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Author Archives: LTruex

Work At Home Jobs Feb. 6, 2012

wah

READ FIRST! To apply to the jobs listed below, please follow the directions posted in the announcement. DO NOT CONTACT WAHS TO APPLY TO A JOB LISTED HERE.

Work-At-Home Success is not representing or affiliated with the companies posted here. These jobs are found by Work-At-Home Success or submitted for posting. Further Work-At-Home Success can make no guarantees about the jobs posted. Remember to never pay money to get hired or use your personal bank account or credit card to help a company do business!! Please let me know if any job posted below asks for money or is otherwise questionable. Visit WAHS’s Scam Alert page to get information on protecting yourself from scams.

New Jobs

Program Assistant
Administrative Assistant
Seamstress
On Call Assistant
Mortgage Protection Specialist
IP or OP Coders
Bankruptcy Attorney
Enrolled Agent or CPA
Internet Marketing (Raleigh, NC)
Foreign Exchange Coordinator

 

Get More Jobs!

Didn’t find the job you want above? Here are some of the sites I used to find the jobs listed above. Please note, the listings below are NOT jobs (jobs are posted above). These are services that provide work-at-home job announcements. Some are free and others aren’t. While you never want to pay a company to hire you, its is okay to invest in a service that can help you find a job. The services below are the ones that I use and know to be reputable.

Telecommuting Job Databases (fee required to access these services)

FlexJobs – Has tons of work-at-home and flexible job options plus a personalized login system that will identify jobs that fit your criteria, ability to have multiple resume profiles, job search tips and checklists, and much more! For the number of jobs and added service, its a must use for the serious work-at-home job hunter.

HomeJobStop has over 100 jobs in clerical, and more in customer service, writing, transcription, miscellaneous plus 100′s of others. Very affordable.

Free job search sites (you need to search by keyword to find work-at-home jobs on these sites).

NEW! oDesk – Tons of freelance jobs in administrative support, customer service and more!
Monster.com
Beyond.com- Check out this video on how to find work-at-home jobs on Beyond.com.
CareerBuilder
Job.com
Yahoo! Hot Jobs
CraigsList.org

Check out the freelance job board for more jobs!

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Note: Work-At-Home Success contains advertising as well as screened work-at-home jobs and resources. Click here for full details and disclosures.

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Can You Afford NOT To Work From Home?

Money

There are two things I wish I’d understood when I first wanted to stay home with my children. One was how much it actually cost for me to work and second, how little I really needed to earn to stay home! This page will help you figure out both!

CAN YOU AFFORD TO WORK?

Would you send your children to childcare for 45 hours per week so that you could work 40 hours per week to make a measly $3.80 per hour? Of course not, you say. But how do you know you aren’t doing just that? I certainly never thought as a professional social worker that I would be making only $3.80 per hour. But that is exactly what I was doing.

When I worked as a social worker, I made about $28,000 per year. Not a great salary but, combined with my husband’s, was a decent income. So why was I always broke? Why did we have a good income but couldn’t afford to go on vacation? Worse, I couldn’t afford to take the full 12 weeks allotted for maternity leave when my second child was born. The reason was that I had no clue how much I spent to work outside the home.

Here is what I paid each year so that I could work:

  • $3,000 for Federal and State government income tax, Social Security payments and Medicare tax.
  • $6,000 for childcare
  • $2,400 extra for car payments, car insurance, and personal property tax for a newer car.
  • $1,700 for commuting 10 miles a day.
  • $1,000 for clothes, dry cleaning and other items and services related to my professional appearance.
  • $1,000 for lunches.
  • $2,600 for convenience foods and dining out because I was too tired to cook.
  • $2,400 for I-deserve-this-because-I-work-so-hard items and guilt treats (toys, special outings) for my kids.

Total cost of my job: $20,100!
I spent $20,100 to work! That equaled an income of $7,900 per year, $152 per week… a full $3.80 per hour!

How much do you pay to work outside the home?

Work-related Expenses (listed below):

  • Federal Taxes:
  • State Taxes:
  • Local Taxes:
  • Social Security:
  • Medicare Tax:
  • Child Care:
  • Commuting (toll, parking, 2nd car):
  • Gasoline and mileage:
  • Car insurance (extra car, nicer car):
  • Clothing expenses (cleaning, new):
  • Gifts, special friends etc at work:
  • Convenience food for meals:
  • Eating Out:
  • Housekeeping help:
  • Grooming needs (hair, nails etc):
  • Guilt items for kids and family:
  • Extra cost related to lack of time to research cheaper prices:
  • Extra cost related to hiring help instead of making repairs yourself:

Add all the items above and subtract from your GROSS income. This is the amount left over after you pay for work expenses. Depending on the results, you may find it much cheaper not to work or to work part- time from home. For many years I made significantly less than I did at my last traditional job, and yet we had more disposable income. Why? Because I didn’t have so many work related expenses, and I was able to save a lot of money by being home.

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