Don’t stop working, just work differently
Why retire when you can combine “the life” with work?
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Why retire when you can combine “the life” with work?
In researching the post-Findependence lifestyle, I’ve come across a lot of books that invoke the phrase “never work again” in the title, or variants that suggest much the same thing. There is, for example, a free e-book with that precise title. I’ve discovered that these kinds of books equate the word “work” with the corporate 9 to 5 routine.
Most of them, like the Tim Ferriss book we looked at earlier this summer, involve leveraging the Internet to create a mobile lifestyle that can earn money anywhere in the world. Other examples are The Laptop Millionaire and Click Millionaires. In the case of Erland Bakke, author of the book shown on the left, if you follow your passion and the money eventually follows, this is no longer defined as “work,” even though for all intents and purposes it is.
These books propose business ownership and the pursuit of multiple clients and at some point leverage their personal time to either employ one or more assistants, or to outsource various pieces of “work” that one either lacks the skills for (like website development) or lacks the inclination to focus on.
The fundamental decision is whether to continue to sell one’s time—this is what salaried employees do, as do “one-man band” freelancers—or to pursue the sale of products. The latter route, whether of tangible products or web-based information products, contains the seeds of potentially greater wealth, but of course requires a lot of upfront time, energy and often capital in order to establish the infrastructure that will later deliver a sort of “freedom.”
I’d still call this work, even if it’s the supposedly glamorous field of “internet marketing.” Certainly, the covers of these books suggest the hybrid nature of this lifestyle. Typical are the two covers I’ve used to illustrate this blog: you see someone lounging on a beach somewhere—but instead of the lounger languidly sipping a piña colada and reading a trashy paperback, we see instead a laptop computer perched on their stomach. They are in fact “working,” however idyllic the environment, not unlike the photo I ran of myself “lazing” in the back yard in this blog earlier in the summer.
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