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Do You Have what it takes to be a VA?
by Nell Taliercio

Published on this site: December 19th, 2006 - See
more articles from this month

If you have any previous administrative experience, working
from home as a virtual assistant seems like an easy way to end
the daily commute to your job outside the home. However, just
because you have the knowledge, skills and abilities in virtual
assisting, does not automatically mean you have what it takes to
be a VA.
Before you consider starting a virtual assistant business you
need to determine if you are disciplined to work hard without a
boss looking over your shoulder. If you're the type who is
easily distracted, unfocused and disorganized then becoming a
virtual assistant may not be for you.
There are a number of areas to seriously consider before you
hang a shingle and call yourself a VA. Can you make a schedule
and stick to it? Can you meet all deadlines? Do you have a
screaming baby or a barking dog that would interfere with
needed phone calls?
You will be responsible for the marketing, accounting, and all
operations of the business. Do you have the personality or
drive to promote yourself; to let others know about your
services? Jobs will not simply fall into your lap. Competition
is keen.
Are you prepared to initially work long hours and multiple jobs
simultaneously? Will your household survive the potential loss
of income as you start your VA business?
Do you have a specialized niche? Do you enjoy article
submissions, search engine optimization, presentation creation,
accounting, or web design? You should not try to be all things
to all people. Determine your best skills; then promote those
services to the target market who will most benefit.
While starting a virtual assistant business requires a much
smaller financial investment than some other businesses, there
are still expenses. You must have a reliable computer and the
ability to use the telephone at the same time you're online.
You'll also need a decent printer and a fax machine.
Run your business like a business. Every VA should have a
website which highlights skills and services. If you don't have
the skills or money to have a professionally designed website,
you better start saving or learning. A less than professional
website will absolutely hurt your business - guaranteed.
Do you have what it takes to be a virtual assistant? If you
have the skills, the personality or drive and some available
funding - you just very well may have what it takes to be a
great VA. Follow your dreams!

Nell Taliercio - Nell Taliercio and Jennifer Houck grew
successful virtual assistant businesses quickly and are showing
you how to do the same thing in their complete How to Become a
VA course: http://www.howtobecomeava.com


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