The Chronicle

BUSINESS HELPS WORK-LIFE BALANCE

- RHYLEA MILLAR

WATCHING her partner work 50 hour weeks and arrive home only to start his paperwork inspired Teleah Brydon to help business owners reduce their workload.

For years she worked in the real estate and education industries where Teleah had also struggled to achieve a healthy work-life balance.

So when the pandemic meant many employees were required to work from home, the 25-year-old decided to resign and start her own freelance business – Muse EA and Creative.

Offering businesses assistance with general administra­tion duties, as well as email, diary, social media and project management, Teleah signed her first client, who just happened to be her partner Kieran.

“He’s a chippy who runs his own business, but he’s definitely a tradie who prefers to work on the tools,” she said.

“I could see how drained he was, so I started thinking of ways I could help him get back to focusing on parts of the business he enjoys … he really was my main muse,” she said.

Passionate about helping other businesses flourish and owners achieve a work-life balance, the freelancer said her support had already made an impact on clients.

Since launching less than two months ago, Teleah has secured five clients with plans to hire her own team next year.

“Progress has been made but we still have a long way to go in supporting women in the corporate world and in my experience, I was almost made to feel like I had to fit into a box,” Ms Brydon said.

“I’ve met countless young women who feel like they’re destined for something more or want to have their voices heard, so one day I want to be the boss I always wished I had.”

While the new business owner said a trend had emerged since Covid, with others offering similar freelance services, she believed there was a lot of demand for the services her business offered and online careers had become very sustainabl­e.

 ?? Picture: Contribute­d ?? NEW BUSINESS: Watching her partner struggle to fit work into each working day inspired Teleah Brydon to start her own business Muse EA and Creative.
Picture: Contribute­d NEW BUSINESS: Watching her partner struggle to fit work into each working day inspired Teleah Brydon to start her own business Muse EA and Creative.

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