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Startup Counseling Orangeville ON

You love your day job in Orangeville, but just have to scratch your entrepreneurial itch. How do you do it? Stay clear, don’t mix them up and tell all.

Freeborn & Associates
905 584-4399
11 Antrim Crt
Caledon, ON
Camillo Enterprises Corp
905-374-6500
4025 Dorchester Rd
Niagara Falls, ON
Per-Mar Training Systems
905-357-6404
7790 Donlee Dr
Niagara Falls, ON
Antebi Professional Coaching & Consulting
705-472-8511
1925 Northshore
North Bay, ON
Innovative Accounting Solutions
613-936-0469
54-812 Pitt Street
Cornwall, ON
Business Enterprise Center
613-932-7925
144 Pitt Street
Cornwall, ON
SD And G Community Futures Development Corp
613-932-4333
26 Pitt Street
Cornwall, ON
Hobb Bakker Bergin Hill
(905) 579-5659
200 Bond W
Oshawa, ON
Epilepsy Ontario Lindsay
705-324-8139
61 Needham St #4
Lindsay, ON
Neco CFDC/SADC
705-476-8822
195 First Avenue West
North Bay, ON

You Don't Have to Quit Your Day Job to Succeed in Business

Serial entrepreneur Asher Epstein rises at 6 a.m. every day to take two hours of conference calls with an Israeli company for which he’s a consultant. At 8, he heads to his job, where he works with 25 different startups all day long, guiding them on the ins and outs of entrepreneurship. At night, he works freelance again, this time with an East Coast company.

Epstein uses the same skill sets in his freelance consulting that he does during his day job -- helping companies grow. What he does – keeping a great day job while branching out on the side to feed his own entrepreneurial urgings – is far from uncommon, but it can be tough to juggle both.

“The key is to be unbelievably efficient with your time,” says Maryland-based Epstein. “Use nights and weekends for your second job, and make sure you’re staying focused on both opportunities.”

That’s exactly what Lesley Zwick did when she started Chocolate Impressions, a company that mounts photographs on chocolate as lagniappe at private events and corporate functions. Working full time as program director for a Detroit non-profit, Zwick made sales calls and printed chocolate before heading to the office at 10 a.m. After work, she’d do more for her side business.

“You’ve got to be real organized,” says Zwick, who juggled both jobs for a year and a half. “You’ve got to be able to manage your time and know what you’re getting into. I was fortunate that my boss knew what I was doing and was supportive of it.

Author: Lynne Meredith Schreiber

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