Skip to main content

Mum. You don't have a business....

That was what my 15 year old son said to me when I announced that I'd been shortlisted for a business award. I was pretty pleased with my achievement and his rather derogatory comment took the wind out of my sails somewhat. Now granted I wasn't running my business full time at that point, but still, he'd seen me working at home, disappearing into my recording studio at all times of the day, so if I wasn't running a business, what was I doing?!

I asked him about this and he said, 'but you don't have any premises'. So, in his mind I needed to be going 'out' to work, for it to count. Bear in mind this child is taking Business Studies at school, so really he should know that businesses come in all shapes and sizes, and that a business run from home is still a valid business - but no - a business run by his Mum doesn't mean anything.

Why are my children so dismissive about what I do? They are never excited by my successes or pleased that I've earned enough money to take them on holiday. To them it's all just 'stuff Mum does' - they're always far more impressed that Dad is a research scientist and that his job took us to live in the USA for a while... My sister's son is much the same. She runs her own business making fused glass jewellery and ornaments (here's her Etsy shop) but her son thinks she's just playing about.

So, I was wondering where's the line between having a hobby that makes a bit of money, and running a business?

I've always run my voiceover business as just that - a business, even when I was only working at it part-time. Most of my clients wouldn't even have known that I wasn't full time because I still managed to turn their projects around quickly.

A quick online search showed me that if you intend to make a profit then you're probably running a business. HMRC allow you to earn up to £1000 in a tax year in 'trading income' so as a very rough rule of thumb if you're earning more than that from your hobby then you should be looking into whether it actually counts as a business, and whether you should be declaring these earnings.

Even when I first started I earned more than £1000 a year, so I was definitely running a business from day one - and I intended to make a profit!

So, that proves that I DO actually have a business - regardless of what my teenage sons may think. I was a runner up in the business awards that I mentioned at the start, but I was also one of last year's Top Small Business 100 and this year I've been shortlisted for a One Voice Award. This means that not only am I running a valid business, I'm also running a valid VOICEOVER business, and I think I'm just going to ignore what my children think about it from now on :-)


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

A Review of 2017 and Plans for 2018

Well 2017 was a year of the slightly unexpected, but it’s turned out for the best in the end. At the end of May, after 11 years (with a 3 year sabbatical when we lived in the USA), my career at Franklin Sixth Form College came to an abrupt end. Over the years my role had changed from managing projects (which I enjoyed), to working in business development and sourcing apprenticeship placements (not my forte). I didn’t see redundancy coming, so I was rather taken by surprise, but apart from feeling a little sad, I wasn’t upset by it – which told me I was ready to move on and concentrate on my own business full time. I have been working as a voiceover artist on a part-time basis since 2013, and started my business in America (where they do love a British accent). Since then my business has trundled along alongside my job at the college without really growing, but now I have the opportunity to do something about that! I’ve had some fantastic PR for my business over the last few m...

Saturday Jobs

Last week my eldest son started his first paid job. He's washing up at The Black Bull pub two nights a week , and although he's only being paid the minimum wage for 16 year olds of £4.20 an hour, he's still going to have more money than he's ever had before. On the first night he was there, the industrial dishwasher was broken, so everything had to be washed by hand, and as we have a dishwasher at home, 3 hours of washing up was possibly a slight shock to his system! However, he did also get to fry an egg for a food order, and it didn't get sent back so I think he was quite pleased with himself. Photo by  Catt Liu  on  Unsplash It made me think about the jobs I had as a teenager and later as a student. I did a few different things over the years - some I really enjoyed, other not so much, but they all added to my experience and helped me work out what I was good at. My first ever paid job was at Blisworth Tunnel Boats, a narrowboat hire company on the G...

Voiceover Training

When would-be voiceover artists contact me to ask for advice on how to get into the industry, I always tell them the same thing - start with some training. It wasn't quite the way I started - I had actually done some work before I looked for training, but I was lucky - it's not the norm to get work without at least having a decent demo reel, and I quickly realised that I was going to need this if I was going to get more work. I was living in America when I started my career, and the training company I went to was Edge Studio . I did lots of research before settling on Edge, and what I really liked about them was the fact that they won't just train anybody. They assess everyone who comes to them, and they tell them whether it's worth their time and money to go through the training programme. There are plenty of companies out there who will gladly take your money from you and leave with a voiceover demo that sounds terrible. I was confident that this wouldn't be the...