A growing number of us can now expect to live close to or
past 100 years, so 50 has become midlife.
Today instead of approaching midlife with the obligations of work and
family, baby boomers are looking to a second half they pretty much design as
they wish. For many of them, the results
don’t look much like what their parents and grandparents called retirement.
Whether because of layoffs or because they’re weary of their
jobs, many are considering new possibilities for their post-50 years and that
includes starting a business of their own.
Many of these business endeavors combine their passions and talents into
a revenue-producing career. This
marriage fits their goals in ways a salaried job rarely could. Some work full-time, but some work part of a
day, week, month, or year. Many are
pursuing work similar to what they did when employed, while others are staking
out entirely new careers.
The obstacles that post-50s face in starting a business are
not substantially different from those anyone else faces when becoming
self-employed. Without exception, most consider their age as an advantage in
communicating credibility to clients and customers.
What a difference from the ageism experienced by so many on
the job! No wonder the U.S. Small
Business Administration is finding the ages of start-up entrepreneurs is
trending older.
I know of a friend who after a 30-year career as a
journalist found his work shifting from working on articles to working with
administrators. The bureaucratic and
political hassles that came with the job of editor of a consumer magazine were
no longer what he wanted.
Figuring there was a good chance he’d live to 90 or beyond,
he started thinking about what he wanted to do with the next third of his
life. Luckily he’d developed a passion
for pottery in his 40’s and the more he did it, the more he liked it. So when offered a chance to retire early at
63, he jumped at the chance to turn his hobby into a second career.
His biggest challenge was to find ways to market his work,
and he found doing studio sales several times a year worked for him. He and his wife purchased a 20-acre home in Virginia , and remodeled
a four-stall barn into a studio workshop and living quarters. Three years later, between the studio sales,
galleries that carry his work, annual crafts shows, his Web site and some great
publicity his business is growing well.
Best of all he loves what he does and envisions doing it
until they carry him out. He sees no
reason for not having another 30-year career after his first. More and more
“old gray mares” are following the same path.
So if you’re nearing or are 50, you are coming up to bat in the second
inning of your life. Why not hit it out
of the park!