforward, non-fiction explanation of the SPARKLES concept. Having said that, parts of her story were very similar to my own, especially having bursts of creativity when I was pregnant and totally shattered, then collapsing and achieving very little once the baby was born. If you like to learn through stories, you may really enjoy reading about Gemma.

This book is good for getting you moving and for boosting your self-belief. With many mums saying that they would start a business if only they knew how, it’s great that there’s a book out there that tackles the vital first step in the process.  However, Mum Ultrapreneur doesn’t cover the nuts and bolts of starting a business (and doesn’t claim to), so I’d suggest reading it alongside Antonia Chitty’s The Mumpreneur Guide or Anita Naik’s Kitchen Table Tycoon.

You can buy Mum Ultrapreneur from Amazon.

Women Wednesday Blog Hop

Creation|Collaboration was set up by eight women, all existing friends, who run small businesses from their homes. They started the Women Wednesday blog hop to link up with other women in business, spread the word about Creation|Collaboration and basically just have fun visiting new and interesting blogs.

Find out more about the blog hop here.
 

I Started A Business With A Baby – Kayte Judge of Good Things

My business is just a little younger than my two-year old son, Jim

When I first set out my stall I primarily offered corporate social responsibility (CSR) support to micro and small businesses.  Small businesses annually give more to CSR causes than big business every year– but they rarely harness the benefits in the same way that the big guys do. Through staff engagement, streamlining, and identifying meaningful causes and ways of giving that can be transformative small companies and the causes they support can reap the benefits.

A large strand of my work was to fuse CSR principles and staff training; meeting the soft skills needs of organisations through focussed volunteering.  Things have changed now though – I have become far more involved in education innovation and most of my work is now in this area. In many ways the process is the same, it is only the client group that is different. I facilitate, I support, I clarify, I deliver and I aid organisational change and innovation. I suspect that my future lies in education: it really floats my boat.

A little bit about my background

I hold a first class degree in Comparative Religion from the School of Oriental and African Studies, and my early career focussed on people and work: I was variously a jobs analyst, a qualified careers advisor and Higher Education specialist and a communications co-ordinator. I hold qualifications in guidance, careers education, delivering learning and CIPD training. I then moved to the Open University and briefly managed a project to encourage graduates into teaching, before I became pregnant and had my son. My early work as a job analyst and careers adviser had shown me clearly that work impacts significantly on people sense of themselves and I had been introduced to CSR through my CIPD training. I believe that CSR can create meaning in the workplace.

Looking back I had always known that the time I took off to have a child would be time that I could sue to refocus my life and career goals. I had always been disappointed that I hadn’t continued in my studies after my degree and it was always in the back of my mind that I would study again if I became a Mum.

The last few years of paid employment had been increasingly uncomfortable for me

I was competent but miserable. It was the never-ending grind, shifting goal posts and never-quite-knowing-who-you-should-be-pleasing feeling that got me down. But, I was a wage slave. When I took my maternity leave I faced a very tough decision. The OU are a spectacular employer and had given me a pay rise while I was away, they also offered me any number of part time/flexi time working options. I remember opening the pay-rise  letter on the same day that I had handed my notice in and sobbing, fearing for my future career. I always aspired to earn my age, and taking that pay-rise would have got me there at last!

My reasons for starting a business were very much about my own self actualisation

I needed to see if I could create something new in the world and I needed to test my own value in the market place. I wanted to test the limits of my potential. Maternity leave gave me the safety net to create a hole in my CV without any risk: people would expect a gap, and if I used that gap to try to start a business then there was no harm if it all went wrong.  The only other thing that would allow me to break from paid employment would have been a lottery win.  It’s not often that maternity pay is likened to a lottery win…

I started work when Jimmy was 2 months old, I had taken on some data entry work to get funds into the business to get me started. Alongside this I was developing the CSR policy and practice of a Design and Branding Agency in return for the design and hosting of my website and stationery.  I began a short OU finance course to keep my brain working. I networked hard and offered free training to a local forest centre in return for free use of their grounds to offer my own training (I do a lot of outdoor challenges and games). I attended a few business link courses and some at the Centre for Women’s Enterprise, as well as other training courses in specifics, one of which paid for by a grant from http://www.enterprising-women.org

I was exhausted. Knackered.

I didn’t finish the course. My first year profits equalled, exactly, my accountant’s fees (which I hadn’t factored in!). You live and learn.

My Mum helped with childcare and I worked every evening and nap-time

I did try to use a nursery quite early on by it was too upsetting for everyone: it was too much to young for him I think. I don’t think mums should feel guilty a bout using childcare at all, different things work for different Mum/baby combos and there is little harm in trying different things. Looking back I should have had childcare to allow me to sleep first and then start the business slightly later.

Two years on and it is very different – Jim has settled into a different nursery for 3 half days a week (with plenty of extra hours when needed) and goes to his beloved Nanny for two further days. I work much more than full time, contracted for approximately 3 days a week with different clients and studying towards an MSc in Managing Business Creativity and Innovation. I love my work and I love being a portfolio worker.

The big challenges have all been personal

have spent so long outside of my comfort zone I can’t remember where I left it.  I had often been successful in my career pre-baby and feared failure. I had imagined that motherhood would be manageable and satisfying. Oh dear. The horror of childbirth and my complete failure to feed the poor little fella blew all my ideas clear out of the water – I struggled so hard in those early days. If you have managed to survive the early days of motherhood there really isn’t much you can’t do. I have taken more personal risks post baby than I could imagine doing before and most have paid off.

If I were to offer any advice I would urge Mums to be brave, rest up and throw away the guilt. Your child wants you to be happy.

Kayte Judge

www.goodthingsltd.com

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