I'm seriously contemplating quitting my job but I'd like to be able to contribute a little financially while staying home.
If you are working from home - what do you do? Do you like it? If you don't mind me getting personal, roughly how many hours do you put in and how much do you make?
I have a BA in sociology and I'm currently in the human services field but I'm open to almost anything. I also have a background in sales. Ideas?
I was an ER/Trauma nurse now staying at home until I find a new job since it looks like continuing to be a SAHM isn't going to work out. I've been trying to sell knitted things on Etsy but I've only sold one thing so far.
I have a home daycare where I watch other peoples kids. You can choose how much time you want to put into it by choosing the age you want to watch. If you want something really simple, you could do before and after care for school age kids. All you have to do is feed them breakfast in the morning, take them to the bus, then pick them up from the bus in the afternoon and give them a snack and watch them until the parents pick them up after work. You may need to help with homework. It can be difficult to get started though. It took me a little over a year to get my first child enrolled. Ido live a little out of the way though. Around here the average rate for before and after care is about $75 a week per child.
I too have a home daycare. Before DS, I worked Mon-Fri. Now I work Tue-Fri so that DS and I have one day just for us. I've only been back to work for 3 weeks, it's a little tougher with DS here but I'm thankful to be at home with him. I do all day care for no more than 5 kids. I don't make a ton of money at it, probably around 32k a year.
i run my etsy shop from a room in our house. depending on the time of year (or even just the week) i could be down there anywhere between 10 and 25 hours a week. i do it almost exclusively at night, but in seasons (like now) where i'm overrun with orders to fulfill, it spills over into daytimes too.
i think last year my earnings were somewhere around $20k. it's a pretty sweet gig for something i LOVE that keeps me sane and doesn't require any childcare expenses. i set my own hours, i do my own thing, i make my own rules. if i get too busy, i enforce policies that help pare down my orders to just a few really profitable sales, and/or i have the option of shutting down my shop for awhile until i can catch up a bit.
the money is just candy. we live off my husband's income for the most part. i put my earnings into savings and/or buy us bigger stuff (new mattress, bedroom set, gym membership, etc). for me, the biggest benefit is just the creative outlet and the opportunity to express myself in means other than motherhood. the benefit from that far outweighs any monetary gain.
I work in Talent Aquisition. My background is in recruiting but I do more than that at this point- I manage staffing for a large company for all offices in MD.
There are some recruiting jobs you can do remotely, but they are big in being on the phone so you couldn't do it with a baby at home.
I am a freelance writer and editor. I work in small windows of time, mostly when E is asleep or with her dad. It's hard to focus enough when she's with me, but I will say that I'm more productive than I've ever been with the small amount of time I do have. All told, I probably work roughly 5 hours each day.
I'm a wedding photographer, so I work definitely Saturdays and often evenings, especially in the autumn. During the day, I probably do ~2-4 hours of work. Mostly during naps. I outsource a bit. My business is quite healthy, grossing >$100k each year. It's my second baby, though. I work hard for my clients.
I have two jobs. I'm a contractor for Leapforce.com, a search engine evaluation company. I work 100% online and set my own hours, I just have to meet minimum productivity and quality standards. It's only 13.50 an hour, but makes a difference
I also do freelance sewing work for clients in my area. I take on jobs when I have time, and don't when things get too crazy.
I work mostly during naps, weekends, or after the kid are in bed. It's very tiring to work from home and be a SAHM, but it's worth it to me
I still use my JD for contract hours at home -- mostly document review (snore) for large discovery sets for a friend's commercial litigation firm. The work is case-based so it could be 20-30 hours a week for a month and then nothing for a while. The work isn't the most exciting (understatement), but it pays well (up to $70 an hour) and keeps, like, half my pinkie-toe in the lady-lawyer-door. It couldn't be more different than the work I was doing before having DD (non-profit; immigration law), but, as someone who has a really hard time mentally being a SAHM, it's good for my headspace.
I do side jobs for my ex-employer. I used to design invitations, stationery, cell phone cases, and on and on... They laid me off when I was 7 months pregnant which blew big time, but I at least was able to collect unemployment up until this month. Now I just take whatever side jobs they give me. It's become increasingly difficult to work now that DD is not napping during the day and I'm exhausted at night, but they understand. We've never lived off of 1 income before and DH only makes $47k, so we'll see how this goes! I wouldn't trade the time I get to spend with DD for anything.
I monogram and appliqué from home. I have a business Facebook and take from there and a few local boutiques. I spend about 10-15 hours per week and make around 200 a week.
I'm still brand new to it so time management is still hard for me. It's pretty difficult to juggle three kids and that. I need something to do besides cooking, cleaning and watching kids.
I work for a biotechnology company marketing a brand new anti aging product. I work approx 10-20 hours a week, although since it is essentially like owning your own business you can choose how much time to invest. The tax benefits are amazing for us, and I absolutely love the product. The company culture aligns well with my values and I get to help others reach their goals, so for me it is a great fit.
I'm a legal document preparer. I do work for my husbands clients and for other financial advisors. You can make really good money as a cldp, however, right now I'm just doing referral work. So about one trust a month etc. I'm just really busy with the baby and my other two kids and since dh can pay the bills I could care less about extra money right now. I don't want to overwhelm myself. It is a juggling act trying to be a full time stay at home mom and a worker out of your house. But it's worth it.
I WFH part time in my job as a technical writer. SO watches my LO when I am working. There is no way I would get anything done if I had to watch her and work; the work is way too complex and also has a high amount of being in contact with coworkers throughout the day.
@sandbridge1030 Your work is beautiful! I love that you did Andrew McCutchen's photos! I'll be sure to keep you in mind if a Pgh friend needs a rec for a photographer.
I run an online store for a local interior design business. I work part time and receive a base pay + commission for items sold.
happily married since 2009, SAHM diagnosed with unexplained infertility, regular cycles Baby #1: ttc naturally for 3 years, 6 yr old daughter Baby #2: ttc naturally for 2 years, 2 yr old son Baby #3: ttc naturally since August 2016
@mommyofmac Oh darn. I mean, that's good for you though. I'm sure you're glad to be home. lol I live around the Houston area, about 45 minutes south of it!
February Siggy Challenge: Favorite TV couple ~ Jim & Pam
@mommyofmac so busy right now + a teething baby. This mama needs a vacation!!
Uhm your work is fantastic and your marketing is superb! No wonder you're busy, Mama! My ONE regret in life is that we were young and dumb when we got married and accepted the "gift" of photography offered by a friend who just graduated from art school. Yeah, no. A nice camera and diploma do not a photographer make. Lesson learned.
@sandbridge1030 Do you shoot only weddings & engagements? I'm throwing around the idea of hiring a prof photographer for LO's baptism (in Pgh) in late Oct. If not, anyone you could recommend?
Re: WAHMs - What do you do?
There are some recruiting jobs you can do remotely, but they are big in being on the phone so you couldn't do it with a baby at home.
I also do freelance sewing work for clients in my area. I take on jobs when I have time, and don't when things get too crazy.
I work mostly during naps, weekends, or after the kid are in bed. It's very tiring to work from home and be a SAHM, but it's worth it to me
I'm still brand new to it so time management is still hard for me. It's pretty difficult to juggle three kids and that. I need something to do besides cooking, cleaning and watching kids.
My life is online! Lol
diagnosed with unexplained infertility, regular cycles
Baby #1: ttc naturally for 3 years, 6 yr old daughter
Baby #2: ttc naturally for 2 years, 2 yr old son
Baby #3: ttc naturally since August 2016
Do you shoot only weddings & engagements? I'm throwing around the idea of hiring a prof photographer for LO's baptism (in Pgh) in late Oct. If not, anyone you could recommend?