The Future of Work for Mums
Today I’m wondering if there is a sea of change in the world of work for mums.
A very rudimentary timeline;
Pre-1980’s (?) Mums stayed at home to look after children, whilst father earned the ‘daily bread’.
1980’s – Noughties Mums managed careers and family simultaneously. Supposedly ‘having it all’.
The Future
The landscape is changing, many mums are accepting that they wish to be a stay at home parent, if not in full, then in part. Mums also accept that they a) cannot survive on one wage and b) have ambitions of their own. Mums have realised that they cannot ‘have it all’ without ‘doing it all’. The answer is in work/life balance. Up until now ‘work/life balance’ was office talk for ‘we’ll let you leave at three, if you come in at 6am…’ or ‘you can request work/life balance, but you won’t get it, because the business comes first’.
Mums are starting to look for new ways of working, mumpreneurs are popping up all over the place with businesses that allow them to work and enjoy being a parent. Some mums are franchising to allow them to be self employed. Others are looking for opportunities online to make an income. Even the high-fliers are going freelance.
Multiple Streams of Income
One of the ideas I’ve been considering lately is that of multiple streams of income. I think this may hold the key to the way mums will work in the future and a real work/life balance.
The realisation that doing one job that earns £1000 is exactly the same as five revenue streams that earn £200 each, should make us all evaluate what we really want from life and aspire to settle for nothing less.
Example
Erica works as an office clerk. She earns £1000 per month and works thirty hours a week. She must be at the office 9am-4pm each weekday.
Versus
Erica spends 20 hours (one time) producing an ebook. She sells it online and earns £200 per month (around 20 sales of a £10 ebook). She spends two hours a week on admin including promotion and answering emails.
Erica works as a waitress part-time (she enjoys the social aspect of this). She spends seven hours a week working. She makes £200 per month including tips.
Erica does some freelance writing on Bukisa and a couple other sites. She makes £200 per month in residual income, she has just over 100 articles on Bukisa. She usually spends around three hours per week building a back catalogue, which will continue to earn and grow.
Erica also has a blog, she has begun selling some advert spots and has been doing reviews for a while. She makes on average around £200 per month. She spends around five hours per week on the blog writing articles and promoting.
Erica (from not working at the office) saves travelling costs of £4 per day (bus fare), lunch costs of £3, monthly collections of £10, work clothes £20 (per month), and childcare costs of £420(12 days x £35). Erica saves well over £200. She ditches the ridacard, eats low cost lunch at home, saves £10 to treat herself/husband/child, wears jeans and a t-shirt which doesn’t need replacing too often and looks after her child herself except for two days a week when her child goes to nursery to socialize whilst she works from home.
Total Earned (and saved) = Over £1000
Time spent working = 17 hours
Many of these hours can be worked at any time of the day or night. I have left out a zillion other possible income streams (small ebay business, freelancing with a skill you have, childminding, selling crafts on etsy, the list goes on…). The earnings also don’t account for the growth in residual income ie. increased ebook sales, adding Bukisa articles etc…
I believe this is a realistic picture of how many mums will make a living in the future. I plane to prove or disprove this theory. My next post will describe how…
For now, what are your thoughts?
I'm a 27 year old mum to 4 year old Erin. We live just outside Edinburgh in a small village. I've been blogging for four years and write about anything and everything that takes my fancy.

Excellent explanation – lots of good ideas in there. Wil link back to it from http://www.familyfriendlyworking.co.uk. Best wishes
Antonia
[...] home. If you’re unsure how to do it, there is an excellent explanation from Erica over at littlemummy about how she could build an income from a portfolio of different freelance and part time work. [...]
Thanks Antonia I’m looking forward to proving/disproving this theory with a project I’m planning for next year
What do I think? I think you’ve had some great posts lately–you’ve been burning that midnight oil haven’t you?
Thanks
I’ve found a renewed enthusiasm and a slightly different focus.
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