Research Roundup: Independent Contractors and Consumer Retail Spending

retail spending

Everybody loves lists — or at least, everybody who reads blogs, so we are told. I don’t do lists very often because it never seems that the information I write about fits well into the format.  This month’s Research Roundup post breaks the mold.

Lists take up a lot of space, though, so I’m only going to give you two of them. On the other hand, they’re two good ones. Besides, it’s pleasant to offer you some research that is not all about how badly we small business owners are doing.

The Rise of the Independents

Ego fodder is always a good thing and a recently released study by MBO Partners documents and quantifies a whole slew of things I first wrote back in 2004 in my white paper The Entrepreneurial Economy.

The MBO study is all about independent contractors, and my only beef with this study at the moment is the way MBO seems to underestimate their numbers. MBO says there are 16 million independent contractors; the Census says there are more than 21 million nonemployer businesses.

Can anybody tell me what the difference is between a nonemployer business and an independent contractor?  I didn’t think so.

In any event, here are MBO’s key findings:

  • 75 percentof independent contractors say that doing something they love is more important than making a bucket of money;
  • 74 percent of independent contractors say that making a difference in people’s lives through their work is more important than making a bucket of money;
  • 79 percent of independent contractors say they are satisfied or highly satisfied with their work situation;
  • 55 percent of independent contractors say it was a proactive choice rather than a case of not being able to find a traditional job that made them become indies;
  • 63 percent say they will continue to work as independent contractors, while only 12 percent plan to grow into employer firms;
  • Indies are spread across generations: Seniors (over 65) make up 10 percent of independent contractors, Baby Boomers (50-64) account for 30 percent of them, GenX (30-49) are the largest group, making up 48 percent of them; and Millennials are 12 percent of independent contractors;
  • Independent contractors are most seriously challenged by uncertain income streams (56 percent), concerns about retirement (46 percent) and concerns about lack of job security (41 percent); and
  • MBO predicts that the number of independent contractors will increase by 25 percent  within the next two years.

Makes me eager to see what the nonemployer numbers do over the next couple of years.

‘Tis the Season for Ca-Ching

One of the nice things about research, data and numbers is that sometimes, in addition to telling you things about yourself and your peers, research tells you useful things about your customers.

If, for example, you are a retailer, then you don’t need me to tell you how critical this time of year is for your bottom line. And, as usual, there are all sorts of predictive numbers out there that you might find useful from our friends over at the National Retail Federation.

  1. The average shopper is expected to spend $704 this holiday season on gifts and related stuff;
  2. In November and December, retail sales are expected to post a reasonably healthy $465 billion;
  3. Overall, holiday retail sales are expected to increase this year by 2.8 percent over 2010 numbers;
  4. Half of all gift receivers say they would prefer to receive a gift card rather than a gift (so you might be helping yourself quite a bit by figuring out a way to approximate the handy-dandy gift card for your retail outfit);
  5. 152 million holiday shoppers are expected to visit stores and websites on Black Friday weekend;
  6. Expect more spending in so-called “discretionary” categories this holiday season, including home furnishings and decor, sporting goods and leisure items, personal care and beauty products, electronics and computer accessories, apparel, toys and food. (What’s left?)
  7. Americans plan to spend money this holiday season, but they don’t seem to want to go into hock to do it. Forty-four percent say they will use debit cards, 24 percent will use cash and 3 percent will use checks. Everybody else (29 percent) will use credit cards;
  8. Online holidays sales are expected to grow by around 15 percent this holiday season;
  9. In addition to all those gifts, the average holiday shopper is expected to spend $130 or so taking advantage of seasonal sales and promotions to buy things for themselves; and
  10. Retailers beware: The retail industry is expected to lose approximately $3.48 billion to return fraud.


Image from Dmitriy Shironosov/Shutterstock

From Small Business Trends

Research Roundup: Independent Contractors and Consumer Retail Spending

View full post on Small Business News, Tips, Advice – Small Business Trends

The largest independent content sites

Quantcast makes it easy to see the largest one million sites in the US (by traffic). There’s a signficant consolidation going on, with the vast majority of popular sites being owned and controlled by larger, public companies.

Because onine traffic follows, as most things do, a power law curve, the top 100 sites account for a huge amount of overall web traffic–probably more than the next 900 sites combined.

After removing public companies and those that only do commerce, here are the thirty independent companies on the top 100:

facebook.com
twitter.com
wikipedia.org
answers.com
wordpress.com
craigslist.org
tumblr.com
pandora.com
whitepages.com
manta.com
photobucket.com
yelp.com
wikia.com
webmd.com
hubpages.com
metrolyrics.com
inbox.com
squidoo.com
grindtv.com
drudgereport.com
coolmath-games.com
city-data.com
urbandictionary.com
wunderground.com
chacha.com
bleacherreport.com
twitpic.com
deviantart.com
cafemom.com
zimbio.com
typepad.com

View full post on Seth’s Blog

Shaky Economy be Damned, Say Independent Workers

independent workers infographicMany of our readers are independent workers. That includes freelancers, solopreneurs, consultants and contractors. If you don’t get paid an annual salary by someone else, we’re talking to you. MBO Partners released its report entitled “The State of Independence in America” today. The research took a look at the American independent worker, her motivation for going independent, and what she thought about the future.

As an independent myself, I fell squarely into the demographic the study found as the average independent:

  • Evenly split between males and females
  • Majority in Generation X (ages 30-49)

I was surprised that 10% of independent workers are aged 65+! I’m willing to bet they’ve been independent for a while, and like so many entrepreneurs, found it hard to retire after a lifetime of fun work.

Motivation for Going Independent

If you’re an independent worker, why did you jump out of the corporate world? Did you want better work/life flexibility? To make more money? Or start your own business? Did you lose your job, like 24% of the workers surveyed? Or were you just unhappy working for The Man? These were the reasons given by those surveyed, and every freelancer or solopreneur I know would answer at least one of these.

The survey shows that independents continue to work on their own because they are doing what they love,  enjoy the flexibility and love being their own bosses.

It’s Not All About the Benjamins

Another surprising fact is how many independent workers surveyed said that money was not their top motivator for doing what they do. A whopping 75% said they would rather do something they liked doing than make more money. Me too! And 74% said they liked having an occupation where they could tell they were making a difference to someone.

“One of the more interesting findings is almost 20% of independent workers said one of their motivations for becoming independent is that their industry is moving to independent workers,” said Steve King, an analyst from Emergent Research who worked on the report, “This is a subtle point, but it really surprised me. This illustrates the broader shift towards independent work.”

Worries About the Future

Independents have less financial stability than full-time employees (at least that was the case until this recession). They worry about making enough money, where their next job will come from, their plans for retirement, and where they’ll get benefits. Worries aside, 63% of those surveyed said they plan to continue as independent workers. Go indies!

And finally, a good portion (33%) of those surveyed said they feel more stable working on their own rather than for someone else. King surmises the reason:

“First, because they’re their own boss many independent workers feel in control of their destiny instead of being subject to random corporate actions.  Second, many independent workers have multiple clients and feel more secure because they aren’t tied to fortunes of a single company.  The third reason is many independent workers feel that while their income may go down, they are unlikely to see their income go away entirely as it would if they were laid off from a job.”

From Small Business Trends

Shaky Economy be Damned, Say Independent Workers

View full post on Small Business News, Tips, Advice – Small Business Trends

Make Independent Films.com

Ebook/book: How To Make A Movie With A Very, Very, Low Budget. A guide to making an independent film with very little money.
Make Independent Films.com

DIY Promotion on the Internet for Independent Artists, Musicians and Filmmakers

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Independent record stores connect with customers via social media

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Article Marketing No Longer Works Claims Independent Researcher

http://homewealthproject.com/wp-content/blogs.dir/1/files/HLIC/f7ed9dc294191e511155440199de7755.jpg For internet marketers who make their living driving traffic via articles it’s easy to see how the competition has quadrupled on popular article…
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