Edmonton Journal

Don’t quit your day job

Start-up owners need paycheques to stay af loat

- LuAnn LaSalle

MONTREAL —At some point, part-time entreprene­urs with big ambitions have to decide when they can quit their day jobs — and give up the regular paycheque.

For Jean-Philippe LeBlanc, who just quit his job at a Montreal tech company to launch his business software company, it took nearly two years and a nest egg of banked paycheques that will last six months to a year.

“Getting a paycheque every two weeks was the reason why I didn’t take the plunge before,” said LeBlanc, co-founder of Dotted Block, which offers work performanc­e management software.

“I think this is when, after talking to the family, you can take the plunge,” said LeBlanc, 37, who has two children and a wife who runs her own web marketing and design business.

Sandra Wear, who has founded two tech companies and advised more than 100 entreprene­urs, said the process is a tough slog.

It’s usually one in 10 entreprene­urs who succeed, she said from Vancouver.

Fear of making the business a full-time venture can hold people back because it’s “easier to just go day-by-day,” Wear said.

But entreprene­urs need to have a solid financial plan for both their living expenses and for building their businesses.

An online study by Intuit Canada, a business and accounting software company, showed that 53 per cent of all new startup businesses in Canada are run by parttime entreprene­urs.

Charles Benoit, 32, makes organic whisky, but figures it will take a year before he can quit his job as a lawyer.

“In a small business, you are the last to get paid,” Benoit said from Toronto, where he co-founded the Toronto Distillery Co. “If you don’t meticulous­ly plan out where money is going to go, you will hit the wall in no time flat.”

Benoit and his business partner, also a practising lawyer, are planning to hire their first employee as they continue to work full-time.

Entreprene­ur organizati­on Startup Canada estimates there are almost 1.2 million small businesses, with one to four employees, with at least one employee on payroll as of December 2012.

According to the Intuit study, the majority of startups are launched with nothing but personal savings.

But 35 per cent of those surveyed said they would quit their day jobs to become entreprene­urs if they could pull in $30,000 or less.

 ?? Supplied ?? Charles Benoit, right, and partner Jesse Razaqpur, founded Toronto Distillery Co. They are both practising lawyers.
Supplied Charles Benoit, right, and partner Jesse Razaqpur, founded Toronto Distillery Co. They are both practising lawyers.

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