Ask HN: Any advice for switching from self-employment back to employee?
Throw-away account for confidentially. I've been self employed for about 15 years, and am contemplating a return to the workforce as an employee. While the relative freedom of self employment has been a net positive, and I've had steady work through that entire time, I'm in a different place than I was 15 years ago, with a family, a home, and additional responsibilities which make self employment more challenging.
I'm wondering if those that have made this switch back to being an employee of a larger organization after a period of self-employment have any advice. I'm finding it difficult to even compare self employment to an employee role when it comes to basics like salary requirements considering most jobs include a benefits package that don't always have direct corollaries in a self-employment scenario.
What's your best advice for how to approach this transition and evaluate whether it might be the right time to change?
50 comments
[ 3.5 ms ] story [ 96.8 ms ] threadI am sure if I was less picky or had a skill set with broader appeal (I'm somewhat specialized at this point) I'd have maybe found something, but part time in tech is a shockingly hard uphill battle.
There's also a middle route where it kinda works but doesn't really. And some other options for people who want to get really ambitious and start agencies.
1. You gain a lot of time back due to zero travel 2. You can earn less to earn the same as you were when employed. This is true because I removed the transport and time cost.
It's worth keeping in mind these will be reversed if you situation is similar to mine. You'll have much less time available, and your salary will need to be higher than you earned being self employed to achieve the same end-of-month income.
Good luck.
Maybe you just need physical separation, and not necessarily W2 income / benefits...?
1) Find a shorter term contract gig with one company. This might give you the option to try something on for a bit without making a long term commitment. If you like it, and it's a to-hire situation, you can stick around.
2) Find a remote job that still gives you the at-home time and schedule flexibility that (I'm assuming) you are accustomed to.
3) Depending on where you are and what you decide to do, keep in mind that you can always bail and go back to self employment if you think it sucks.
As for how to evaluate. Try imagining a 5-10 year period in both scenarios, calculate your pay/earnings, be realistic about sick leave, holidays, periods without earnings (as self-employed), figure out where you will be career-wise as an employee.
I can absolutely understand why being an employee again can become attractive again after a while as self-employed.
I had an employee contract after 6-7 years freelancing which I terminated 2 years ago and I needed more than half a year to recover.
If I was you I will try to increase the price to your current clients to the point that you can do this in a sustainable manner
You might keep your job. Your definition of "good enough job" and your boss's might not be the same thing. Or your boss might lose an internal fight and your team could be laid off tomorrow.
As a consultant, I always have at least two clients active at any given time that can pay my rent and monthly expenses. I work 24 to 30 hours a week. The "marketing trick" is that you are being hired in exactly the same way I am: tomorrow you may be gone, with no recourse, nothing. In a sane world you'd be compensated for that risk; I am, as I'm pricing that into my rates and making hay while the sun shines. :)
Do you really believe you can generalize well enough from your personal situation to give such strongly worded & unconventional advice, especially to someone you know very little about?
It may be the right choice for certain people at certain times, but it's definitely not a trivial decision.
I understand what they are getting at, and I'm actually sympathetic to the view point. But the reality is much more nuanced.
Edit: To more explicitly answer your question, I would say that being self-employed is more difficult and demanding than working for someone else. Thus for many people it makes more sense to be an employee.
Not for me though. I wonder if we could make a poll among people who have tried both.
However, I suspect your poll would be biased towards those who prefer self-employment, as those who are certain it is not for them wouldn't bother trying it.
However, you will miss earning your own money and cringe at the thought of making someone else richer on you're time. I personally will return to running my own company eventually, but for right now, I'm quite content with my fat monthly pay check.
Be wary of too much value being placed on benefits packages, and be aware when you are signing yourself up for golden handcuffs. Also, signing bonuses can tie your hands, so review the terms and be conscious of what you are signing yourself up for.
If you are evaluating whether or not this is a good idea, think about your existing customers and which ones you would like to work for and which ones would hire you. Those are the people who know you best - your work ethic, your potential, etc. You might want to go outside that bubble, but the process of evaluating will make you more aware of the details about your desired environment.
As a business owner, you are used to making decisions. Many individual contributor roles don't have a decision making component. It's something to seriously consider when evaluating positions.
As far as the finances go, it's a whole different ball game. My health insurance costs were night and day - although the whole once-a-year chance to make changes is frustrating. Employee and group discounts can be significant. But if you aren't going to take advantage of them, you have to leave that off of your evaluation.
I found online paycheck calculators pretty good at estimating income for budgeting.
There is a certain level of stress associated with being self-employed and that's gone for me now. Some of it has been replaced, but overall I'm a much more relaxed person.
Good luck!
1) Having a flexible schedule allows one to get a lot more done. My personal/family life and side projects received a lot less time when I became an employee. That 40-60 hr/wk job eats way more hours than you get paid for.
2) The stress around hustling to keep work coming long-term when self-employed goes away in favor of a steady paycheck. It's odd getting paid the same no matter how productive you are. You do acquire other stresses, however. Like having to work with people you don't like or jive with. And having to work on projects that you don't like.
3) The flip side of that stress is the excitement of working on something new where you get to learn new skills. You have a lot more control over what you work on being self-employed. As employee, you do what the company most needs you to do.
4) And the flip side of the steady paycheck no matter what is the ability to generate more income by working more or jumping on a lucrative opportunity right away when you spot one.
Regarding equivalent compensation, it depends on your health insurance situation (do you depend on it? how big is your family? or maybe you are young and healthy and only need coverage for catastrophes?), your tax bracket, how much your family/outside time is worth to you, etc. There are no online calculators for a reason. ;)
You should be able to check your past financial expenses, and don't be afraid to get as much detail as you need to get a real apples-to-apples comparison. You can potentially negotiate your way into all-cash compensation, especially since you're likely wanting to continue to manage your investments manually.
As far as whether or not it's "the right time" - that's totally your call.
I've been self-employed for 14 years, and the couple of times I've done this analysis I've been hard-pressed to come up with justification to get back in the employment "game". My personal situation sounds somewhat similar to yours. I started this venture single, w/ no kids, and relatively uncommitted outside of work. I've since gotten married, had a child, and picked up various and assorted commitments outside of work. If for no other reason I'm interested in your situation simply out of concern that I'm "missing something" in my analysis that self-employment remains the best gig.
I try to look at work, as much as possible, as a business transaction trading my time and energy for money. I've never looked at work as being particularly "fulfilling" or defining my person. I derive pleasure from a job well done and I enjoy feeling like I'm creating good value for my Customers, but my fundamental belief is that my work is just a means to an end.
I should be quick to point out I'm fairly lucky that, although it ebbs and flows, my current gig is generally not very stressful. There are bad days, to be sure, but in general I'm not at my wits end every day. I've also enjoyed the luxury of jettisoning clients who were undue sources of stress. Were stress a factor in my life I'm not sure how I'd factor it into analysis of a job. I'd want to know a lot about the "culture" of the prospective employer.
From a financial perspective I viciously normalized the prospective salary/benefits into an hourly rate number (erring, where I had to, on the side of making the job seem more attractive). I compared that to my current net income and logs of my hours actually spent working (I try to collect a lot of personal analytics). The two employment opportunities I looked at were a significant decrease in income per hour worked. (I recognize that I'm lucky this was the case.)
Even if it were a net positive to change back to employment I think I'd have had a lot of trouble ceding so much control of my life back to an employer for other reasons.
It's particularly bothersome to me that employers, at least in my locality (Midwest US), have almost no legal obligation to be "loyal" to me. They sit in a negotiating position that often allows them to demand unpaid overtime, uncompensated 24 x 7 availability, and silly contrivances like non-compete covenants. (I suppose if I were more credentialed, more of a "rockstar", or just better at "selling" myself this would be less of a problem, but I still consider an employee to be, effectively, a business w/ a single Customer. If that single Customer chooses to take their business elsewhere... That's not a position I could imagine being comfortable in.)
The idea of working in a corporate bureaucracy also grates to me. Perhaps it's just a matter of semantics, but coordinating my schedule with Customers to take a day off is exceedingly more palatable to me than "putting in a vacation request w/ HR" was back in the old job. Likewise, pulling an all-nighter or working a weekend "for myself" doesn't make me feel taken advantage-of like the same work did at the "old job".
Given that the time w/ my now 3/yo daughter has proven to be precious to me (more than I expected it would, for sure!) I can't help but think that I'd feel put-upon even more today than I did 14 years ago. It's difficult to think that any amount of money would make up that that, either.
As for the right time to change, that's a question with lots of factors and most of those are related to your situation. You say you've had steady work but that self employment is "more challenging". How is it more challenging, and which of those challenges will be solved by becoming an employee of someone else?
One consideration for the right time question is the value of your skills as a self-employed person vs the value of those skills on the open market.
15 years is a long time to be on your own (for the record, I've also been mostly self-employed for about 15 years), so I'm guessing you'll get at least a bit of resistance from employers thinking you may not be accustomed to playing the game of working with others in an office environment. If you have a highly marketable skill set and are in tech, and are talking to smaller companies that may not put much value on that ability, that may not be a non-issue for you.
I don't see the difficulty in establishing salary requirements, because the market dictates that more than anything else. You need to discover what your experience is worth on the market. Talk to an agency recruiter who places people like you in your area and they should be able to give you an idea better than the average websites. That value will have some fluctuation based on a number of factors, the value of benefits likely being one of them.
Self-employment is the way to go.
Also, you may want to take some time to interview preparation, depending on your skills. Google the most common interview questions and see if you're in shape. If not, stay self-employed and improve your skills until you'll be able to land a really good job in a really good company.
Don't waste your time on looking for just something. Set a goal, find a good position, work for a year and then decide if it's for you.
My advice: give yourself time to make the switch back to full-time employment. You may find your skills and interests don't necessarily make you an ideal candidate for many roles. When you run your own business, you're the ultimate full stack developer: doing everything from marketing through dev ops.
This makes you a less than ideal fit for a lot of full time employment opportunities, where companies aren't necessarily looking to hire people who are passionate about wearing many different hats and doing a lot of different roles.
I found smaller startups were generally the best opportunities for me.
That said, there are some real benefits to going back to full-time employment. Taxes get simpler, mortgages are easier to get, you can focus on the work you enjoy doing and not the accounting / paperwork stuff that you have to do when you run a business.
Wrote up the full story (it's long) if you are interested though. http://www.brightball.com/articles/what-exactly-happened-to-...
There are plenty of downsides to going back to being an employee, though. I wouldn't do it if it weren't with the right people. At the time, I took a pay cut to do it, but it worked out and I'm happy with my decision, because I got what I wanted: to work with great people and build relationships with them. And the reduced stress from not having to hustle all the time has been good.
Since you're self-employed, take your time and really find an employer that suits you. You have a lot of leverage in negotiations since you know you don't _need_ any given job you interview for.
I've gone through more than one cycle before of building up a set of clients from scratch, so I know that I can always go back to freelancing if I want to. I wouldn't be too worried about getting stuck as an employee unless you let your skills stagnate.
I don't do a lot of side work now, but there was quite a long tail of follow-on work for my past clients that continues to this day. Having the legal entity, bank accounts and such still alive doesn't cost too much and having them has been helpful both with the tax man and in dealing with former customers.