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My Second Act Retirement Jobs: What Worked, What Didn’t

The benefits of working in retirement are many, from financial to social. I retired early at the age of 51 and planned on pursuing certain paid opportunities that I was interested in learning and doing. I was excited about the prospects of experiencing second act retirement jobs that I had passion for. A passion and excitement that was lost after decades of doing mostly the same thing with a lot of stress and legacy baggage attached to it.

I did find success in my second act efforts and can truthfully say it exceeded my expectations. There were a couple of jobs, a side hustle, and even a 4 year encore career that I enjoyed before I retired early again. Although I can look back at my second act experiences with pride and label it all a great success, there were certainly some things that worked and some things I tried to do that didn’t work as well.

My Second Act Retirement Jobs: What Worked, What Didn’t

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My Second Act Retirement Jobs Adventure

Knowing What I Wanted For My Second Act Retirement Job

I wanted to choose the right retirement job, not simply jumping back into the unfulfilling rat race. The first thing I did was identify my payable skills and experiences. I then split them between the skills that I enjoyed using and the ones I didn’t enjoy doing. On the ‘didn’t enjoy’ list I also identified those skills I wish to never do again. The idea was to target positions that were heavy on the ‘enjoy using’ side of my skills ledger. In no way did I want a second act retirement job heavily weighted toward doing things I didn’t enjoy.

Next I listed what jobs and industries I wanted to experience. I had some technical opportunities I wanted to pursue that were aligned with my first career, others were not. There were some non-technical opportunities I really wanted to experience. I also listed other desired second act attributes I was looking for, like commute limitations, avoiding the corporate world, flexibility, etc. This gave me an expanded retirement job target zone.

Then there was the early retired side of me. In my first career I was a lead engineer and I no longer wished to have the stress of a high professional position. At least not right out of the retirement gate. I wanted to look for lower level opportunities that would be less stressful.

This worked!

This was an important aspect of my successful second act adventure. I accomplished knowing what I wanted for my second act retirement job and then eagerly went after it. It set realistic goals based on the payable skills I had and enjoyed using. 

A Lower Stress Stepped Down Position

None of my second act plans revolved around making the big bucks so scoring a lower stress position was tops on my list. This turned out to be a lot harder than I thought it would be. Even though there were many aspects of my technical career I still enjoyed doing, I prioritized finding a non-technical opportunity.

I carefully applied and interviewed for positions I really wanted to do. Even though I had some desired cross-over skills, the fact that I had no real documented experience in these fields held me back. I noticed a common issue during interviews. Because of my previous high technical past, the interviewers in one way or another had concerns about boredom doing nontechnical work. In their minds I was only applying for the position because I was bored or they were concerned I would soon become bored if hired. No matter how I tried to counter this issue I failed.

I shifted my strategy to pursue a lower level technical position that aligned more with my first career. I didn’t have to deal with the boredom issue but instead the overqualified kiss of retirement job death. But I countered honestly by telling them why I wanted the position and found success.

First attempts failed but strategy shift worked.

Seeking stepped down opportunities outside of my long career failed. I should have either attempted to work part-time in these fields of interest before I retired or signed up at a temp agency to work in those industries to get experience. That may have been enough proof that I had real interest in them regardless of my long career. However, after finding success with my strategy shift, I must say that my first retirement job was a fun and rewarding experience. Even though my initial desire to attempt staying out of tech failed, I have no regrets about how my second act journey played out. I stayed just short of 2 years with this first opportunity before accepting what would become my encore career.

Being Honest and Setting Boundaries

For my second act I was looking for something more rewarding. I was honest about my experience and skills. I didn’t want to fake my way into a job that I wouldn’t enjoy doing or putting myself in a position where I couldn’t meet their expectations. But I also set some boundaries. If during an interview things came up that were skills I never wanted to do again I would honestly explain my position and bow out. I feel this worked well for me.

I had no issues in my first stepped down position but I did experience push back in my encore career and even more so during what I call my short-term early retirement side hustle. The longer I worked for them, the more they pushed to expand my responsibilities into my no-fly skills zone. I was mostly successful in maintaining the boundaries set when I was hired on during my encore career stint. There was honest discussion that resulted in agreeable compromise. I retired early again and I still look back more favorably on that experience than my first long career.

My short-term side hustle experience within a different business segment of that same company was another story. I accepted the short-term gig after honestly defining the scope of my work. It was probably the best work arrangement of my life. But after a couple of months when the first phase of the project was completed, the pressure started again to push me into doing things beyond the scope of our agreement and what I found acceptable for my second act.  

I successfully maintained my boundaries but there were repercussions.

Sometimes honesty isn’t acceptable, especially when management just wants conformity and silent obedience to authority. I saw that everyone was being pushed to expand roles and responsibilities. I simply and honestly said that maybe it’s best we call this good and part ways. Management doesn’t always seem to like that kind of honest conversation. The situation resulted in my staying on for the last 4 months of the agreed upon contract but there was obvious hostility from my manager. I can’t call this short-term side hustle a second act retirement job win. If ever in this kind of situation again I would now just resign and happily return to retirement.

Being A Competent Overachiever In A Stepped Down Retirement Job

For my first retirement job I wanted a less stressful lower responsibility opportunity. Having been an engineer and becoming a technician in a similar field was exactly that. I was doing very well in the position and I found myself applying some of my previous self, like documenting training for new techs that went beyond my role. It was appreciated and I had a very good relationship with my coworkers and manager. That was the upside. But I did experience something I hadn’t planned for.

An opportunity to move into a different job within the company became open that I really wanted. It was a slight promotion but still within my stepped down lower stress retirement job parameters. My manager was for it and the hiring manager was ready to offer me the position. But my director had different ideas. Two things were on his mind. I was in my fifties where everyone else was 25-35 and I was basically too good to let go. He went to the VP and the offer was killed. My background and early retirement status was well-known. I was seen as a flight risk. Better to continue using me where I am already productive for as long as they can. 

I felt the sting because I forgot how business works.

I somehow let myself fall into a youthful exuberance of being in a company I liked, doing something I had passion for. All said, the director was absolutely right. I had no real intentions of staying for a long time.

It wasn’t a major setback in how I grade this second act experience. But I felt a mental sting and call this a great lesson in handling stepped down retirement jobs. My lack of life drama made me dependable. I was reliable and capable. My lesson learned- Being good at your retirement job can’t counter the realities of how management thinks. At the same time understand and remember my goals. If I really want to make a long commitment then communicate that. Voluntarily go above and beyond but don’t lose sight of my defined second act employment parameters. I have to remember that as a retiree willing to take on retirement jobs that I will always be a flight risk. Throttle expectations to that truth.

Financial Blessings

I was prepared to live off of my portfolio when I retired early, but I always planned on living a retire early and often lifestyle. This allowed me to have the courage to retire with less than a million dollar portfolio. I enjoyed second act retirement jobs for just short of 6 years and earned a little over $350,000. It’s amazing how different work can be when you do something you enjoy learning and doing. I accepted opportunities that I had interest and passion for and was paid for doing so.

This is a total win!

Money wasn’t my primary motivation to pursue the opportunities I took on. But I knew that earning even a little money in retirement makes a huge difference in portfolio longevity.

 

I always say that retirement should be redefined as the absence of needing to work, not the absence of working. I went into retirement with that definition and my experience was better than expected. Some things I did worked, others didn’t or at least only partially worked.

From education to careers, so much of our life’s employment decisions are career minded and money centric. My second acts were more about working in areas of interest, passions, and doing it on my terms. Nothing much that we do goes off without a hitch. However, by having goals we tilt the odds in our favor.

Your Guide To Buying A Profitable Business & Retiring Early In 2018

Buying A Profitable Business

Looking for ways to make an easy early retirement? Perhaps buying up a business is a more feasible way to make your dreams come true? After all, starting from the very beginning and becoming an entrepreneur now may not fit in with your life plans.

With the help of the internet and online tools, business ownership is not as complicated as it once was.  You can quite easily get your hands on a good business that’s already turning a tidy profit, and tune it up to make even more.

Investing in ready business equity means cutting out the expensive build phase entirely, but you will need some capital in order to get started.  Doing it the smart way means spending a little now, in order to make a lot more in the future.

To ensure you’re stepping into something profitable, there will be plenty of balances and checks you’ll need to complete before running to the bank. Here are some essential considerations for anyone looking to buy a business in 2018.

Spotting a profitable business

What does a profitable business look like? Funnily enough, it might not be one that looks like it’s raking in the cash. Don’t be fooled by a busy shop-floor or a popular Facebook Page — profitability is all about number crunching.

Things like distribution networks, equity, and market demand will dictate how much money you can expect to actually take home. Depending on your investment and retirement plans, you may need to shift focus based on how much ready equity and cash there is in the business right now .Profitability is all about managing business outgoings and cash flow, and ensuring that at its heart the business is balanced.

Speaking to the business seller and their financial team should give you a good idea of how things are currently doing. Look out for any potential warning flags like employees on little or no salaries, a high commission structure, low profits, or a dwindling business on a steady decline. (If you believe in the product or service and have the right skills, you could turn an ailing business around. But don’t count on it).

Note: A lot of high turnover businesses aren’t that profitable, and you need profits in order to take assets and cash out of the business. Make sure you understand the business balance sheet well enough to be able to make a sound judgement call.

Your Guide To Buying A Profitable Business & Retiring Early In 2018Check in with market demand

Market projections can be deeply flawed once taken out of the ‘lab’, but that doesn’t mean

that you shouldn’t at least try to gauge what’s happening out there right now. From industry reports to keyword research, even a cursory glance can help fill in some data blanks.

Google Trends offers some useful, if basic, data. Social media is a good place to find potential customer communities and influencers who will be able to tell you more about the scene on the ground. Even an internet business will benefit from having a clear understanding of the local landscape, so don’t dismiss local knowledge and developments. It all helps paint a more accurate picture of the current marketplace and landscape.

At the same time, demand can ebb and flow, and many ‘dead’ niches are still generating people a ton of profit. You will often hear people advising you to invest in evergreen, rather than seasonal businesses; but there is something to be said for jumping on a current bandwagon and riding it for all its worth. Products or services that are hitting the headlines right now can help give your business a much-needed boost.

The strongest position to be in is one where you have exclusive rights to a market, or you have a unique product or service. But that’s also a potentially vulnerable position, as others will be eyeing you up and attempting to copy what you’re doing….

Buy into a passion, or make it yours

Passion businesses can be risky, but a passionate group of customers is a surefire way to make a lot of money fast and make a profitable exit from your business.

Buying into a business that’s a passion for a large group of people is a fruitful endeavor, but with passion also comes challenges. Customers will be picky and you may have to invest time and money into community management in order to balance sales with customer experience.

From a business owner perspective, the more you like and care about what you do and what you’re selling, the better. It will keep you engaged with the business, and will ensure that you keep coming up with ideas to drive the business forwards.

Mark Cuban has gone on the record to say that following your passion into business is not a good idea, and that you should follow your effort instead. There is definitely something to be said for that attitude. A pet project won’t always easily turn into a profitable business.

Where to find businesses to buy

There are plenty of different ways to find businesses for sale — both online and offline.

Other people who are retiring are actually a good demographic to buy from. It often means the business is doing well, and they just need a new challenge or want to slow down their pace of life.

  • There are sites for sale on Ebay, as well as specialist website marketplaces
  • Social media groups and reddit threads are good places to go as sellers often advertise on there
  • Traditional business brokers who buy and sell businesses will work on commission, but they can help you save time
  • There are many offline places in the community like groups and noticeboards where people advertise businesses for sale
  • Reach out and put some feelers out there — if you let people know that you are looking, you will attract sellers.

Developing a business further

If you buy a business, you should definitely be thinking of ways that you can increase and improve scope.

Whether you widen the product lines, bring down overheads, improve margins, or re-launch the brand — it’s a good idea to have a few different developmental ideas up your sleeve. After all, there is always room for improvement!

Buying an ecommerce business is probably one of the easiest ways to buy a business and make it more profitable within the space of about 3-6 months. Often all that is needed is some better marketing and targeting in order to increase sales figures. If the ecommerce business is already making sales, you know you’ve got a product that works.

It’s advisable to stay away from a business that doesn’t really have a strong product offering at its core. Otherwise, you will just be buying a domain name and a logo, and an ecommerce business should be more than that.

Bootstrap or die

The best way to grow a business is to adopt the bootstrap mentality. Don’t go and needlessly invest in all the latest tools and tech, advertising, expensive consultants etc.

Even if you are in a hurry to turn the business around, you need to make sure that the business builds up its own cash so that you aren’t having to reach into your own pockets for everything.

Here are some ways to ensure profitability:
  • Hire slow, fire fast. Look at remote working and freelancers before bringing experts in-house
  • Know your business figures and get financial help if you aren’t good with numbers
  • Sort out your sales pipeline or customer journey — all businesses need a steady stream of prospects, and many make the mistake of trying to implement changes when it’s already too late
  • Be on the constant lookout for ways to drive down business overheads.

Reinvest for growth

Whether you are looking to sell the business on, or you want to keep drawing a healthy income for the foreseeable future, make sure that company profits are reinvested in the right things. Equity, assets, product development, marketing — invest in the things that will contribute to growth.

Multiple businesses, franchising, or a multichannel sales approach may work best for you. Don’t dilute your efforts too much, but having multiple profitable projects or businesses on the go is obviously a good thing! Opening up the business to partnerships is also a great way to make the most of running the business in a short space of time.

Buy a business that you 100% believe in and that has good profit potential. As a first-time buyer, don’t pay over the odds. Starting with a more modest investment may be the way forward — it’s certainly safer from a financial perspective.

    

This is article was contributed to Leisure Freak by the very talented Victoria Greene.

Victoria Greene: Writer & Digital Marketing Specialist

Now that I’m freelance, I love spending my days writing, learning more about digital investments, and sharing my tips with fellow entrepreneurs. I live for digital and am always on the lookout for the next big thing.

Considering A Retirement Job? Avoid These Costly Mistakes

Working in retirement can bring many rewarding benefits. From social and personal growth to obvious financial rewards. But do it wrong and your retirement job can cost you plenty. Sadly, making some simple mistakes can have us end up with a retirement job that delivers a dose of regret. Having a little awareness goes a long way in avoiding any retirement job pitfalls. Here are some issues to look out for and plan around so you can walk the retirement job tightrope.

The Benefits of a Retirement Job Are Obvious

I had always planned on living a retire early and often lifestyle. Based on recent studies many people plan on having some type of retirement job. According to a 2017 Gallup poll 75% (3 out of 4) people plan on working in retirement. Part-time is the most popular option from that group. A 2015 AARP study reported “more than one-third of working Americans age 50-64 (37%) anticipate working for pay post retirement from their current career.”

Obviously, earning any income in retirement will at least mean a reduction in the amount we take from our retirement savings. That lets our tax-advantaged retirement accounts continue to grow. Starting a lucrative encore career could even mean adding more money to those retirement savings accounts. We may still be able to add earned income to a Roth IRA even in the year we turn 70 ½ and beyond when RMD is in play.

Working in retirement can be great. But we have to be smart about earning income from a retirement job and do it right or it can cost us way more than it should.

Avoiding Costly Mistakes When Considering A Retirement Job

Everyone’s situation is different. A smart strategy for working in retirement takes looking at how you have your retirement funding and benefits set up and from where it comes from.

I was aware of some of the pitfalls of working in retirement. I planned accordingly based on my retirement income and benefits. Yet I was still surprised at how easy it would be to misstep.

Retiring With A Severance Package

Many companies offer early out packages due to restructuring business direction, location, or personnel. If you began your retirement with a nice send-off in the way of a severance package, then you better pay attention to the fine print in the severance package contract. Many if not all severance packages will have a non-compete clause.

Now What?

If you figured you would accept the severance package, retire, and then take a retirement job in your same field, you best check the contract for any non-compete language. Most dictate a non-compete time frame. It usually starts from the date you left the business dictating that you must not compete in the same line of business. The last thing you want is a costly legal suit. Some states limit the ability of companies to enforce non-compete clauses. If your heart is set on a retirement job within in your same field during the non-compete clause time frame then first seek legal advice.

Increased Taxes and Managing Payment

Just like pre-retirement, the more you earn the bigger your chance of being pushed into a higher tax bracket. Knowing the tax brackets and making sure you either stay just below the next jump or make well enough that you won’t care is a necessary action to take. The challenge a retirement job brings is when your retirement funding is set and can’t be suspended or reduced while you work in retirement. Having a set private or public pension, an annuity, or taking early retirement SEPP 72t payments from your IRA, means that retirement income still comes even though you may now also have a paycheck.

In my case I had a 72t with a 10% Federal Tax withholding assigned to it. That was more than enough taxes withheld when I didn’t work in retirement. Those taxable 72t payments had to continue coming to me while I was working. Even though I filled out my retirement job W4 to withhold taxes as Married but at the higher single rate with Zero dependents, I owed over $1,000 when tax filing time came. That kind of under payment can cause an IRS tax penalty and interest charges.

What to do:  

Keep track of your income and run tax estimates. Make sure that you set aside money for taxes owed later and/or plan on paying additional quarterly estimated taxes if withholding will fall short. Being caught off guard at tax filing time is nobody’s idea of fun. Especially if your savings isn’t easily accessible.

Another consideration is stuffing as much of your retirement job income into tax deferred retirement accounts. Contributing to an IRA and/or 401K can help mitigate any retirement job tax issues. On my early retirement 5 month side-hustle I contributed 80% of my salary to a 401K. This reduced my retirement job’s taxable income for the year. It was set aside for later in retirement when I could easier manage my retirement income and tax rate.

Health Benefits

Medicare:

Once your reach age 65 you have to sign up for Medicare. If you’re already collecting Social Security, whether working in retirement or not, you will be automatically signed up for Medicare Part A. However, you must still sign up for a Part B plan or a 10% penalty may be levied against you. This is easy to overlook if you turn age 65 while working a retirement job that offers health insurance benefits. Start investigating all of the medicare rules before you reach age 65.

ACA (Obamacare):

Many people took advantage of using the ACA so that they could retire early before Medicare kicks in. A lot of retirement jobs do not provide health insurance benefits so the ACA makes it easy to accept these opportunities. If you have a low-cost of living, thus having a low enough income to qualify to receive health insurance subsidies, then pay close attention to the ACA income thresholds. Crossing them may cause your health subsidy being trimmed way back. This could cause you to pay thousands more a year for your health insurance. Take care to analyze the income to cost ratio so that your retirement job doesn’t cost you more than you earn from it.

Employer Retirement Healthcare:

If you retired with a medical benefit from your employer then pay close attention to the fine print and review the plan rules yearly. Things can change and you can run afoul of the rules causing you lose your hard-won retirement healthcare benefit.

After working over 30 years in my first career and company I had earned a retirement health benefit where I was allowed to buy into the employee health plan. With my first retirement job came a low-cost employee health insurance benefit that was 75% less than my retirement health insurance premium. I suspended my retirement healthcare as allowed and went on the retirement job’s health plan for the year.

The next year the retirement health benefit rules changed and benefit suspension was no longer supported. It became a “use it or lose it” retirement healthcare policy going forward. If I had missed the fine print on the end of year healthcare election documents I could have been dropped. Losing a 30 year employment benefit and once again being forced to work for healthcare or thrown to the expensive individual market, praying the ACA stays intact until I turn age 65, could have been a costly mistake.  

Social Security

If you take on a retirement job after you have started receiving Social Security then there are two separate issues that can come into play.

  • Having your Social Security payment reduced
  • Causing your Social Security to be taxable
Reduced Social Security Payment:

If you started Social Security before your full retirement age and take on a retirement job making more than the yearly earnings limit, Social Security will reduce your benefit payment. The reduction is $1 for every $2 earned above the annual limit. The 2018 earnings limit is only $17,040. For the year you reach full retirement age, the reduction is $1 for every $3 earned above the annual limit but it is only applied to earnings before your birthday. The earnings limit is also set higher at $45,360. There is no Social Security limit on earnings for working in retirement after your full retirement age.

Note: Reduced Social Security benefit amounts are merely delayed. Reduced amounts are added back to your benefit and monthly payments once you reach full retirement age.

Social Security Becoming Taxable:

Regardless of your age, a chunk of your Social Security can become taxable. According to the Social Security Administration:

file a federal tax return as an “individual” and your combined income* is

  • between $25,000 and $34,000, you may have to pay income tax on up to 50 percent of your benefits.
  • more than $34,000, up to 85 percent of your benefits may be taxable.

file a joint return, and you and your spouse have a combined income* that is

  • between $32,000 and $44,000, you may have to pay income tax on up to 50 percent of your benefits
  • more than $44,000, up to 85 percent of your benefits may be taxable.

*Combined income is calculated the following way- AGI (wages, self-employment income, interest, dividends, IRA/401K withdrawals, taxable pension/annuity, etc.) + Non-taxable interest. (interest excluded from taxes on your federal return but considered as part of the taxable Social Security threshold calculation) + ½ of your Social Security benefits. (individual, or joint-you and spouse combined).

If you are considering a retirement job and haven’t already claimed Social Security, you may want to delay beginning your benefits, if you can afford to. That way you will earn a higher benefit amount later. You also won’t have to deal with retirement job related Social Security payment reduction and/or taxable Social Security thresholds.

Be aware of these thresholds if you have already begun your Social Security benefits. That way you can calculate the impacts and the actions you can take to reduce unnecessary cost and make your retirement job worth doing.

Retirement Job Trap

One of the easiest retirement job mistakes to make is finding yourself trapped in the wrong job. This is a costly mistake because we end up spending our time doing something we are not happily doing. Choose your retirement opportunity wisely. We all only have so much time left to spend so we shouldn’t be wasteful with it. Even a carefully chosen job can later have run its course. It’s far too easy to become trapped because of our old pre-retirement work habits of business obligation and loyalty.

I certainly experienced that in my retirement job endeavours. The longer I was there the more the business added to my duties beyond my desired working in retirement happiness thresholds.

Be sure to check your retirement job happiness account frequently. If you find it being depleted then your retirement job is costing you way too much. Make the necessary adjustments to your working arrangement, retire again and find another retirement job, or re-enter a happiness based work-free phase of retirement.

Working In Retirement – Is It Worth It?

 

Once we retire, that’s it, right? You are finally able to give up your job and can leisurely sit back and relax. Or is it that simple?

Not all retirees want to give up their job once they hit retirement age. In fact, some even take up another job once they have retired from their regular one. Wondering why that is? Well, there are various reasons. For some folks retirement is the perfect time to pursue new opportunities of passion and interest. But the main reasons many retirees return to a paying job is they need the money or they just get bored with all the free time that retirement brings.

Thinking of calling it quits on your retirement and finding another job? Here are some reasons why it might be worth it.

 

The Benefits of Working In Retirement

Can Keep It Flexible

Lots of retirees enjoy the new lease of flexibility that it brings. They are no longer trapped by their nine-to-five. And it’s now possible to find a flexible job that they can do in their spare time. This is why there are a lot of retirees who are now becoming entrepreneurs and freelancers – the flexible way of working fits into their new lifestyle. You just need to remember to stay highly organized with your working schedule, paystub generator for your payroll, and filing your taxes. Being highly organized and having plenty of free time – they are the best things for helping your new flexible career become a success!

Provides You With A Regular Income

When some people hit retirement age, they are surprised to find that they haven’t saved up enough for their post-work life, despite all of their best efforts. If you find that you are in this situation, then you might be forced to go back to work. Don’t worry, though, even if your pension pot isn’t as big as you were expecting, it should make it possible to only go back to part-time work rather than a full-time job. Even taking on a full-time opportunity in retirement can be enjoyable. Especially if it’s aligned with what you are interested in doing or passionate about. Who knows, it could be the start of a rewarding encore career.

 

Social and Personal Growth Benefits

Of course, it’s not just the monetary benefits that people get from going back to work. They also enjoy the social side of having a job as well! In fact, some retirees who feel quite lonely after leaving work choose to find a part-time job just so they have some regular contact with other folk. This is especially the case with retirees who live quite far away from their family.

Aside from this social benefit, working in retirement allows retirees the opportunity to learn new skills they have long admired. Personal growth is a rewarding self-investment that adds immense satisfaction.  

Delay Pension Withdrawals

If you do go back to work after retiring, you won’t have to begin your Government Pension (Social Security) or withdraw from your private pension (retirement accounts) as you will be living off your regular income. At the very least you will be able to withdraw far less. So, you will be leaving most of, if not all, of your pension for a later date, when you finally do retire for good. And, while your pension waits for you to fully begin withdrawing from it, it will be amassing more interest and will grow as a result. So, when you do decide to start making withdrawals, your pension pot will be larger than right at the start of your retirement!

 

Just because you are now at retirement age, it doesn’t mean that you absolutely have to retire. As you can see, there are a few different reasons why it might be worth returning to work!

Create Your Own Phased Retirement

Just because your company doesn’t support phased retirements doesn’t mean you have to delay your retirement. Staying in their full-time rat race grind may be the only solution they offer. But it isn’t the only solution for anyone wishing to ease into retirement using a phased retirement approach.

Create Your Own Phased Retirement A recent study done by the Transamerica Center for Retirement Studies (TCRS) found that 77% of employers actually believe many of their employees plan to continue working after they retire. 47% of these employers also say many of their employees envision they’re using a phased retirement transition approach for their retirement.

Yet only 31% of the employers that Transamerica surveyed said they would let their employees shift from full-time to part-time employment. Not surprisingly, only 27% of employers said they would allow phased retirement seeking employees to move into less stressful or demanding positions.

Caution is Needed for Employer Allowed Phased Retirement

Retiring employees do need to be careful entering into a formal or informal phased retirement work arrangement with their employer.

Careful attention has to made into the impacts that a reduced schedule or a lower stress/lower paying position will have on any defined retirement benefits there may be. The defined benefit rules and the formulas they use are tough to get around. The last thing you want is for your phased retirement time dragging your retirement benefit amount down.

Other active employee benefits like medical insurance and paid-time-off/Vacation will also need to be carefully examined. Entering into a phased retirement arrangement will most likely impact them.

Signs to Look for Before Staying With Your Company in a Phased Retirement Agreement

Being able to have a phased retirement with one’s current employer is certainly the most comfortable way to go. We already understand the business, the work processes, and the culture. But based on my first career I believe caution is justified.

I think my corporate world experience isn’t unique and is a shared experience. Entering into a phased retirement agreement with one’s employer may not be the no-brainer decision you might think.

Think about the following:

Does your company have a habit of expecting employee loyalty but never reciprocates?

In other words, do they treat long-time loyal and dedicated employees as just a disposable number? Your phased retirement gig may be just short-term to ring out all they can before letting you leave on their terms, not necessarily yours. They will and do value younger employees who they think they can retain longer-term.

Do employees who have transferred to a new position or have been promoted get sucked back into their previous roles every time feces hits the fan?

Do you think your phased retirement agreement will stand if your company has a habit of doing that? Are you OK with a prolonged or indefinite return to your pre-retirement job obligations?

Has there been times when your company has backtracked away from promises made?

Think bonuses, raises, 401k match, pensions, health insurance, promotions, etc. When they do, did they include executives in the pain or did they state they decided not to include them in order to attract and retain the best for the company? Do you think they will honor your phased retirement agreement for as long as you want, need, or agreed to? If your company throws employees under the bus but never its executives then maybe you should think twice about extending your relationship with them.

Just take a moment and really think about your experience with the company.

If your career there has been nothing but a stellar experience then I think you are in the minority. If it’s that good I would also question why even consider a phased retirement. Just enjoy it until you can feel like fully retiring. If you have concerns now about the company then why enter into a phased retirement agreement and continue with any negative feelings in your life?

For my first early retirement I wasn’t thinking “phased retirement”.

I was fully in a “retire early and often” mindset. I have successfully done that with some rewarding and interesting post-retirement work. In hindsight some of the things I did while preparing for that included asking myself the above questions about my long-time employer.

Let’s just say that I have never worked for them again in post-retirement. I admit that there is some truth in the saying better the devil you know (than the devil you don’t)”. However I found entering into a new relationship to be in my favor when working in retirement.

I could work without a legacy of career obligation baggage to be dragged back into. I could create a retirement lifestyle where I would only seek opportunities aligned with my interests and passions. That includes only working under my terms for as long as I wanted to.

Not having to worry about upsetting or angering a long-time employer who may still have control over some of my retirement benefits, thus having control over me. That to me is a big deal.

Why Creating Your Own Phased Retirement May Be the Better Way

First off, understand what kind of phased retirement you really want. Even if your company does offer a phased retirement option it may not be aligned with what you envision.

  • Are you looking to go part-time?  
  • Change job duties to something with less stress and less responsibilities?
  • Wanting to only work certain parts of the year or specific seasons?  

Also try to figure out how long you want the arrangement to last. I think the fact anyone is willing to bring up phased retirement with their employer means they aren’t afraid to signal their retirement intentions. Hopefully this is done only after knowing one could actually retire because employers may sideswipe someone who have prematurely signaled their retirement intentions.

Rather than thinking only “phased retirement”, open up your options by thinking of retirement as the absence of needing to work. You can think of it as a phased retirement or as I had planned to do and have successfully done. That is retiring early and often.

If your plan is to go directly into your desired phased retirement position then begin finding, interviewing, and accepting a position before announcing your retirement. This will at least allow for you to explore your options over only attempting to stay at your existing company.

Here are some reasons supporting why you should create your own phased retirement:

Make a clean break from your employer. No worries of negatively impacting any retirement benefits through a reduced salary (less stress-pay/fewer hours) phased retirement agreement.

Free to choose opportunities aligned with your interests and passions. Not what your employer thinks is their best way to use you. It’s easier to limit your duties to agreed upon responsibilities and negotiate rather than be dictated when our role needs to be changed.

No previous legacy obligation of work to be dragged back into in any time of crisis, real or otherwise. That certainly could circumvent your phased retirement wants and needs.

New working environments offer new experiences. In people, work, education, and culture. It may not be as comfortable starting out but it makes up for that by being more exciting. We all stay in our ruts too long.

It’s easier to move on or as I call it “retire early again” when there are no long-term ties. Knowing that I can simply leave once a retirement job isn’t checking off all my boxes anymore makes working in retirement fun and not a dreaded burden.

Last Words on Creating Your Own Phased Retirement

The company I worked for over 3 decades did not offer any phased retirement options. It was “their way or the highway”. I waited some months after retiring early before I began looking for my first dream retirement job. It all worked out wonderfully. That doesn’t mean that it didn’t take some effort on my part.

I have several pages on this Leisure Freak site that might be of help:

Retiring Early and Often 

How to Choose Your Retirement Job 

How To Find Your Early Retirement Job 

Retire Early and Start Your Own Business 

Check under the Retiring Early and Often tab at the top of the page and there are pages on retiree resume  and interview  tips, handling the dreaded “overqualified issue, and even how you can increase your wealth by retiring early and often

Before I close out this post I would be remiss if I didn’t mention the fly in the ointment. It’s called health insurance. If you retire without a retirement medical benefit then health insurance must be considered. A phased retirement agreement at your employer that allows for employee group medical insurance does carry some weight.

When looking at creating your own phased retirement, include health insurance in your decision process. Look at staying with the same employer, looking for new opportunities that provide health care benefits, or buying health insurance in the single payer market.  

Starting A Business The Frugal Way: 7 Savvy Tips You Need To Know

Starting A Business The Frugal Way: 7 Savvy Tips You Need To Know

 

Image source

Clever ways to keep costs down when starting up your own company.

So, you’re considering launching your own company? Having your own business venture will give you somewhere to focus your time and energy and the prospect of seeing a healthy return on your investment is rather exciting too. Shows like Dragon’s Den and The Apprentice may lead us to believe that a considerable sum of money is required for a successful startup, but that’s not necessarily true. Here are seven top tips for launching a business while on a budget.

1. Utilize your skills

This may seem like an obvious one, but starting a business in a sector where you have interest and expertise is always going to set you in good stead. Also, consider that your business could be service-based rather than product-based as this will keep your overhead costs to an absolute minimum. If you’re a dab hand in the garden, for example, why not offer your gardening and landscaping skills locally? Or perhaps your career was in finance, so you are able to pitch yourself as a bookkeeper.

2. Seek out investment

You can definitely start a company on your own with only a small amount of capital behind you, however if you have a more ambitious business plan or are very short on startup funds, there are many ways of gaining a little helping hand. Crowdfunding sites like Kickstarter and Crowdfunder are great tools – they are platforms for you to pitch your idea on in order to receive funding from friends, family and other unknown investors, which will eventually help you to launch your business. You could also look into the possibility of government schemes and local funding being able to assist you.

3. Make mutual business deals

A major way to save on costs is by organising trade-offs with other businesses – this move will require you to be quite pro-active and maybe even a little bit brazen, but it’s true when they say  ‘if you don’t ask, you don’t get’. Let’s imagine you’re setting up your own B&B and you contact the local paper to invite them to come and review your facilities. If they say yes, they will be getting a lovely complimentary stay and you will be getting some free advertising – win, win. Or perhaps if you know somebody who’s good at website design, you can get them to design your site for you in exchange for use of your services.

4. Advertise for free

As a startup, you might not have the funds for traditional forms of advertising, but that doesn’t mean that you can’t advertise. Exploit the powers of free promotion through social media. Social media users make up 37% of the entire world population and total 2.8 billion people worldwide, so that’s the place to get your brand noticed. Set up pages on any social media sites that are relevant to your target market and offer discounts and giveaways to gain new followers straight away. Also, it’s important not to forget the power of word of mouth – tell your friends and family about your new business venture and get them to spread to the word!

5. Acquire a sponsor

Start by making a list of brands that you affiliate with and think up ways that you could promote their brand. This could be in the form of banners on your website or marketing signs at events. You can even suggest promoting their products – for example, if you own a tutoring service, you could team up with a local bookstore. If you send your students there for books, they may be able to offer initial sponsorship to help your business get off the ground.

6. Minimize waste

From packaging to printing, you need to be savvy with your resources because the small things can quickly add up. A good way to save money (and help the environment) is by going paperless. Many companies and consumers are used to e-correspondence now, so why not eliminate as much printed material as you can? Also, it’s worth considering dropshipping ­– this is where a retailer doesn’t have a shop or warehouse and the products go directly from the supplier to the buyer. By using this method of shipping, you won’t have to rent out a warehouse or pay for packaging, meaning you will save a substantial amount.

7. Budget branding

The great news is, creating coherent business branding can be done with minimal cost. There are so many websites out there for reasonably priced business cards – you’ll be sure to find great deals on Vistaprint, and the same goes for logos on Logo Shuffle and Logo Shines. Remember to create a consistent brand image, which means using the same logos and brand colours across all of your commercial channels and social networks. The next step is getting it out there into the world for potential consumers to see – this can mean placing it on your work clothing and even your vehicles so that your logo becomes locally recognised.

Now you’re all set with the advice you need to start a business the frugal way, it’s time to take the plunge and become the entrepreneur you’ve always dreamt of being. Who knows, you may just be able to fund an early retirement.

This is a contributed post to Leisure Freak by the awesome author Kayleigh Alexandra.

Kayleigh Alexandra: Content Marketer & Ecommerce EntrepreneurKayleigh Alexandra: Content Marketer & Ecommerce Entrepreneur

Passionate about writing for the startup and entrepreneurial audience, I love to share my insight into the world of ecommerce and digital marketing. I hope to inspire others to start their own journeys and share their stories. Find me at MicroStartups.

Retire Early and Often: A 7 Step Plan for Scoring a Successful Encore Career

If I was able to retire early and have a successful encore career then you can too.

When I retired early from a long career at the age of 51 it was late 2009. Unemployment was high and the economy was low. It took having a plan of action for a successful encore career to happen for me.

People have many reasons for wanting a retirement job or starting an encore career. There are obvious social and financial benefits. For me there were some things I really wanted to learn more about and experience. Getting paid to do it was the frosting on the cake.

Successful Encore CareerI had always planned to retire early and often.   I needed to set aside my decades long engineer persona and all of its associated all-consuming obligation. My wish was to spend more of my time doing things closer aligned with my passions and interests.

I didn’t need to return to work. What I wanted to do was cherry-pick opportunities that concentrated on the skills I enjoyed using. I was and still am grateful for all that the earlier version of me and my career gave me. But I needed to move-on and reinvent myself  to living a more passion-driven lifestyle.

I’d like to share my seven-step strategy for landing a successful encore career.

Second Act, Here I Come

My 7 Step Plan for Scoring a Successful Encore Career

Phase one of my plan started with taking some time off to decompress and enjoy some alarm clock freedom. Phase one had it’s unique importance. It’s where I could mentally shed decades of institutional career-driven conditioning. That and embrace the new life to be lived on my terms. Phase two is where the 7 step encore career actions came into full play.

Step 1: It’s All About and Not About Money

Have Your Financial House in Order

Obviously my retiring early meant having a good handle on my finances and lifestyle cost. In my case my early retirement funding paid for my primary living expenses. This allowed me to remove money from the retirement job decision process. With money off the table I can ask myself whether I would really want to pursue an opportunity. That question is a tool I use in what I describe as “retiring well”. 

Even if lifestyle funding isn’t at 100% for the long-term, knowing where we are financially removes any job search desperation. I believe part of my encore career success was the lack of financial desperation in my opportunity selection process. I Chose well. It was at no time salary driven. I also believe having a lack of financial desperation helps in the interview process.

Encore career success isn’t just about money. It’s about scoring an opportunity aligned with our values, passions, and what we are interested in doing now.  What I did was focus on the opportunity first. I then only negotiated an appropriate salary after being offered the position.

Step 2: What Floats Your Boat?

Identify Your Passions and Interests

I asked myself, what do I want? The whole idea is picking the right encore career opportunity.  I began with a self-assessment of my passions and interests. There were specific industry and positions I wanted to pursue.

I then listed my relevant payable skills and divided them into 2 columns. Those I enjoy doing and those that I don’t. I only targeted opportunities that tilted heavily to the payable skills I enjoyed using. There will always be a need to do the things from the less desired payable skills column. The encore career idea I embraced was to limit my exposure to the non-enjoyed column skills as much as possible through purposeful opportunity targeting.

Step 3: What’s Your Story?

Be Able to Enthusiastically Answer the “Your Story” Question

The question can come in many forms. Tell me about yourself. Why did you retire? Why are you interested in doing XYZ? That’s when understanding my story became important. In my story I am the protagonist. I am more than a chronological list of my experiences. My resume certainly lays out that professional experience and accomplishments list. I didn’t want to just roll through that boring narrative when given the opportunity to tell my story.

Choosing an encore career path different from one’s first long career can be challenging. Instead of my early retirement and subsequent search for a new opportunity looking like I’m some kind of unpredictable, undependable flake. I wanted my story to be about coherent transition. My story is about all my experiences and discovering what I am really good at, love doing, and what I have passion for. It shows how I am pursuing opportunities that are on a logical path forward to grow and be productive in those areas. It’s why I should be seen as an asset and not someone making a nonsensical disconnected jump.

What I found necessary for encore career success is telling my story by adding emotion and interest to the chronological history. I used feelings to set myself apart by adding how I felt during certain milestones or personal discoveries. I also emphasized the impact it had on me, the business, and/or others. My belief in my story is projected out when telling it.

Step 4: Keep Growing

Add New Skills that are Aligned with Your Early Retirement and Encore Career Goals

I am very curious and that is a big part of my early retirement. I’m always exploring new concepts and adding new skills. I had many interests that went in different directions when I was looking at opportunities. Even though I was targeting opportunities based on what I loved doing, the job ads listed things I had never done or wasn’t as proficient at doing.

I took free classes that were offered at my library. It was a gardening class and had nothing to do with my eventual encore career. It was about other encore avenues I was exploring. I also did volunteer work in what was another path unrelated to my eventual encore career. Although they did not result in an encore career the experience was still rewarding and helped me in other ways.

I did sit for a few sessions with a friend of mine who was an Excel and SQL-pro. He tutored me on advanced spreadsheet and database query skills. They were skills aligned with my targeted technical encore interests. Those skill learning sessions were directly related to my eventual coveted retirement job. There are many ways to learn new skills.   

When we keep growing in areas of our interest and passions it makes our early retirement fuller and only improves our chances for starting a successful encore career.

Step 5: Practice Makes Perfect

Test the Waters and Yourself

I actually started interviewing a year before I retired from my first career. At that time (2008) job opportunities were limited due to the deepening recession. Doing it gave me practice. Job interviewing is like a game or dance. The better we are the more likely we are to stand out. It’s something we get better at the more we do it. Our resume facts are the same. But it’s all about feeling and acting more natural and comfortable in the role of self-promotion and being judged.

I also did some volunteer work and a side hustle. The volunteer work was very physical and allowed me to test my interest and passion for the outdoor recreation industry. For the side hustle I was a private consultant. It was a contract related to telecom litigation and paid extremely well. I was able to explore my self-employment path in an area I thought I enjoyed from my long career. In both of these examples I decided the experience showed me that they weren’t exactly what I wanted to do in my retirement.

The volunteer work was too physical for my 50ish old body and I couldn’t easily keep up with my younger team members. I had to set aside that targeted path and honor my limitations. The other was too close to my first career. Requiring heavy use of skills I preferred to limit using going forward regardless of how much it paid. However it did bring to view how much I really loved some of the other skills I had to use. The experiences fine-tuned and narrowed my focus to the space where my eventual encore career lived.

Step 6: Get Off Your Island

Stay Connected To and Keep Expanding Your Network

After retiring it’s easy to withdraw from our professional connections. Our focus happily changes and the last thing we want is to stay connected to anything associated to the past grind. That withdrawal is what I allowed during my first phase of my early retirement (career mindset decompression). It was a time I concentrated on building my social circle. I began reconnecting to my professional circle in phase 2. I did this by email. No big drawn out dialog. Just reconnecting and reminding them of my retire early and often plans that many thought was crazy or funny when I mentioned it during my pre-retirement years.

I also expanded my network using LinkedIn. There were many people who had left my orbit over the years that I had worked with and respected. I reconnected and mentioned my intentions when appropriate. What all of this did was lock-in what I was going to do. It gets the word out but more than that it made me accountable to myself. I then started mentioning to my social circle that I was always open to the right opportunity. Retiring early and often became a great conversation topic at social events when others discussed work matters.

My successful encore career came out of LinkedIn. An email came to me asking if I would be interested in talking about an opportunity. Using social networks like LinkedIn is a necessary tool but it is important to go beyond them. Through face to face social conversation I met executives and other key connections to add to my network. Just by talking about what I did and what I wanted to now do.

Step 7: Throw Your Name Into the Hat

Post Your Resume Online and Talk to Everyone

I did what everyone does. I started searching for opportunities that were posted online or in the newspaper. Unfortunately applying for those openings and getting a call back during those times had a very low success rate. Hopefully things are better for that now. I did successfully get a lot of contact from simply having my resume posted online and viewable to recruiters. I have used Snag-A-Job, Monster, CareerBuilder, Dice and InDeed.

Obviously not all targeted jobs use recruiters to fill positions. If you have no network connections for a foot in the door, then the good old-fashioned way of going on site or to their online portal and applying is the only way to get your resume in front of someone. My stepped down retirement jobs came that way. The resume posting sites I mentioned above allow you to directly apply your posted resume to job listings. 

A key tip is to talk to everyone you can. Even when they are calling or emailing about a position that you know upfront you wouldn’t be interested in. Don’t just ignore them. Have fun and learn what’s going on. It is easier talking with them when you don’t want the job. I would return their calls/emails and ask for more details. After listening to their pitch I then would explain why I didn’t feel it was a good fit and what it was I was looking for. I would be totally honest. I would also share the name and contact details of anyone else I knew that was looking for an opportunity in that field. What this did was create a certain rapport and a new professional connection. I still get contacted from many of them even after removing my online resume over 5 years ago.

In Closing

I believe that retirement is the absence of NEEDING to work, not the absence of working. That doesn’t mean I will always do paid work or even look for new opportunities. But when I do it is something I really WANT to do. Parts of all seven of these steps came fully into play for me to score my encore career. They will again if I choose to do another opportunity.

Now that I’m in my second early retirement I look back at all of my retirement work opportunities far more fondly than my first career. I believe that’s because they were all on my terms and aligned with what I valued doing. Doing what I wanted to do for as long as I wanted them in my life.  

There is nothing special about me. We all have our own unique skill-sets and experiences. I hope by sharing my approach for scoring a successful encore career that it inspires you to see a way to set your own retirement job strategy into motion.

How to Start an Online Microbusiness on a Shoestring Budget

How to Start an Online Microbusiness on a Budget- start a microbusiness onlineImage Credit: Pixabay

Dreaming of being an online entrepreneur? Struggling to make ends meet? Here is how to start a microbusiness online, budget-style.  (If you want to learn more about setting up your first website, read this Leisurefreak guide).

Plan it all out & budget sensibly

Online markets can be volatile, and there are sneaky hidden costs out there for the unsuspecting online entrepreneur. Mitigate any chances of overspending by planning everything out in minute detail before taking the plunge. Budgeting is your friend, especially when margins are tight.

 

  • Forecasting is really important – you can learn a lot from traditional forecasting models for startups, but remember to adjust this to the online model. You will be paying out for services, not traditional business overheads; and though there’s a lot of free stuff out there – you will be hit by mounting subscription fees if you want to grow fast.
  • Map out all the different channels you are going to spend money on like web development, design, SEO, images etc. Make sure that you include timings as well as costs, as waiting around for a developer to finish when you have SEOs on standby can be expensive (and stressful). Plan extra breathing space into a development budget to allow for testing and tweaks.
  • The SaaS model can quickly add up – evaluate whether you can make do with free trials, or whether you are going to eventually end up for going for pro packages.
  • Don’t forget to include maintenance costs like hosting and content management in your plans.
  • Read the small print of everything you’ve paid for – who actually owns the website? Where is your content hosted (their server, or yours)? What happens if you want to terminate a service? What image rights have you actually got? Paying less now may end up costing you WAY more in the future.
  • Don’t try to grow too soon. The beauty of online work is that you can stay quite small as you build up funds.

Learn things for yourself

Don’t outsource if you can learn how to do things yourself.

 

There are loads of free courses out there that can help you top up your digital skillset and get more clued up on things like SEO, web design and PPC.

 

  • The main things you will benefit from learning yourself are content management and social media management. Updating your website yourself is a great thing to do and means that you have 100% control over content. Most CMSs offer extensive training packages – use them wisely. Social media management is made way easier with social media tools like Hootsuite (who also offer a certification).
  • Start learning with free online courses and certifications like HubSpot’s Inbound Certification to help you navigate the world of web promotion. There are so many free resources out there – use them to help you grow.
  • Even if you don’t learn enough to implement all the tactics yourself, you will be better at vetting suppliers, spending less money and making better business decisions.
  • Eventually, you might even be able to monetize all this learning and offer out your web services to others.

Sell things online

A great way to make money online is to take a cut of the growing ecommerce industry.

 

You don’t need a warehouse to be an ecommerce merchant; in fact, you don’t need much at all to become an ecommerce merchant (except a lot of common sense and time).

 

  • Start small and sell products that will be easy and cheap to produce and ship. If you have a specific business idea you think will work (like upcycling vintage dressers), do your market research before investing in anything. Use search engine trends and searches to give you an idea of current competition.
  • Take advantage of free trials and the digital ‘try before you buy’ mentality when choosing an ecommerce platform (like this online store free trial). Use the professional themes you get with the platform, and customize with a logo and your own imagery.
  • You can dropship products if you don’t fancy getting involved in the logistics of shipping products yourself. This essentially means re-selling other retailers’ products on and can be very lucrative if you get into the right niche.
  • Sell digital products like ebooks, webinars and worksheets from your website to cut down on production costs.

Leverage advertising & affiliate income

Use the power of advertising and affiliate marketing to earn passive income online, reinvesting it back into your microbusiness.

 

  • The beauty of running an online business (or even just a website), is that you can monetize it with ads or affiliate links.
  • Though these methods are totally legitimate, it’s important you do them in a ‘non-spammy’ way and that you always disclose any affiliate links. Make sure you aren’t negatively impacting your website’s look and feel.
  • Running a product review series is a great way to get steady affiliate income. Just remember to optimize for keywords and promote your content through social media and search engines.

Local SEO

Not all SEO is fancy with bells and whistles on.

 

Whether your business is all online, or has an offline arm, use Google maps, local listings and reviews to appear higher in search results. (Moz has some great posts on local SEO and where it’s going right now).

 

  • As a small business, take advantage of free online promotional tools like Google MyBusiness. Takes minutes to set up and has instant results.
  • List yourself on free online directories – just make sure that you keep your business and contact details consistent.
  • Register for a business address and tell Google where you are – local searches with maps attract loads of clicks (especially on mobile).
  • Ask customers for reviews and encourage them to leave them with an email or a phone call – they are a brilliant form of free online marketing that people trust.

 

We hope you’ve got some good ideas on how to manage budgets smarter when starting your online business. What online business tips have you got to share? Let us know!

 

This is a guest post by Content Marketer & Startup Specialist Kayleigh Alexandra.

Passionate about writing for the startup and entrepreneurial audience, I have recently been part of setting up an exciting project at MicroStartups.org. We donate all our website profits to charities that help people reach their full potential. Find out more on Twitter.

A Fun Retirement Job Starts With Your Motivation

I have had a few working opportunities since my first early retirement. I can tell you that a Fun Retirement Job Starts With Your Motivation. Work and Fun together in the same sentence seems to be the ultimate oxymoron. But the reality is that working for the right reasons in retirement can be fun. I love the definition of retirement as the absence of NEEDING to work. Basically we are still retired if we choose to work for reasons other than our financial survival. Being forced back to work for a paycheck just to make it is unfortunately another flavor of the rat race.

More and more people plan on working in retirement. There are many reasons why retirees choose to work. Motivators include:

  • Working in a Field of Interest and Passion
  • Being Social
  • Brain Stimulation
  • Staying Active
  • Learning New Things
  • etc.

For some retirees the motivation to work in retirement is for a financial boost or extra play-money. For a fun retirement job money can’t stand alone and shouldn’t be the only motivator.

No matter what our reason is for starting a new retirement gig, having a fun retirement job starts with our motivation. Then using our motivation to pick the right job that checks off all of our motivation boxes.

My Fun Retirement Job Experiences

I had always planned on retiring early and often. Since my first early retirement as an engineer from a long telecom career I have had some amazing retirement jobs. I call these fun retirement jobs my passion driven opportunities.

Wireless Telecommunications NOC Tech

A stepped down responsibility position from my land-line engineer career where I was able to learn everything I could about wireless networks.

Cable Video on Demand Systems Analyst

This was my encore career. It was a nice transition into IT away from my earlier life in network operations. I was able to use a lot of my passion focused skills to learn and work in the video world.

Cable Telecommunications Billing Systems Analyst

This was a 7 month early retirement side hustle. It started as the most perfect and fun consulting gig I have ever done. I was able to use the skills that I like doing from my first and second career together.

Craft Beer Bartender

This was a part-time gig of passion. I love a good beer and the craft beer movement. It’s a totally new working experience and it gave a huge boost to my social circle.

Not a bad run of opportunities since first retiring in December 2009. These passion driven opportunities were all fun retirement jobs for me. It was my motivation that made them that way. Many of my coworkers in these gigs were not having fun. That is because they HAD to work there. They were motivated by career driven money reasons and their financial survival.

What was their rat race existence was my learning, social outlet, rewarding (financially and otherwise), passion driven and fun experience.

Having the Right Motivation: The Key to a Fun Retirement Job

We have all been there. Having a job to pay the bills and enduring the crappy commute. We lived for payday and the weekends. If we were lucky we had some fun doing what we did for money.

Working in retirement has the same challenges. There is still usually a commute and a work schedule which obligates our time to be committed to the employer.

The difference that makes a fun retirement job is we only work in retirement because we want to. The key is tying anything we do to our passions and interests. Otherwise we trade one rat race lifestyle for another.

Work is work but if we choose our retirement job correctly, the Fun comes when everything is aligned perfectly.

My motivation has always been to try and learn new things. I also focused on skills I enjoyed using and steered clear of skills that I had and didn’t enjoy doing. My passion driven opportunities were for reasons other than money.  That is what made them fun. Money was just the frosting on the cake. I targeted areas of high interest and passions. How could I not enjoy doing them? It also doesn’t hurt knowing that leaving a job is always an option.

Sometimes it doesn’t Work Out or Last

We will never know until we know. As we grow and move forward some of our passions and interest can change. That is when a passion driven retirement opportunity can stop being fun. The money side of the brain can take over and convince us to stick it out. But that isn’t what working a fun retirement job is about.

When the fun ends then that is when it’s time to move on. Life is short. That is the “retire often” part I love. When I hear that little voice that I have all I wanted from the opportunity and it loses its fun-factor it is time for me to go.

Sometimes the opportunity is still something I have interest in or passion for but other elements have made it lose its luster and fun.

  • Difficult Coworkers and/or Managers
  • Difficult Clients
  • Change in Work Scope
  • Commuting Changes
  • Health and Wellness Issues

There can be a number of reasons that can make what was a fun retirement job turn into dreaded unsatisfying work. Once our motivation is no longer being met then it becomes another obligation slog. Just like any pre-retirement job. It is then time to move on to the next fun retirement adventure.

In Closing

a Fun Retirement Job Starts With Your MotivationI just ended a short 3 month run as a Craft Beer Bartender. It was a blast and totally outside of anything I have done before. The people were great, the PUB was awesome, it was close to home and I learned a lot.

However my old back injury was aggravated by all the standing on hard surfaces and the constant bending over for low stored items / low dish sink. I have had to limit a lot of things I used to do because of my back issue. So I had to resign and return to loyal customer status.

I only worked part-time a couple of shifts a week. It was still a scheduled obligation and if it wasn’t fun it would feel like an unwanted obligation. Looking forward to going in for a shift was exactly what a fun retirement job is about.

On my last shift which was this past Saturday I felt more sadness about leaving coworkers and the business than I did in my first 2 early retirements. It was hard to quit something I was enjoying doing and being a part of. Sometimes things just don’t work out but we gain great things in the experience.

Who knows what or when the next passion driven opportunity will come along. Early retirement is an adventure. My primary motivator is to strive to keep it fun and rewarding.

Are you open to considering working a fun retirement job?

High Encore Career Success Rate

I was reading the results of a recent study that destroys the biggest argument from my naysayers about being able to start an encore career living the Retire Early and Often lifestyle. They insist that finding a new meaningful and rewarding career is impossible due to age discrimination. They insist that anyone’s encore career success is due to luck.

This survey just came out from the American Institute for Economic Research (AIER). Their study results clearly show a High Encore Career Success Rate for those 45 and older making a sought-after career change in their later life. Success at a far better rate than people would expect.

Surprisingly the results go against most published articles on the matter. As the majority of respondents not only found and started new careers that provided them greater satisfaction. But also received higher pay than the career they left.

Of the survey respondents: Eighty-two percent reported they successfully transitioned to a new career after age 45. The key was having and using their transferable skills that they gained from their earlier career.

Not only did they find themselves being happier in their new pursuits but also receiving higher pay to do it. Some said they did initially start their new career at a lower salary. But they worked hard and climbed the income ladder to be paid higher than their first career paid.

My Experience Matches the Study Results.

This is certainly what I experienced. My first retirement was from an Engineering career working in telecommunications network operations. After some time off I started to pursue opportunities of interest in the wireless industry. I focused on skills that I liked doing. I did land a sweet position in a wireless company’s network operations and was enjoying it when I made another move. This time pursuing interest in the video (cable) industry working in IT as a Systems Analyst.

Again I was using my transferable skills to win the position. My wireless experience did pay less than my first career but that job was a lower stress and lower expectation job. The video position was in a new industry and career segment for me (IT instead of network operations). It paid around 13% higher than my first career. I retired from that IT career after a few years and later returned for a little early retirement side hustle in their telecom IT unit.

It seems that success can be found pursuing opportunities when using your first career and for myself even my second career gained skills and education despite everything we hear to the contrary that most people can’t find meaningful work in their later years.

Results Show a High Encore Career Success Rate but not 100%.

Although there was a high second career success rate from the respondents. There were still those who were unable to make a career change. The study results explained it came down to being short of the necessary education or skills required. The study found that for those who failed to connect to their dream position. They only had two of the required attributes being looked for.

From this we can see the importance of planning ahead and getting the necessary education and skills needed to improve our odds of making a later life career change. Respondents did go out and did exactly that in many cases. Although it would seem through the high success rate that age discrimination wasn’t a brick wall to overcome. There is no way to know how prevalent it was as a factor among respondent’s pursuits.

Conclusion

The study was actually called “New Careers for Older Workers”. But all the findings would fully relate to those who retire early and often by seeking their desired encore career. Because starting a new career in later life is exactly what starting an encore career is about.

If you want to see more about the study you can download the PDF from the American Institute for Economic Research site using the following link: https://www.aier.org/new-careers-older-workers. Just find the “download report” button. Your email is required.

The download even includes the survey questions so that you can evaluate how the survey was done and the depth of the questioning asked to come up with their results.

Have you found success pursuing an encore career?

Do you plan on retiring early from your current career and then seeking a new encore career?

Do you find the High Encore Career Success Rate surprising?