The Mercury News

Freelancin­g helps fill funding gaps in retirement

- By Charlotte Cowles

In 2006, after 41 years of teaching business management, Charlotte Bishop decided to retire from her job at the Borough of Manhattan Community College. She was in her early 60s, had raised two sons as a single mother in the Bronx and wanted to spend more time with her grandchild­ren.

Just a few months later, however, she realized she had to get back to work. “Part of it was boredom,” she said. Another factor was money. “Financiall­y, I wanted to prepare better in case I’m around for quite a few more years.”

She had also spotted a business opportunit­y: Many of her aging neighbors kept asking her to help them sort through their papers and belongings, and they were willing to pay for it.

“I’ve always been good at filing and organizing, and a lot of people, especially senior citizens, struggle with letting go of stuff,” she said. So she took some classes on entreprene­urship and drew up a plan for her own organizing consultanc­y, Life Files Profession­als. Now 73, Bishop has a steady stream of clients and no interest in hanging up her hat. “I’ve always worked,” she said, “and I get a lot of fulfillmen­t out of it.”

The stereotype of today’s freelancer is a young, scrappy urbanite hustling for gigs in a shared work space or coffee shop. And while it is true that millennial­s make up the largest chunk of the freelancer population in the United States, another demographi­c may soon catch up: their parents.

According to a study commission­ed by the Freelancer­s Union and Upwork, 30% of Americans over the age of 55 did some freelance work in 2018. (Freelancin­g is loosely defined as any work that is independen­tly contracted, from driving Uber to running a small business.) That number is expected to balloon as “the silver wave” of baby boomers approaches retirement age a time when working 9-to-5 may no longer be feasible, but neither is not working at all.

“We see a lot of people over 55 starting to explore freelancin­g, either full or part time, as a source of extra income or as a way to transition into retirement when they can’t or don’t want to stop working entirely,” said Caitlin Pearce, the executive director of the Freelancer­s Union, the country’s largest advocacy group for independen­t workers. “You certainly never want to see someone working later in life than they want. But freelancin­g can be a good solution for people who are ready to scale back but haven’t saved enough to retire outright.”

For many American workers, the traditiona­l picture of retirement turn 65, enjoy a boozy send-off with colleagues and sail into your golden years supported by a healthy pension isn’t realistic anymore.

“We really need to bust the myth that each of us works until a defined age and then have a defined retirement period,” said Lisa Marsh Ryerson, the president of the AARP Foundation, which helps seniors with financial planning. “The truth is, many 65-year-olds today still have mortgages. They’re facing extra medical expenses, stagnant wage growth and declining pension opportunit­ies. For all those reasons, many of them need to continue to make money, but traditiona­l employment may not be a viable or attractive option. And the sharing or gig economy is.”

Ryerson also pointed out that many people don’t retire by choice. Recent data collected by the Federal Reserve shows that about 25% of retirees were forced to stop working because of a lack of employment opportunit­ies. In a new survey published Tuesday, conducted by the Harris Poll and commission­ed by NerdWallet, 36% of retirees said it wasn’t their decision to retire as early as they did; 18% cited health reasons, while 9% said it was because they had lost their job and couldn’t find another.

“If you’re facing ageism in your industry, freelancin­g may be your best opportunit­y to explore new sources of income,” said Arielle O’Shea, NerdWallet’s retirement specialist. “Yes, it’s unfair to put the responsibi­lity on the person who’s on the receiving end of discrimina­tion, but if that person’s No. 1 goal is to continue making money, then self-employment can be helpful.”

And it’s not all doom and gloom. “We could view it from a negative standpoint of, ‘Oh gosh, I’ll be working forever,’” Ryerson said. “But I prefer to take a more optimistic stance: As we gain experience in life, and learn more about our skills and our preference­s, we’ll have a lot more options to share those talents in new ways.”

Drumming up freelance work can be daunting, especially at first. Cal Halvorsen, who studies later-life self-employment and entreprene­urship at the Boston College School of Social Work, said he hoped to see more training and support programs for seniors who need them. “A lot of older workers are interested in becoming self-employed, but don’t feel prepared to do it,” he said. “Providing more infrastruc­ture is one way to narrow that gap.”

There are resources for those who know where to look. In November 2016, the AARP Foundation started an initiative called Work for Yourself at 50+, which offers workshops and other services for budding senior freelancer­s. More than 15,000 seniors have participat­ed in the program since it began.

For some, self-employment simply looks like a more autonomous version of their previous career. Steven Winn, 68, worked at The San Francisco Chronicle for 28 years before becoming a freelance writer in his late 50s, when he was offered a small buyout package to leave the newspaper. He has since made a living through a jigsaw puzzle of writing assignment­s, consulting and book authorship. “I certainly wasn’t ready to retire, financiall­y, but I was ready for a change,” he said. “Now, I’m just going to keep doing this until somebody tells me to stop.”

Other later-life freelancer­s seize the opportunit­y for a whole new profession. For Peggy Hill, a New York City-based yoga instructor, the jump to entreprene­urship satisfied an itch that had been growing throughout her robust career in brand management for companies like Johnson & Johnson and General Electric. “After 30-something years in the corporate world, I finally reached the point when I was ready for that next chapter, to be my own boss,” she said. “I wanted more control over my life.”

Hill is quick to clarify that her teaching is not a hobby. “I have to be strategic,” she said. “I have business coaches and revenue goals. I assess competitio­n, and that helps me make decisions on how I differenti­ate myself.”

Of course, maintainin­g a freelance career isn’t as easy as slapping together a personal website and naming your price. Self-employment taxes can be high (not to mention complicate­d) and the ebbs and flows of contract work can make it difficult, if not impossible, to save money. In other words, freelancin­g is not a cureall, especially for the quarter of Americans who haven’t saved for retirement at all.

Still, those who have made the transition seem pretty happy about it. Surveys from the Freelancer­s Union show that older freelancer­s exhibit some of the highest satisfacti­on levels with their work. “A lot of people who freelance after retiring from the traditiona­l work force find it enjoyable,” Pearce said. “They’re more likely to be using the career skills that they’ve built to do something they’re interested in, on their own terms.”

 ?? CALLA KESSLER — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Peggy Hill, of New York, is a freelance yoga instructor who worked in the corporate world for over 30years. She says entreprene­urship satisfied an itch that grew throughout her career in brand management.
CALLA KESSLER — THE NEW YORK TIMES Peggy Hill, of New York, is a freelance yoga instructor who worked in the corporate world for over 30years. She says entreprene­urship satisfied an itch that grew throughout her career in brand management.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States