Have you ever sat down and really thought about why it is that you do what you do? Have you thought about whether or not it lights your soul on fire? Does your job or business allow you to live the life you want, or is at least building to help you get the life you want?

I can’t get a straight answer on which philosopher said, “Do what you love and you’ll never work a day in your life”, but whomever it was really knew their stuff.

Before I get too ahead of myself in this post, I want you to know that I am not making the big bucks. I’m still very new to this service-based business game. I have a modest client base. I can only work two full days per week on client work. Each client gets five hours per week. Even then, I’m slotting things in here and there. Meetings. Training. Writing proposals. Then there’s my own work. While I do have lots going on, I’m getting there as each day passes. One thing I have realised though since starting Mayday VA in December 2018 is that I should have done it sooner. Hindsight is a wonderful thing, right?

Life before Mayday VA.

 

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If you’ve read my About page, you’ll have a little insight to what I did before Mayday VA. If you haven’t, or even if you have, here’s the lowdown on my work history:

  • Landed my first job at Safeway in February 2000. Left after 12 months as it interfered with my schooling;
  • Completed Certificate III in Business Administration at an accounting firm in 2004. I was a ‘Girl Friday’ for the duration of the traineeship and 18 months after;
  • Applied for and was promoted to IT Director’s Personal and Team Assistant. Website fascination began here;
  • Headhunted in mid-2006 by a printer/tech company. Offered service work coordinator position. It didn’t work out and I left early 2007;
  • Side-stepped into retail hospitality working for a friend in March 2007 (I had a mortgage to pay!);
  • Returned to Safeway (now Woolworths) in May/June 2007 until October 2009 when I went overseas. Completed and awarded with Certificate III in Retail Management;
  • Waited tables on weekends for extra money whilst going through a divorce (early to mid 2009);
  • Worked casually between Woolworths stores from late November 2009 (overseas trip cut short thanks to issues with ex-husband) til August 2010;
  • Moved back into tech and accounting administrative services in March 2010, this time in Melbourne. Spent one week commuting (i.e. having no life!). Moved to the big smoke. Suffered debilitating injury in August 2010 (on my 26th birthday but not because of any celebrations!), ceased work in September 2010;
  • November 2010 started outbound call operator role for tech company marketing cloud computing when people did not know what cloud computing was. Altercation with the business owner who believed he was my life coach instead of my employer, resigned on the spot in April 2011.

 

A change is as good as a holiday.

 

Phew, I’m exhausted reading that. Good on you for keeping up!

I had a year off work while I focused on my first year of university. Then a position too good to refuse came up at a friend’s work late 2011 (in the banking industry). It was an outbound call centre position. I would only be calling existing customers, and never for debt collection! WOOHOO!
Unfortunately I learned the hard way that verbal agreements don’t always work, particularly when management move on. After almost nine months, I was forced to resign. New management knew nothing of the agreement I had because of my injury. As devastating as it was, it’s the way the cookie crumbled.

A few months before the bank job, I started a paper crafting business. My creative talent meant they would be lining up at my door, right? I knew there was more to it than that, but really thought I could make enough money to contribute to household expenses. Bzzzzt. Wrong. Not because it wasn’t viable but because I didn’t have the time to dedicate in getting a new business off the ground.

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I persevered for years. Things started with handcrafted invitations and stationery then moved to digital designs about 18 months later. I added prints to my products but still wasn’t in love.  Then I joined The Makers Academy*. I needed clarity and drive to build my business. It worked. I realised that I wanted to niche down and provide vintage-inspired wedding invitations and stationery.  Everything was plugging along fabulously. A major life curve ball came my way in August 2018. Dealt with that accordingly. Kept on swimming. But I had serious self-doubt about using social media for marketing so I joined the Social Method Society in November 2018.

 

And that’s when Mayday VA began.

 

Before I joined SMS, I was already doing some freelance work for women in business. And I loved helping them. Doing all this freelance work, helping women in business, that’s when I realised I still wasn’t in love with Little Goldfish. I loved helping women in business with tasks they were struggling with. Just one month after joining SMS, I registered Mayday VA. On 16 December 2018 I came up with a business name, registered business, secured domains and social media accounts. The next day I built myself a quick one-page website. I can’t even show you what it looked like. Not even on Wayback Machine. Oh well. It served me well while I was still sorting things out.

Here I am, almost nine months later, and things are really coming together.
Just last week have:

Joined The Clever Copywriting School.
I launched my first (paid) client website.
Experienced further realisation about my offering.
And I became fully booked.

That last one still has me completely floored. Never in my wildest dreams did I think I’d be fully booked in my infancy. To be totally honest, if it wasn’t for Rachel Reiter of Hopscotch Branding Studio completely nailing my visual branding, I don’t think I’d be where I am today.

Now I hear you asking why it took someone else doing my visual branding to help get me where I am today.

My offering was everywhere. I had no clear vision of what it was that I wanted to do, other than help women in business and be a virtual assistant. Of course, I knew my strengths, but I thought they’d be best pooled into a monthly VA package. Bzzzzt. Wrong again. Once I received my Brand Style Guide, everything clicked. I’ve had many aha moments since and I’ve tweaked things further, but that’s expected in a business so young. Another thing this week was simplifying my rates even more. And as I sit here finalising this piece, I’m wondering if I should scrap a particular service.

 

Listen to your gut. Do what you love. You’ll love yourself for it.

 

I started this piece whilst holidaying in Airlie Beach and Brisbane. Guess what? If I hadn’t have started Mayday VA, I wouldn’t have had the opportunity to go to Queensland with my family. Not because Little Goldfish wouldn’t have given me the chance, but because I didn’t have the drive. I didn’t love it enough. Even though I love the vintage lifestyle, weddings, and being creative. As a business, it just didn’t fuel me.

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Mayday VA has seen me grow in ways I didn’t think was possible. Sure, I’ve grown as a business person, but I’ve grown as a wife and a mother too.
I have learned to slow down and be more present with my girl (thanks Casey).
Sitting on the couch in the evening watching Netflix or ABC Comedy with my husband doesn’t mean that my business will fail.
I don’t have to be on social media every single day. I just need to be consistent.
And investing in myself is important.

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I’ve also invested in my business in ways I would have always said no. Taking that step and recognising that the limiting belief I placed on myself has shifted so much for me mentally.
Guarantee if you ask my husband, he will admit he did not see a future with Little Goldfish, but he did with Mayday VA. He has not batted an eyelid at anything I’ve invested in since December 2018.

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Follow your heart. Do what you love. You’ll love yourself for it. I know I do.

 

 

*Nb. The link to The Makers Academy is an affiliate link. Enrollments are closed at time of writing but if you pop your name down on the wait-list, you can use the code HOLLIE when enrollments open again for a small discount. If you do use my code – with or without the affiliate link – I will also receive a small commission.

E14: Knowing Your Personal Style with Kamri Hill

There’s no doubt about it, I know my personal style, but I also dress for comfort a lot of the time. Kamri Hill really knows a thing or two about finding your personal style, so if it’s something you struggle with, have a listen.

E13: Help is NOT a Dirty Word

Not asking for help didn’t do me any favours. I burned out so quickly. Now, I don’t have any trouble asking for help. I have a small team to help me here in my business, and I have a team around me to help at home too.