Business Ideas For Mums: Gardening, Ironing, Cleaning and More

Tell me more…

People often want help with these tasks around their homes:

  • Cleaning
  • Oven valeting
  • Gardening
  • Ironing
  • Pet sitting
  • Dog walking
  • Window cleaning

As older people now want to stay in their own homes for as long as they can, demand for this type of service could well be on the increase.

What are the benefits?

This type of business is usually simple, cheap and quick to get started (although getting a steady stream of clients will usually take some work).

  • You can do as many hours work as you want.
  • You can choose to offer as many of the different services (listed above) as you want.
  • If you get too much work for you alone, you could employ other people.

Things to consider…

  • Word-of-mouth is a very effective way of finding clients for this type of business. Make sure your friends, family and neighbours all know about your service so they can refer people to you. Even better, get some business cards printed and leave a few with all your family and friends so they can pass them on.
  • Agree with your clients exactly what you are going to do and when. Will you be using your own materials and tools (e.g. cleaning products, lawn mower) or theirs? Which cleaning tasks will you do in the time you are working for your client? This helps you avoid disagreements later on. 
  • You could try to think of a way to stand out from other businesses in your area. How about using only eco-friendly products?
  • Because these types of business are quick to set up, it could be easy to overlook the basics of starting a business. For example, get adequate insurance as you could accidentally break a client’s window, stain her carpet or burn and item of his clothing with an iron. If you’re offering an ironing service, will you need a heavy-duty iron and ironing board to avoid replacing your ordinary one frequently? Also, don’t forget you will need to register as self employed.

Further information

Not convinced that helping others around the house is for you? Take a look at other business ideas for mums.

Photo by Impicard

Business Ideas For Mums: Beauty Therapies and More

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Do you enjoy working with people and have an interest in beauty? Then you might like…

  • Beauty therapy
  • Spray tanning
  • Manicure and pedicure
  • Facials
  • Massage

What are the benefits?

You can work as many hours as you want. Some clients may actually prefer you to work in the evenings and at weekends, which can fit well around a family.

If you’ve always had a passion for beauty, this could be your chance to turn it into a career.

Things to consider…

  • You can work from home, visit your clients in their homes or hire a room, e.g. in a hairdressing salon – or a combination of all three.  If you rent a room, you will still need to market your services. The centre or salon owner may help you to do this, but on its own this will not be enough to bring you a steady stream of clients.
  • Marketing methods that work well for this type of business are either word-of-mouth or ‘taster’ sessions. There’s nothing like a referral from a happy customer or a chance to demonstrate how good you are.
  • It’s a good idea to have a website listing your services, but this needn’t cost as much as you think. Health Hosts have website packages for therapists that start at £4.95 per month.
  • You might like to consider packaging your services, for example a bridal package that gives the bride-to-be all the treatments she needs to look fabulous on her big day. Perhaps you could offer a mum-to-be package for pregnant clients or even a ‘fabulous over 50’ package. Other possibilities are offering pampering parties or hen nights.
  • If you’re working from home, check with your local authority’s environmental health department as they may need to inspect your working area. Don’t forget to inform your home insurance company that you’re running a business from home. You’ll also need to consider the implications of bringing clients to your home. Do clients need to walk through your home to reach your treatment room? If so, will you be able to maintain a professional image with children around? Even if you work evenings when they are in bed, you may still have to deal with the mess they leave behind!
  • Make sure you have adequate insurance for the services you’re providing.

Further information

  • ITEC offers a range of beauty therapy qualifications plus a new business qualification.
  • Check out your local college for courses.
  • Healthy Pages has a list of courses and a forum covering a wide range of therapies.

Not convinced that being a Beauty Therapist is for you? Take a look at other business ideas for mums.

Creative Commons License photo credit: TaniaSaiz

Business Ideas For Mums: Antenatal Teacher or Therapist

antenatalTell me more…

An antenatal teacher helps pregnant women prepare for birth using techniques like hypnotherapy, visualisation, relaxation, exercise or yoga. A therapist might use therapies such as reflexolgy, reiki and massage to do the same.

These techniques may also be used to help women recover after the birth, to adjust to motherhood or get back into shape after having a baby.

photo: gabi_menashe

What are the benefits?

  • If you are passionate about pregnancy and birth this is a perfect opportunity to work with women at a fascinating time in their lives.
  • As mothers and mothers-to-be, your clients will usually be happy for you to work around your family.
  • Working hours are flexible and will often be in the evening or at weekends to fit in with your clients work and family commitments.

Things to consider…

Your clients will only need your services for a period of a few months, so you'll need to think of ways of catching them early on in their pregnancies. Unless you have lots of clients who go on to have big families, you won't get much repeat custom either! But you could encourage clients to recommend you to their pregnant friends, perhaps by giving them discount vouchers.

It's a good idea to make sure your website appears near the top of the search results in search engines  e.g. if you're a maternity reflexologist in Coventry, aim to be top of the list when someone types 'maternity reflexology Coventry' into Google. Potential clients will then find you if they have decided they want your service but haven't yet found a local teacher/therapist.

You can improve your cash-flow by selling courses, rather than individual sessions. It means that you know you have covered your costs (such as room hire) at the start of a course rather than having to worry about it before every session.

You could offer several different therapies or courses. This might mean being a therapist with a pregnancy specialism (a reflexologist who also does maternity reflexology) or a pregnancy/birth specialist who offers several courses or therapies (e.g. hypnotherapy and reiki).

Further information

Training:

activebirthcentre.com – teacher training for the Active Birth method

www.hypnobirthing.co.uk – teacher training for Hypnobirthing

maternity-reflexology.com – training for reflexologists who want to specialise in maternity reflexology

birthlight.com – training to teach yoga in pregnancy

Examples of mums who are antenatal and postnatal teachers or therapists:

Soles  to Soul reflexology and maternity reflexology

Karma Birth birth workshops, pregnancy and postnatal yoga, pregnancy massage and reiki

No More Excuses pregnancy and postnatal fitness

 

Not convinced that being a Antenatal Teacher or Therapist is for you? Take a look at other business ideas for mums.

 


Business Ideas for Mums – Virtual Assistant

Tell me more…

A virtual assistant works remotely on tasks like administration, bookkeeping, event organisation, telephone answering and personal assistance. Small businesses who need admin support but don't want an employee can hire a VA for as many hours as they want. VAs usually work from their own home and many never meet their clients face-to-face.

What are the benefits?

  • You can work flexible hours.
  • You can choose the type of work you'd like to do.
  • With technology such as call diverting, the internet and email, you can work from almost anywhere.

Things to consider…

  • Although this is a much more flexible way of working compared to being  employed, you will still need to meet deadlines (usually for several different clients at the same time) and be available when your clients need you. This takes a high level of organisation and being realistic about the hours you can work.
  • Many people with administration and PA experience are great at their job, but are used to being 'behind the scenes people'. This means that getting out there and selling themselves doesn't come naturally to them. You can overcome this, but you will need to think about how you will do it.
  • The concept of virtual assistance is still new to many people so you may have to explain what you do and how you can be of benefit to them.
  • Having a niche is the key to building a business – don't try to do all types of administration for all types of business.
  • As a remote worker, potential clients will need to trust that you can get the work done to a high standard and on time. This means projecting a professional image at all times. If your home makes this difficult (if you have screaming children in the background when you answer the phone!), then you'll need to create some systems to get around this. E.g. using a telephone answering service when the children are at home.

Further information

The Virtual Assistant Handbook by  Nadine Hill

The Society of Virtual Assistants

International Association of Virtual Assistants

Not convinced that being a virtual assistant is for you? Take a look at other business ideas for mums.

 


Becoming a Coach: Is it a Good Business Idea?

In the last of my three posts on coaching, I'm considering this question: is becoming a coach is a good idea?

As you may have read in my post the F word, I trained for three years with respected coach training company Coach U. Despite working my socks off for those three years and already being a freelance trainer,  I was unable to get a coaching business off the ground.

I'm not alone. If you're thinking of becoming a coach, you'll want to read this blog post  'I've got my coaching qualifications, now what?' by successful business coach Heather Townsend, which starts with:

"I heard yesterday that from a class of 22 coaches, from a big respected coaching training provider, two years after graduating only eight were still pursuing a coaching career. Out of those eight, most people were scrabbling around for clients, and no-one had cracked how to earn a six-figure income as a coach."

So what's going wrong? Heather says that you need a relationship and a trusted brand to get clients and I completely agree. But there are other hurdles faced by new coaches that are rarely mentioned in the coaching community.

1. There is a huge number of trained coaches out there

Listening professions are popular,  because it's  a wonderful feeling to be able to help others and understanding how another person ticks is fascinating. Similar professions such as counselling and psychology also have more trained practitioners than there is work out there.

Unlike the other listening professions, coach training isn't a academic qualification, so entry onto a course is virtually guaranteed if you have the money to pay for it. Hence there are so many coaches out there.

2. It's a difficult service to sell

Ten years ago people would have said "So you're a coach? What's a coach?" because it was so new. Following many television programmes and magazine articles, people are familiar with the term  'life coach' but still don't really understand what coaching is. TV and magazines cannot demonstrate the intense listening and skill involved, so what you see being delivered are advice and quick solutions. "So you have a problem with over-spending? Sounds like it's because your parents split up when you were a child".

Even if people understand the value of the coaching process, one-to-one coaching is an expensive service to buy. This limits who is able to afford it. It also means that prospective clients  need to trust that you will really deliver the goods before they part with that much cash.  Which takes us back to Heather's point about building a relationship.

So what are 'the goods' when it comes to coaching? You'll hear coaches using phrases like 'fulfilling potential'   (true enough), but if I offered to help you fulfil your potential, would you give me several hundred pounds a month to help you do it? Not very convincing, is it? Now if I offered you a personal development course with a list of lessons, aims and objectives and explained that if you did all the homework I set, you would almost certainly get a pay rise of a few thousand pounds a year, would you be more inclined to get out your credit card?

My point is not that training is better than coaching – you could achieve similar objectives with both. Just that with coaching it's hard to explain what you're going to do and what your client will get for their money, let alone get them to buy. As most newly trained coaches have no business or marketing experience, this is a big problem.

3. There isn't much demand

Coach training providers will tell you that the potential for coaching is huge because everyone wants to be happier and more successful. The problem is that you can get the same kind of  'stuff' as is covered by coaching in other formats – TV, magazines, self help books, websites and so on. And all for a tiny fraction of the cost or for free. Not only do most people not have the money to pay for one-to-one coaching, they don't see the need. And as I said, explaining the benefits is very difficult.

A friend may ask you if you know a good plumber or accountant. But have you ever been asked if you know a good life coach?

You could try to create a demand, but that's an uphill struggle compared with giving clients what they actually want.

It sounds rather bleak doesn't it?

It's not impossible, just very tough. Hard work and being good at coaching are not enough.

There are successful coaches out there and this is how you could join them:

  • If you have a strong human resources, learning and development or senior management background, you could use your network and reputation to build a corporate coaching business.
  • If you have a marketing or PR background, you have an advantage as you know how to reach potential customers and convince them to buy your service. Plus businesses will always want to know how to get more customers, so you have knowledge to share.
  • You could coach people on your field of expertise e.g. a writing coach, weight loss coach, marketing coach. Providing there are enough people who are interested in that subject and they want to pay you.
  • If you have a lifestyle or attitude that people aspire to e.g. you made a fortune and retired before you were 40 or you have a spiritual or philosophical outlook that others want. This is a tough one, as you've either got that something special or you haven't.
  • You are already a successful consultant and add coaching as another technique in your toolkit.

It's rare to find a coach who has had a complete career change. Most have added it on to skills, experience or a business they already had. In other words, they already had marketable skills before they became coaches. Coaching is just another way of delivering their expertise.

Got any thoughts on this? Let me know what you think.

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