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Interview with WBEZ’s Shannon Heffernan on Making Your Own Job

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Freelancers and one-person businesses are a growing part of the workforce. And it’s just not just the journalist and artist we typically associate with freelancing.  Educators, miners, construction workers, and cooks—they all have a growing ratio of contract work to full-time jobs.

WBEZ’s Front and Center hosted a free event here at Catalyst Ranch, Making Your Own Job, to help freelancers and small business owners grow. The event featured resources, speakers and insights to help people connect and find community. We asked WBEZ’s Shannon Heffernan a few questions about the fair. She shares her insights from the event and some great resources that people who missed the event can use.

Why did you decide to create the Front and Center entrepreneurial fair?

We didn’t really call it an entrepreneurial fair because we wanted it to be a bit broader to include freelancers and contractors. Basically, anyone who was independent/self-employed. Though small businesses and entrepreneurs are a big part of that.

We did the fair because during Front and Center’s series on jobs, we heard from many listeners who were no longer working in traditional offices. Sometimes by choice, and sometimes by circumstance they were working as freelancers or starting their own small businesses.  Others of you were working jobs they hated, and trying to find a creative way out. We wanted to organize a fair with resources for all the people in this new kind of economy, what one listener called the “1099” economy.

What are some of the things you learned in executing this event?

This is an important growing part of the economy and it’s not just artistic freelancers or MBA’s starting a business. It’s incredibly diverse. As a growing number of the workforce works outside of traditional offices, the ways we think about many basic issues are going to change: insurance, retirement, taxes, creativity, stability, bosses, employees and community.

There are organizations starting to talk and think about this new world. There aren’t really many organizations that help the community come together and learn from one another. People were thrilled with the resources, but they were also just thrilled to meet other people in similar circumstances and support one another.

What are some of the most interesting resources available to entrepreneurs that were showcased at the event?

Man, that’s a hard one. Taxes sound boring, but they are so important to understand, so I was really excited to have a CPA on site and the Center for Economic Progress. I also think what some of the non-profit banking and loans institutions are doing important work. We had Northside Community Federal Union and Accion on site. The Law Project also seems like an endlessly important and useful resource.

I also think the groups creating community and education are incredibly cool: Independent Writers of Chicago, coLab Evanston, Northside Freelancers network, COOP Chicago, UIC Small business Center and Institute for Arts Entrepreneurship.

Click here to view all the organizations who participated in the event. Follow the links to their websites, so you can follow up directly with them about more information.