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Get A Work-At-Home Job During the Recession
by Leslie Truex
More Home Business / Other Business Opportunities Articles

Published on this site: August 28th, 2009 - See
more articles from this month

Reading news articles that report a nearly 10% national
unemployment rate can be discouraging. If traditional jobs are
scarce, work-at-home jobs must be non-existent. The reality is
that there are lots of work-at-home jobs available,right now.
Here are 6 steps to finding a work-at-home job in a recession:
- Know what you need to earn: Working at home in a job can
change your budget significantly for the better. You can save on
car expenses, child care, and grooming needs. Further there can
be tax advantages that save you thousands of dollars a year. On
the other hand, many work-at-home jobs pay less and often don't
have all the benefits that traditional jobs provide. You need to
do a detailed budget so you can know what sort of wage or salary
you'll need to work at home.
- Know what skills you have to offer: Despite what the scammers
will have you think, you can't just sign up for a job. Neither
will a great offer show up in your email. Work-at-home jobs are
like traditional jobs; you need skills and experience to get
them.
- Tailor your resume to fit the job: Generic resumes don't cut
it anymore. You need to make your resume specific to the needs
indicated in the job announcement.
- Be active and proactive: When the world is flush with jobs,
you can submit a resume and wait for a call. But in this tough
economic climate, there is no sitting back. You need to be
searching for and applying to jobs daily. Talk to people using
your network to help you find possible openings. Contact
businesses who can use the skills you have and share how you can
save them money by working from home.
- Understand that your employment status will probably be
different: Most companies that are taking on home-based workers
are hiring on a contract basis. That doesn't mean the work is
infrequent. It just means that the employer isn't paying for all
the other stuff traditional employers pay for such as taxes and
benefits. Many people are afraid of contract work, but they
shouldn't be. In contract work it's possible to get paid more,
have a flexible schedule, and reap tax benefits that can offset
losing employer perks.
- Consider freelancing: Like contract work, many people fear
freelancing. But finding work as a freelancer isn't that much
different than finding a job. The benefits are even better though
when you consider that freelancers usually get paid more per hour
than employees (so they can make more or work less), have a
flexible schedule, can choose not to work with people they don't
like, and can opt to only do the types work they enjoy!
Work-at-home jobs are available. I find them online every day.
But it's not possible to sign up or submit a resume today and
get a call tomorrow. You need to make yourself stand out from the
crowd, be proactive in your pursuit, and flexible in the types of
work you're willing to take.

Leslie Truex has been helping people find work-at-home jobs since
1998. She is the owner of Work-At-Home Success and author of The
Work-At-Home Success Bible. You can learn more about finding
work-at-home jobs online including a list of over 300 companies
that frequently hire at:
http://www.jobsonlinetoolkit.com.


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