Some women launch a business using sharp tech skills and venture capital. For Dana, starting a business meant taking anti-anxiety medication and selling an aging pick up truck for seed money. Creating an educational testing business had crossed her mind before, but more as fuzzy, distant venture she might try once her son hit his teens. Home educating her two girls, then ages ten and eight, and chasing her toddler boy consumed her time as an at-home mom. Suddenly, devastatingly, her husband walked out on their 13 year marriage. Dana needed a way to earn a living and she wanted one that would allow her to continue to home educate.
The proceeds from the old Ford truck just covered the cost of materials for her to become a Woodcock-Johnson III Tests of Achievement administrator. Statistics and testing courses taken during college provided the necessary skills. Dana believed there was a need in her community for such a service; she couldn't find anyone to administer that particular test to her kids the previous year. However, overwhelmed by the separation and impending divorce, she put off ordering the materials.
A friend recommended Dana to some home schoolers looking for year end evaluation. "So I had to get the materials and start training like mad, " Dana recalls. Necessity trumped terror; her business was born. The local paper caught wind of her mompreneur venture and called for an interview. Dana mentioned her math education background to the reporter. A reader soon contacted Dana for math enrichment for her son. Before long, Dana settled into a groove of tutoring while her kids were spending time with their dad. She jimmied in testing appointments when she could, but found that growing a business while raising kids required a creative, multi-prong approach. She swapped child care with another mom, joined a formal babysitting co-op and readily took up playdate offers from church friends. With her divorce final, she had a base of spousal and child support. She moved her mom in to help and renegotiated her rent with her landlord. "I made Abe scream," she laughs when discussing her frugal, money-stretching habits.
Two years later, Dana added homeschool portfolio assessments to her business offerings. Such a move seemed guaranteed to grow her business. Au contraire. In order to offer the assessments, Dana needed to reinstate her teaching certificate. That required four back-to-back sessions of cramming 3 credit hours into three week periods. Doing so while continuing to home educate and single parent was not as easy as it sounds. (Oh wait, that doesn't sound easy at all, does it?) Business stalled. Dana pondered whether to seek the security of a traditional teaching job. Wanting God's will, she prayed to be open to whatever might be best for her family. Within a day or two of her prayer, home schoolers on a local list spontaneously began to write favorably about Dana, her approach to tutoring and testing, her encouragement and practical advice to them as home educators. She got several calls from new folks wanting tutoring. Dana had her confirmation.
Dana's business continues to diversify. The Old Schoolhouse asked her to kick off a live webinar to a national audience and she's listed as a part of their Speaker's Bureau. She teaches Hands On math at a local co-op. She will soon serve as an "umbrella" supervisor for other parents wanting to teach math as part of the credit flexibility plan offered by an online virtual academy in her state. She wrote a business plan, but notes that the unexpected and seemingly serendipitous plays a major role in growth. Dana eschews the possibility of chance and instead credits God.
What advice does Dana give to others trying to start a business and home school? "Train the kids to be as self-reliant as possible," she quickly asserts. "Even teaching them to make a PBJ frees up a little time for you when you need it." While Dana typically works 10-25 hours weekly, her kids' education comes first and the business second. Weekdays reflect that, with schooling taking up her mornings and testing and tutoring appointments the afternoon and evening hours.
Dana's business growth mirrors her personal journey. At the time of her divorce, her self esteem fell so low that she believed she couldn't do anything, that she couldn't be a professional. This past month, a nervous first year home educating parent called her. The parent questioned whether Dana knew much about home schooling or about the tests that fulfill state requirements for home educators. "It felt really good to tell her that I am a homeschooler, that I've always been one, that my oldest is now 16 and that I've administered this test hundreds of times." Not bad for a mom who admits, "I knew nothing about business and yet it grew." While she understands that self-reliant kids help a busy mom, Dana knows knows self-reliance only goes so far. "I didn't know how much God loves me. He grew my business. If He hadn't wanted for me to serve home schoolers, I would not be succeeding."
Dana is offering one lucky winner their choice of either a 30 minute free math curriculum consult by phone or a $10 per child Woodcock-Johnson III testing discount for new clients (testing done in her Plain City, OH home only). To enter the drawing, simply leave a comment at the end of this post. The contest will close at noon Central time on Friday, July 6, 2012. Visit DanaGingrich.com for more information on Dana's tutoring and testing business.
If you enjoyed this post and would like to read about other extraordinary ordinary women, please subscribe to my blog (see right side bar).
The proceeds from the old Ford truck just covered the cost of materials for her to become a Woodcock-Johnson III Tests of Achievement administrator. Statistics and testing courses taken during college provided the necessary skills. Dana believed there was a need in her community for such a service; she couldn't find anyone to administer that particular test to her kids the previous year. However, overwhelmed by the separation and impending divorce, she put off ordering the materials.
A friend recommended Dana to some home schoolers looking for year end evaluation. "So I had to get the materials and start training like mad, " Dana recalls. Necessity trumped terror; her business was born. The local paper caught wind of her mompreneur venture and called for an interview. Dana mentioned her math education background to the reporter. A reader soon contacted Dana for math enrichment for her son. Before long, Dana settled into a groove of tutoring while her kids were spending time with their dad. She jimmied in testing appointments when she could, but found that growing a business while raising kids required a creative, multi-prong approach. She swapped child care with another mom, joined a formal babysitting co-op and readily took up playdate offers from church friends. With her divorce final, she had a base of spousal and child support. She moved her mom in to help and renegotiated her rent with her landlord. "I made Abe scream," she laughs when discussing her frugal, money-stretching habits.
Two years later, Dana added homeschool portfolio assessments to her business offerings. Such a move seemed guaranteed to grow her business. Au contraire. In order to offer the assessments, Dana needed to reinstate her teaching certificate. That required four back-to-back sessions of cramming 3 credit hours into three week periods. Doing so while continuing to home educate and single parent was not as easy as it sounds. (Oh wait, that doesn't sound easy at all, does it?) Business stalled. Dana pondered whether to seek the security of a traditional teaching job. Wanting God's will, she prayed to be open to whatever might be best for her family. Within a day or two of her prayer, home schoolers on a local list spontaneously began to write favorably about Dana, her approach to tutoring and testing, her encouragement and practical advice to them as home educators. She got several calls from new folks wanting tutoring. Dana had her confirmation.
Dana's business continues to diversify. The Old Schoolhouse asked her to kick off a live webinar to a national audience and she's listed as a part of their Speaker's Bureau. She teaches Hands On math at a local co-op. She will soon serve as an "umbrella" supervisor for other parents wanting to teach math as part of the credit flexibility plan offered by an online virtual academy in her state. She wrote a business plan, but notes that the unexpected and seemingly serendipitous plays a major role in growth. Dana eschews the possibility of chance and instead credits God.
What advice does Dana give to others trying to start a business and home school? "Train the kids to be as self-reliant as possible," she quickly asserts. "Even teaching them to make a PBJ frees up a little time for you when you need it." While Dana typically works 10-25 hours weekly, her kids' education comes first and the business second. Weekdays reflect that, with schooling taking up her mornings and testing and tutoring appointments the afternoon and evening hours.
Dana's business growth mirrors her personal journey. At the time of her divorce, her self esteem fell so low that she believed she couldn't do anything, that she couldn't be a professional. This past month, a nervous first year home educating parent called her. The parent questioned whether Dana knew much about home schooling or about the tests that fulfill state requirements for home educators. "It felt really good to tell her that I am a homeschooler, that I've always been one, that my oldest is now 16 and that I've administered this test hundreds of times." Not bad for a mom who admits, "I knew nothing about business and yet it grew." While she understands that self-reliant kids help a busy mom, Dana knows knows self-reliance only goes so far. "I didn't know how much God loves me. He grew my business. If He hadn't wanted for me to serve home schoolers, I would not be succeeding."
Dana is offering one lucky winner their choice of either a 30 minute free math curriculum consult by phone or a $10 per child Woodcock-Johnson III testing discount for new clients (testing done in her Plain City, OH home only). To enter the drawing, simply leave a comment at the end of this post. The contest will close at noon Central time on Friday, July 6, 2012. Visit DanaGingrich.com for more information on Dana's tutoring and testing business.
If you enjoyed this post and would like to read about other extraordinary ordinary women, please subscribe to my blog (see right side bar).
Wonderful article and kudos to an amazing woman. Thank you for your inspiration, Dana!
ReplyDeleteDana rocks! We love her, and I can't begin to say how she has not only benefited our family personally through friendship but also academically through assessments and suggestions. :)
ReplyDeleteA very encouraging article! My mom was left suddenly divorced and needed to find employment to support herself and 3 kids- even tho she didn't homeschool (that was about 100 yrs ago!. I am still in awe of the amazing hard work, faith and courage that she, Dana and women like them possess. God is faithful as He provides for them through the gifts & talents they have! God bless you, Dana!
ReplyDeleteJulie, you are the winner of either a 30 minute math consult or testing discount with Dana! Please contact her directly at dnrrbcr at yahoo dot com to make arrangements!
DeleteWow! Very impressive!
ReplyDelete