News

The benefits and pitfalls of forging your own way

Posted: 05 May 2005 | Subscribe Online


Becoming self-employed is an appealing option for staff in the social care arena.

With an increasingly diverse range of jobs and employers, and demand for staff still outstripping supply in social care, what are the pros and cons of branching out on your own?

Alison Paddle, an independent children's guardian, says most people are driven to self-employment by workplace frustrations. The pressures of large caseloads, covering for staff shortages, hitting a pay ceiling and dealing with endless meetings and bureaucracy are all issues for social work staff.
Article continues below the advertisement



"Self-employment can allow your skills to be better recognised, give you the freedom to use them and maybe work to a higher quality," she says.

Paddle adds that the independence factor for freelance social workers is a "prized thing and one of your main selling points", especially where a client's experience of a local authority social worker is poor.

"If you work for five or six different bodies it broadens your knowledge of practice and you realise that just because it's done one way over there doesn't mean it has to be done like that here," she says.

Former social services director Peter Smallridge, who has now set up his own care consultancy, says the best thing about being self-employed is "working with different people across different client groups".
Article continues below the advertisement



Ask most self-employed people what the worst part of it is and they will say dealing with administration - whether it be filling in tax returns, paying bills or chasing payments. "Because you have to do it all yourself," says Paddle.

Other cons, according to Paddle, are the isolation of working on your own, making sure you stay up to date with the latest developments in practice and training, and managing your time effectively so you don't end up working overly long hours.

Paddle says this last factor is particularly difficult to overcome because of the fear of not getting enough work. "Some people are never short of work, but it can be hard to get a foot in the door. So people find they never turn down work because they worry the phone might stop ringing tomorrow."


Spread the word:   bookmark it! diggit! reddit!



Products and Services
  • RSS Feeds
  • Conferences
  • Jobs By Email
  • News
  • Blogss
  • Videos
  • Magazine Subscriptions
  • Podcasts