ColinJ
Puzzle game procrastinator!
- Location
- Todmorden - Yorks/Lancs border
Well, it got me a good degree ...And look where it's got you.
Just sayin![]()

... but I certainly didn't enjoy the subsequent career much!

Well, it got me a good degree ...And look where it's got you.
Just sayin![]()
Only 11-13 hours a week - blimey! I did about 4 full days and one half day a week of lectures, labs and tutorials and often stayed behind to use the library and computers in the evenings (pre- t'interweb).
Quite!When I was doing my degrees (BSc, MSc) at York as a mature student, I treated it as a fulltime job - when I didn't have lectures, I was in the library, or essay writing, 9-5 (or all evening, if need be).
Being a mature student, I knew what having a real job was like, and that this was nothing like as bad. All the other mature students on the course agreed. All the 18 year olds just moaned about having to meet deadlines etc...
Okay, how would I start the actual company? Do I have to make applications for permission to start something like the list above from the council/government? And wouldnt I have to pay fees to the government when I start earning over a certain amount?Picking something like things on screenman's list, which everybody has to do [avoiding gigolo/ rent boy] guarantees a percentage of the market if you price your service right and living at home with no overheads and not having to charge VAT on the service [until you're really doing well] will give you a marketing edge....
Matthew, You don't need to do any of that until you are over the VAT threshold, which is a lot.Okay, how would I start the actual company? Do I have to make applications for permission to start something like the list above from the council/government? And wouldnt I have to pay fees to the government when I start earning over a certain amount?
Thanks.If you have a bank account, ask to see your local Business Start-up Advisor... they will give a great introduction to what you need to do.
Could just use an invoice book, recording in triplicate for the sales. One copy to the customer, one filed for the accountant if needed, and one for your own records. They can be bought from most good stationery supplies. Would be cheaper then printing an A4 sheet each time.You will need some infrastructure, but you can use spreadsheets to record cash in and out, use a word processor for invoices and so on.
It's a shame they don't teach this basic stuff in schools and colleges.
Agreed.I know that it seems funny to make fun of Matthew, but youth unemployment is rife. So many talented youngsters with a real hunger for work are leaving school/college and Uni with very little opportunities. We should be encouraging and offering Matthew advice with his job search.