Find us elsewhere

Business Startup Consultants Juneau AK

You’re starting a business for financial independence and a fat owner’s paycheck in Juneau, right? That can take a while. Being the boss often means being paid less or last until your company gets its legs. “You pay your employees first and if there’s anything left, then you get that,” says one veteran. “That’s life as an entrepreneur.”

TWC Consulting Group Inc
425-296 6138
11820 Northup Way
Bellevue, AK
Corona Research
303-894-8246
1630 Welton Street
Denver, AK
Highland Transportation Group
205.802.7753
1736 Oxmoor Road Suite 103
Homewood, AK
Thinkx Intellectual Capital
603 9248660
30 Orchard Hill Rd
Peterborough, AK
Andrews Group the
(907) 790-4009
17370 Glacier Hwy
Juneau, AK
Stark & Associates Inc.
314-5762866
1066 Executive Parkway
St. Louis, AK
TheBusinessMD
907-223-8403
2440 E. Tudor #976
Anchorage, AK
The Mansfield Group, LLC
609-267-0990
6 Oak Tree Court
Westampton,, AK
Loescher & Associates Llc
(907) 586-2032
10645 Misty Ln
Juneau, AK
McKenzie & Associates Inc
(907) 789-3315
17557 Glacier Hwy
Juneau, AK

How to Set Your Salary as a Startup Business Owner

Kevin McQuire quit his job in California and moved to Illinois in late 2000 to start a language translation company using $15,000 in savings. With health coverage and other benefits provided by his wife’ job, he saw no need to pay himself more than a modest salary, just above minimum wage.

As sales picked up in the spring of ’2001, the sacrifice seemed to be paying off – then was smacked down by the events of 9/11 and their effects on the economy. The McQuires lived on credit cards, a loan from a relative and lots of ramen noodle dinners.

“That first year was horrible,” says McQuire, president of Chicago-based Atlas Language Services, Inc. “There was nothing to pull from for salaries. We went without paychecks basically for a year.”

Now the business has grown and comfortably provides McQuire’s six-figure income from salary and disbursements, which he says is still below what he could earn in the open market. But he’s happy with his take-home pay, and finds even greater satisfaction in having built a company with an established reputation and repeat clients.

Tighten Your Belt

Success demands hard work, patience and sacrifice. It’s easier to get there when you have an employed spouse, generous investors or a fat savings cushion to get you through the financial stresses during the first years of a new business. But you may well have none of these.

Author: Lori-Anne Miller

Copyright 2009 StartupNation, LLC

Click here to read more from StartupNation