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Career Coach for Working Mothers Long Beach CA

Being a mom in business is no picnic. Here are 5 things you need to make running a business and a family a little easier. Read on and know more.

Mr. William Hayward
562.544.2208, 562.544.2208
2544 E. 3Rd Street
Long Beach, CA
Kris Anderson
562.494.0079
2201-D N Lakewood Blvd. #302
Long Beach, CA
Jonathan David Jackson
562.233.1723
4705 Harvey Way
Long Beach, CA
Dr. Jo Anne C Bishop PhD MPA
562.760.3009, 562.760.3009
1077 Pacific Coast Highway 183
Seal Beach, CA
Gladi Adams, PH.D.
310.521.0339
1122 W Summerland Ave
San Pedro, CA
Mr. Don Carkeek, Certified Hudson Institute CoachACC
310.500.9961, 310.500.9961
444 West Ocean Suite 1500
Long Beach, CA
Ms. Cynthia HicksACC
562.429.4359, 562.477.1039
3442 Fidler Avenue
Long Beach, CA
Dr. Jo Anne Bishop
(562) 760-3009
Crossing Bridges and Associates
Seal Beach, CA
Mark Goeser
805.558.6337
10822 1/2 Reagan Street
Los Alamitos, CA
Gladi Adams, PH.D.
310.521.0339
1122 W Summerland Ave
San Pedro, CA

Keeping it Together: 5 Tips for Moms in Business

Being a mom is no picnic. Add running a business to that, and things can get complicated and out of hand in no time.

I get it. I'm a mom, I have a business, and my child is far from driving age. I am astounded at how moms (and dads) run a successful business and cultivate a family at the same time. Not just doing it, but doing it well. Managing to stay on top of your family life, friends, social life (you do have one, right?), your employees and your overall business can be done. You've got to have some tricks up your sleeve and in your calendar to really pull it off.

Here are five things you need to make running a business and a family a little easier:

1. Priorities

Being a parent is all about choices and priorities. Being a business owner is also about choices and priorities. Every decision you make, whether about organizing or keeping it together should come out of a list of priorities you have set in place from the beginning.

If you haven't thought much about it, now is the time. For example, is it important for you to put your kids on the bus in the morning? Then early bird networking meetings will generally be out. Little decisions like this may feel like they close off your opportunities, but you'd be surprised at how many doors they will open. Sometimes the choice will be painful, and there will be exceptions if something life-altering comes up (like media coverage or the Queen coming to tea).

Having priorities will guide day-to-day decisions you make as a parent-owned business, giving you a structure to operate from. Lastly, they will help you ensure you are keeping things straight, whatever the definition is for you.

2. Communication & Boundaries:

This means communication and boundaries with your partner, spouse, children, employees and anyone else who will be affected by your business hours and location of your office (especially one in your home). Make sure it's very clear what your office is for, and what it isn't for. Communicate about meetings, including when they are and if any other arrangements need to be made around them (like babysitters or transportation).

If you don't work weekends (as laid out by your Priorities set above), then make sure your clients know this. You will be amazed at how gracious clients are, how they will respect your boundaries. The ones who don't may likely be the ones you don't want anyway.

3. Leverage Technology

Smartphones are changing the face of business - for good. If you are a mom with a business, it's almost critical you have one. Having access to important email and information gives you peace of mind when you are out and away from your laptop. It even gives you an opportunity to get away from the laptop entirely!

Use your time wisely, and leverage a tool like a smartphone to your advantage - shell out the extra money each month, it's worth it. Also, tools like Google Apps enable you to have access to your email, calendar, contacts and documents you need t...

Author: Brandie Kajino

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