Colm Maher:
My Story "Work
From Home"
I tell this
story only to let you know that I have lived the
experience of "the 4 ways we make
money":
I got a good
education and got a good job, I have been self employed
in several capacities and I currently own and operate
several home based business'. So I'm not speaking from
theory but practical experience.
My story starts in
Dublin, Ireland on July 21.1947, the day I was born. I
have 3 sisters. My first recollection: being a very
disgruntled 5 yr school boy in a very crowded school
yard, so much so that I left the school yard to wander
the streets of Dublin. I was found by my Aunt Gwen on a
street corner. As a working class family in Ireland at
the time, life was a constant struggle. Jobs were few and
much of Ireland's work force went abroad to the U.K. and
North America. We were no exception.
My
father,Christopher, a career men's clothing salesperson
(when that meant something) left to work as a
construction labourer in the developing oil refineries in
England.
My mother, Irene a
full time, "stay at home mum" and the 4 kids followed.
The jobs were 1 or 2 years in length so we ended up
moving a lot around the U.K. finally ending up in Wales.
Since the work was short term and finding accommodation
was difficult, we lived in a travel trailer literally
parked in a field. In one spot near Blackfield, we lived
in the New Forest where wild horses used to roam. Our
"Cowboys and Indian games" were real. By the time we
arrived in Canada in September 1961, I had been in 9
schools. In 1961, I was 14 years old and ready to leave
school in Wales. I am sure I would have joined the army
or navy since I was big on the army cadets back then. I
would have had few choices with that kind of
education.
Canada: A New
Land I was used
to moving so this was just a great luxury adventure. This
was the first time I saw and lived a life that was far
different than what I was used to.We came across on the
Empress of Canada which was much better than the back of a
moving truck which we slept in and traveled in when we
moved from England to Pembroke Dock in
Wales.
It has taken me a
long time to realize how gutsy and unselfish my parents
were. They left everything in Ireland: family, friends,
their Church, their whole social network and moved to the
U.K. and later to Canada to start a new life from
scratch. They arrived in Toronto with just a few
suitcases with a hope that things would be better for
them and their kids. They never talked about dreams,
goals or visions but they sure had them. In many ways, I
see myself continuing the mission they
started.
School was a whole
new thing for me in Canada. When I got here, Holy Name
School just south of the Danforth near Pape Avenue didn't
know what to do with me. I was 14--too old for elementary
school and no transcripts from schools in England. They
ended up putting me in Grade 7 with 11 year olds. That
hurt my pride a lot. I was very quiet.
Something happened
to me-- maybe I got a dream for the first time--but I
started paying attention and doing something I never had
done--I started studying. I became the best home study
guy around. I became an A student for the first time in
my life. By the time I got to grade 11 going to school
became a little bit of a burden because I did most of my
real work at home. (Maybe I was preparing for my future).
Trouble was, I slept in class and got chalk winged at me.
I also took a few unscheduled trips to the beach on the
first warm days of summer. I went from being a model
student at Neil McNeil HS to being told I was not welcome
by the principal, Fr Doyle. So I left and went to
Riverdale C.I.
There I got my
study habits back and fell in love with history. I loved
it so much I got the school 1st Prize in History at my
Grade 13 graduation. Should have sent that to Fr Doyle.
You know what? I did not even study for this exam. Too
busy studying biology. And Latin.
Latin was one of
those subjects I was always going to quit, so I never
learned anything. Trouble was I needed to get 50% so I
could graduate. Luckily for me the prose part was 65%. So
I counted the lines of prose and divided them by 6 weeks
so I knew exactly how many lines per night I had to
memorize so I could pass the exam. I did it. I think it
was one of the best examples of goal setting I've ever
done in my life, but I didn't call it goal setting. I
just had to get the job done.
The University
Years
I went to Trent
University in Peterborough, Ontario and graduated in
History and Politics. I should have gone on to Teacher's
College, since I believe that being a teacher is my real
vocation. I got sidetracked by 2 things: one was social:
I started to drink alcohol; two, I enrolled in a Health
Administration course in Ottawa. I never graduated, but I
did learn a lot about the health system from the top
down.
One big bonus I
got from Trent is I met my wife Pat and 35 years later we
are still married. Pat has always been my best
cheerleader and supporter in life. I certainly married
well. She's a great cook too. There are many women who
would not have put up with all my career changes. Thanks
Pat. I love you.
I Had a Job
Once Believe it
or not I had this job once at Nathan Philip's Square (City
Hall Toronto) in 1967 when I was in High School. Later I
improved on my government jobs by getting one in the
Ministry of Health after university. Some would say a good
job. I was Executive Assistant to the Area Planning
Coordinator for Southwestern Ontario. We helped
communities set up District Health Councils. I got to see
a lot of Ontario and see how small towns operate. Being a
big city "Toronto boy", I found this refreshing and
probably this was behind our decision to move to Cobourg
about 15 years ago. I learned a lot about the ambulance
service (from Chuck Brubacher & Bob Horton who were
the founders of the present day ambulance system in
Ontario), mental health service and acute treatment
hospitals. One theme that I learned from Dr Sutherland at
the Health Administration course was "prevention". I am
all for putting salt down so you don't slip and break your
foot, leg or hip. Many expensive hospital visits could be
saved by a little salt on the road. Not to mention how
lives are changed by traffic accidents. So I am big on
prevention. That's why I take
supplements.
Anyway, the
government job was not for me . Too many committees and
way too much politics. Now I see it as just a big
corporation which I didn't want anything to do with. I
had studied politics at school and loved it, but when you
see politics at the local level or street level (in the
mud), it's not so pretty. I wanted something more than a
job.
The Birth of A
Dream: My Own Business Pat and I
had recently bought a house in the mid 1970's. The
experience had been good so I thought I'd like to sell
real estate in Toronto. I'd like to say I knew all about
the Baby Boom and that real estate was a great place to
be. I didn't understand this boom. It was just part of the
way things were. As a result, I did not do well in Real
Estate-- I made a living--the same amount as I was making
in the government. But I could have made much more if I
had done it right.
I worked 7 days a
week for weeks on end. Our children were born in the
early 1980's and we decided that Pat would stay home so I
worked at real estate appraisals too. That worked out
fairly well. I was self employed and working all day and
all night now. Great.
The Sausage
Business Sounds a
little weird I know. My grand father was a home based pork
butcher in Dublin in the 1940's and 1950's. He did
everything including the delivery to stores which he did
on a bicycle with a 6 ft aluminum bike trailer. So
sausages are in my genes. We discovered the art of making
sausages through a real estate buddy- Fred and his wife,
Cathy Ploder. I loved it. We made great sausages. Trouble
is we blew our brain out making them commercially. We set
up shop in 1991 in Bewdley, Ontario where nobody lives so
we could guarantee our failure. Since nobody lived there,
we took our sausages to markets in Peterborough,
Etobicoke, Port Hope and Cobourg. If these markets were
year round, we might still be doing it. My focus
throughout this experience was to make great sausages.(We
should of had a goal to make some money) We made about 35
varieties of sausages--pork,beef,lamb and chicken. Very
lean and healthy. No preservatives and totally natural.
Maybe we were too far ahead of the market. But it made the
transition into the bread business and the wellness
business very "natural".
I finally decided
that enough was enough. We made far too little money for
the effort so I looked around. What could I do now? Now I
had no money left, no job in appraisal any more, nothing.
I did supply teaching for a while. That hurt because I
was good at it but I couldn't teach full time because I
hadn't got my Teachers Certificate. I did not want a job.
Who would hire a 48 year old broke business owner anyway?
Bad attitude too. I looked around our little shop and
asked the question: what's here that I could make a
living at. The answer was "bread". Several of our
customers had told us about Stickling's Bread so I went
to see them. Hans Stickling allowed me to sell his bread
in our store but I had to pick it up at the bakery. Later
I saw them selling bread at their stall in the
Peterborough Farmers Market. They always sold out and
they always had a crowd around them. I was at my sausage
table thinking "I wonder if I can sell this bread to
stores--I kept wondering and then I finally started: the
birth of Bread Roots Inc (14 years later we still sell
bread but now for 20 other suppliers). We will be
launching a new website shortly about making homemade
where we will be offering an e book explaining how to
make them with over 35 mouth watering sausage recipes.
Web address is www.homesausage.net expected to be on line
April 1st, 2008.
Bread Roots
Inc
Bread Roots
IncI started Bread
Roots with absolutely nothing and just as a way to get
by. No great vision. That came later. We started in a
small VW Fox station wagon. From there we had a VW van
which cost me a fortune in repairs and still gives me a
bad feeling towards trucks in general. One time the gear
shift in the VW broke off in my hand so the truck was
stuck in 3 rd gear. I drove it in 3rd gear for a week
before the new part came in. By that time, I needed a new
clutch. But the bread got through. Another time I broke
my heal and couldn't deliver the bread but I could drive.
My sister Marigold came to Cobourg 3 times a week to help
me deliver bread. I would drive, she would deliver: the
bread got through. She really felt sorry for me and the
punny business I had. At one time I had tendonitis so bad
in both shoulders that I had no idea how I was going to
deliver bread the next day. I couldn't even lift myself
out of bed to go to the hospital. I had delivered bread
that day with both arms in a sling and I had also hurt my
knee, so I was quite a sight. After being treated at Port
Hope Hospital, I felt like a new man and was happy to get
back to work pain free. They were the early years. Every
day seemed like a struggle. It was. The best part was
going to the stores to meet and to talk to the people who
worked there.
The Re
AwakeningBefore we left
Toronto for the country, I had been reading "back to the
land" and "subsistance farming books" as well as books on
sausages. Well you are, what you read. I ended up with no
money and no farm. The Bread business was a ray of hope
but a faint ray. I met Don Scharfe at church one day. He
looked pretty bright being an engineer and he had
something on the side called "interactive distribution"
focusing on personal business ownership. He made an
appointment with me for a Saturday morning. I remember
the time and day because I knew it would not interfere
with my favorite pastime, drinking. He and Ken Wilson
came over to show me "the plan". It went over fairly well
until Ken asked me what my dream was. He might as well
have asked me for an equation in rocket science because I
drew a complete blank--I really did not know what he was
talking about. Luckily my wife was there and said she
would like to take the kids on the same kind of trips her
parents took her on---Grand Canyon, California, New York
etc. Then I suddenly got it and remembered that 10 years
earlier, I had thought about taking the family back to
Ireland for a visit. Something I had long forgotten. When
Ken and Don left I really realized how far I had sunk
down in life. No dreams, no goals. My dream was several
bottles of beer a night, every night. It became a big
problem for me. It would take another 3 years of going to
Amway meetings, reading the books, and listening to tapes
to find another vision for my life that did not include
booze. A lot of people have negative things to say about
Amway but I am not one of them. (No, I am not an Amway
Distributor or a Quixtar Distributor any more) I went to
all the meetings, conventions,read endlessly, listened to
all kinds of tapes and changed the way I thought about
business and life in general. Can't ask for much more
than that!
Applied
Knowledge At these
Amway conventions, I heard great speakers like Paul Zane
Pilzer on the future of the wellness industry in 1996. In
1997, I heard Robert Kiyosaki before he published his
first book, Rich Dad Poor Dad. I heard Les Brown on
"possibility thinking" and "it's not over 'til I win". I
applied all this thinking to Bread Roots Inc and it never
looked back. Bottom line is this: I was almost 50 years
old before I got a business education via a network
marketing/direct sales company. I have found that not only
are these companies on the cutting edge of business
education and tools but often their products are way ahead
of the market place. It was this kind of thinking that
made me expand my organic bread business as fast as I
could because I knew the market was coming. In 1994, who
was promoting water purifying equipment--only NSA a
network marketing company. Now you hear ads about water
all the time. In 1955, who was promoting vitamins:
Nutrilite, the precursor of Amway and a Dr Shaklee. 1955
that was almost before TV in the dark ages. They were the
pioneers of the "wellness Industry"
Not only are these
companies leaders in product development but they are
also pioneers in progressive business mentality. Direct
sales/ network marketing companies and mlm are
all based on "COOPERATION AND HELPING OTHERS" not on "Dog
Eat Dog Competition" like most conventional business
models. This is a huge difference in thinking and much
more in tune with a healthy progressive
lifestyle.
Not all network
marketing/direct sales/pmlm organizations are worth
joining. Just like any business, there are some good ones
and some bad ones. That's one reason I suggested the
Direct Sellers Association as a good place to start. If
you are looking for a business, check a number out. You
will find one you like where it fits with you. If you
don't join with me that's fine, but do something. As Les
Brown says "you won't be happy unless you are pursuing
your dreams" You may try and ignore them but they will
haunt you. As one very memorable Amway tape says "hell is
meeting the person you could have been"
The company I have
finally decided on believes in cooperative marketing but
with a real twist. It is not network marketing and it has
state of the art systems for attracting customers. Since
every business needs customers, this is an excellent
solid base on which to build a home based
business.
Globalization:
The world is
getting smaller and smaller due mostly to communication
networks in telecommunications, satellite TV and the
Internet. The latter by itself is revolutionizing how we
do many things. It's not about to stop anytime
soon.
If you could get a
piece of this pie for yourself, would that interest you?
Well, you can have it right here.
Working From Home
Advantages:
I have
had a home business now since 1976. Since my children were born
in 1980 and 1982, someone has always been home for them. When
it was time to get the bus to school one of us was always home
to see them off and greet them when they got home. Breakfast
was always made and someone was home to make dinner. That was
normal for our family. Now my wife works as a teachers
assistant and her dinner is usually ready when she gets home.
After work she goes to exercise class or yoga and her dinner is
home when she gets home because I'm here to make it. I have a
job too operating my conventional home based business, Bread
Roots,(www.breadroots.com) and my on line home business' which
Veretekk is very much part . No I don't work in my underwear
because I have 2 women who work at Bread Roots full time in my
home office. My commute in the morning consists of a walk in
the park by the beach. We live in Cobourg, Ontario which has a
fabulous beach with a great boardwalk. http://www.cobourg.ca . My commute in the
evening is very similar except it's in the dark. It's much
more pleasant in the summer. Why am I building another
business on line? Well I don't want to be thinking of
carrying bread boxes 3 years from now. I don't have to carry
them often but I am the back up and rescue
driver. It's also financially
intelligent to have several sources of income. (Read Rich
Dad, Poor Dad)
Besides
having a better family life, the biggest bang for my buck has
come from having my independence. I haven't had a boss for over
30 years. Sure my customers and suppliers exercise some control
over me but I have control too. That's been a great feeling.
It's also very creative work because I have to keep thinking of
how to make things better, find new products and new markets.
It keeps me busy with never a dull moment
Quote from Zig
Ziglar from "Over The Top" "You may not be
able to change the world, but you can change
your world, but when you change your
world, you have taken a major step in changing the world.
And when you change your world for the better, you have
positioned yourself perfectly to change the world of
those around you."
|