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To: politicket
Working for clients with such poor methods was a thing of my twentys.

Today I think life is too short for full time work, and see the rates my bosses saw as extortion then as so so.

I've gotten financially positioned to be able to say no. It prevents me from doing crazy things like working (many) 80 hour weeks. Seriously I bet you could say no to some of the crazy hours but could'nt say why beyond the money you never have time to spend (at some point money just becomes a way of keeping score IMHO). Please take this all as friendly commentary etc. Tell me to shut up if you need 500K/year for a sick kid or something.

My pattern seems to be about a 50% duty cycle with about 50 hour weeks if clusters of months (I find my quality drops drastically if I don't get enough sleep). I do remember being hungry, but I also remember working my a&* off when I could'nt find sensible ways to spend the money I already had.

I'll post my client list right after you post yours. And yes I'm gratefull for so many things.

36 posted on 05/12/2005 10:48:41 PM PDT by Dinsdale
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To: Dinsdale
I've gotten financially positioned to be able to say no. It prevents me from doing crazy things like working (many) 80 hour weeks.

I could cut my hours down by taking on a few more quality sub-contractors.

30 hours of my week are not paid per se. They are being used to expand my business from being only service-based to one which is also product-based.

I'm beginning to move away from the "dollars per hour worked" scenario into the "dollars per product sold". That way my efforts can be multiplied many times over.

I'm also fortunate that almost all of my hours are home-based, so I am able to enjoy my family and get work done at the same time.
37 posted on 05/12/2005 10:55:27 PM PDT by politicket (We now live in a society where "tolerance" is celebrated at the expense of moral correctness.)
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