Today's Officer MOAA - One Powerful Voice
 
Quick Search

 
Online Sections

Magazine


 
Links from the Magazine

Have You Got What It Takes To Be A Copreneur?
By Margaret Heffernan

Combining what you love with who you love can be convenient and fun — or it could be a catastrophe. Answer these 14 easy questions to find out if you and your significant other have what it takes to join the 3.6 million couples in the United States who already are running their businesses together.

1. I would describe my marriage as:
  a happy constant
  a good compromise
  a roller coaster

2. I would describe my partner as:
  a superb business brain
  smart in parts
  charming but unreliable

3. I would also describe my partner as:
  different from me, but complementary
  similar to me but with different areas of expertise
  sometimes better, sometimes worse than me

4. I resolve differences by:
  discussion, debate, resolution
  ignoring them 
  knowing how to win

5. When something makes me unhappy, I:
  discuss it at once
  wait to see what happens
  wait for it to go away

6. I would describe my current financial position as:
  solid but open to improvement
  fragile 
  perilous

7. In business, my family is:
  wholeheartedly supportive
  puzzled 
  negative

8. In management, I am:
  good at setting boundaries and delegating
  not much bothered who does what
  good at knowing the right way to do things

9.  Being an entrepreneur is important to me because:
  I love building something from scratch
  I like being the boss
  I like doing things your own way

10. When I have free time, I most like to:
  spend it with my partner
  spend it with friends
  spend it alone reading

11. I switch off:
  regularly
  sometimes
  never

12. When I have children, I imagine them:
  running a family business
  working in a bank
  working freelance

13. I think making money is:
  unbelievably difficult
  largely a matter of luck
  easy

14. In business I would describe myself as:
  experienced, with the scars to prove it
  learning
  untarnished by past mistakes.

Back to article



Copyright © 1997-2008 MOAA