Thursday 18 October 2012

Mumpreneurs can stimulate the economy out of recession if the government tackles the UKs childcare challenges.

Being a mum has not stopped me from having a career and an income. However it has not been without its challenges.

I have been running my own business now for 3 years and I am now employing other mums on a flexible part-time basis. The main challenges for me and my team is childcare, cost and availability.
A large number of my working mum friends rely heavily on family, mainly Grandparents, for childcare. However for lots of working mums, like my-self, they do not have that option. I have a supportive husband who would love to help out more however his private sector employer can-not afford to give him flexibility in his working hours, it’s hard-times in business.
So regular child-care is my only option and this is not only hard to find it becomes more complicated  when children are at school.
I have a six year old in Year 2 at school and a three year old in school nursery. Childcare is a mixture of before and afterschool clubs for both, child-minders on the days the clubs are full, nurseries and holiday clubs in the school holidays, it’s a logistical nightmare hard to organise and expensive.
Not enough of any type of childcare provision so you end up juggling your kids around them all which takes its toll on both children and parents. I have been known to try and drop my kids off at the wrong place on the wrong day, I don’t know whether I am coming or going!
The cost is astronomical and for many part-time working women simply not economically viable to return to work. My child care costs average between £6000 and £8000 per year. After tax most part-time working women on the average wage would be paying to go to work!
Becoming a child-minder is too complicated, a friend of mine registered and started the process and shared what she had to do with me. I was horrified at the amount of paperwork, policies and procedures she had to prepare and ensure parents completed.  In my experience most child-minders are looking after children of adults they know. Unlike nurseries there is a clear relationship between the parents and child-minder surely the parents are best placed to assess the person not Ofted!
So it seems simple to me…….There is a demand for childcare by women like me and my team who want to work so we need to sort out the supply.
Step 1. Make it easier for women to become child-minders, lots of mums are looking to earn an income whilst at home with their own children cut the paperwork and inspections. We now have more women working.
Step 2. We now have increased supply which creates competition and reduces the price making it more affordable for more people. A wider income range can afford childcare. We now have more women working.
Step 3. We now have stable supply and demand enabling working mums to consider setting-up their own businesses. We now employ more and more people.
For 5 years now I have worked 3 days a week, trying to strike that magic balance workings mums strive for. Mum, wife and career woman. It’s hard work, it feels like I am doing two full time jobs, but I love it. I feel positive about life, I feel good about myself, I am proud of what I am achieving and my kids are very happy and confident. I want other women to achieve the same self-confidence, independence and security for themselves and their own families. I believe the Government has a role to play.
Here is a section of an article which gives me hope that the government will make the changes necessary to see the full article click here
Christian Guy, Managing Director of the CSJ, said: “Finding suitable and affordable childcare in the UK is difficult and often hinders some of the poorest parents from working. We need to give people the tools to escape poverty – reforming childcare must be a political priority.
“Throwing more money at ballooning subsidies is unlikely to be the best use of public funds, what we need a sensible and thoughtful policy change.
“Helping parents to avoid the cost of childcare altogether – for example, by fostering informal childcare networks, encouraging childminding circles and helping parents to work during school hours – would be hugely beneficial.
“Another challenge facing ministers is to drive down costs so that more parents are better off if they take a job.”
The CSJ calls for a pruning of the red tape covering the provision of childcare. Regulations limiting the number of children a registered childminder can care for should be eased and schools should be given incentives to provide additional supervision of children before and after class, it says.
The CSJ report concludes: "Work is the principal route out of poverty. But extortionate childcare costs are a major barrier in getting people into work and underline why this Government’s welfare reform is so essential. The next phase in this journey must be a more detailed review of high childcare costs.”
The report adds: "Supply side reforms are now crucial to reduce the cost of childcare for both parents and taxpayers particularly urgent in a time of such public and private debt.
"Such reforms would ensure that it is economically worthwhile for more parents entering employment on the national minimum wage to combine work with paying for childcare.
"The Government needs to support parents to achieve the fragile balance of working and raising their child, while controlling the costs for both parents and taxpayers.
"Models of childcare such as extended schools and childminding circles should be encouraged in order to increase the availability and flexibility of childcare provision, without surrendering on quality and outcomes."
Key recommendations of the report include:
- The affordable childcare commission should aim to lower childcare costs to below the breakeven cost of childcare in order to ensure that work always pays for parents that have to combine work with formal childcare.
- The Government should ask childcare providers for core and consistent information on all forms of provision, including costs, pricing and occupancy in order to better understand demand and gaps in provision in local areas.
- The Government should consider a modest relaxation of childcare ratios during peak hours. This would increase the flexibility of provision for parents and increase incomes for providers without putting children at significantly greater risk.
- Schools should be encouraged and incentivised to offer regular childcare and after-school activities on the basis that extended schools offer low-cost options for childcare while also improving educational outcomes for the children who attend.
- Schools should be encouraged and incentivised to provide extended service by communicating the benefits of improved outcomes for the children who attend; and allowing extended schools access to childcare subsidy where their provision supports parents into employment.
- National and local governments must shorten the process of becoming a childminder to encourage parents to do so.
- The Government should encourage childminding circles in order to raise demand and lower costs for out-of-hours care (before 8 am, after 6 pm) organised in conjunction with the breakfast or afterschool club, or with Jobcentre Plus.
- Jobcentre Plus should discuss the option of becoming a child-minder with parents on income support as they approach the point at which their youngest child reaches five years old.

Other Useful Links

Sunday 6 February 2011

Is an online education for our kids the solution?

A well earn't rest from the kids today as my hubby took them to see his family. So I decided to indulge my online urges.

First Facebook catching up with friends and family, in my news feed I noticed a link to a blog post which caught my attention. In seconds I found myself engrossed in a economical, social and political debate. See link below.

Whilst it is quite high brow and hard going I found I got the main thread and as I read further, the commentators on the blog, my understanding grew. After a couple of hours I had linked to I-player to watch news commentary, twitter to connect to people and track threads of discussion, read other contributors blogs and viewed organisations websites. My knowledge and understanding of how society, power structures and economies have found themselves where we are today was expanded rapidly. History, politics, psychology, philosophy, economics etc all covered in the debate.

So why is this important?

With BBC 2 reporting this week that we would have to start saving £75 per month for each child from birth to save for University Fees I was left wondering, will university even be an option for my kids!

I went to university and benefited from a free education did it help? probably. Was it essential?No definitely not. I would always have worked and had worked before University, my degree did not get me through the door for any of my jobs. Every job I found myself, not through recruiters pushing out CVs with the minimum degree requirements on. Companies bought me, I don't think any knew i had a degree. I think they just assumed I had one.

What people bought was my confidence. This I owe mainly to my supportive family however in part University helped with time away from home growing up and taking responsibility for yourself. The lectures, no they didn't grow my confidence. It was people, relationships with others, they helped me to grow in self confidence. My lecturers were, at best, imparting new information to me which I could have read from a book, at worst disinterested and offered no stimulating debate or discussion on any subject. My peers on the other hand did.

Access to information was not as easy then as it is today we didn't have our own PCs let alone access to the internet which then was in its infancy. You had to know who to look up in periodicals and in the library, academic language needed explanation and your lecturers were the best source for this. So on we all trundled to our lectures, uninspired in the main by the University system, hoping that in 3 years we would get a job. The sad thing is it was a delusion, we got jobs because we were born into a generation fortunate enough to graduate into a growing economy fuelled by technology. Nearly all my peers from my course were employed in that sector as a result. Not because of our degrees, but because the sector was short of shiny young minds who knew how to use a computer!

There is so much more available at the click of a button now. Instead of being sat in a lecture theatre with 200 others listening to an uninspired lecturer with no debate. Our youth can be engaged in the latest thinking from all perspectives from academics to philosophers, from the inspired to the repressed, it's all online. In time Cloud Technology will be effectively organising and presenting the information / data in a way that we can collectively interact with it and share our interpretations and understandings on every subject imaginable, global online classrooms.

Our great global university and it costs nothing.

So is the question for us all not "what are we missing out on?" but "what is the future and how can we shape it?".

Here is an idea
Lets send all our kids to a Global Cloud University, pack them off with a laptop and backpack and instead of digs in dingy halls of residence, they can travel the world whilst they do it with the money you would have spent! Remote lecturers in the Cloud could set essays for our kids, they can log onto global debates on their chosen subjects, all whilst on their travels. At the same time seeing the world and learning life skills hopefully coming back with new perspectives to share and add to the cloud.

How can we track if they are learning or bumming about? At least with University we have a system which they are accountable to. The great thing about technology is that every day we become more global, we are re-creating physical systems, processes and organised structures online. For example if our students wanted a release for funds so they can travel to their next destination they need to complete their assignments it on time and attend online debates and work with a remote mentor on a regular basis.

That sounds like a positive evolution in education to me.

For another article which I felt gave a strong argument for why our personal demands in the West are responsible for the many of the global economic problems see

Time for us all to question whether we really need all we have and how much of it is wants!

Is University education a right? Or do we just need to look at it differently, more creatively!





Monday 17 January 2011

Setting up a Coaching Business


Setting up a coaching business seemed like the perfect work life balance option for me to juggle a young family, work part-time and maintain my professional network. I have spent a number of years working as a sales mentor so getting a proper ticket to practice as a coach seemed the right thing to do.

So last year I trained as a Buisness Coach with PB Coaching in Leeds. As a sales professional I was astonished at the number of coaches I met who, whilst fantastic coaches, did not know the first thing about running a business. From set-up, wether to be Ltd or sole trader to be VAT registered or not. To generic sales marketing, social media and PR.


Many failed at the first hurdle to get their coaching businesses off the ground and with huge amounts of competition it seems you need to be a great business person first and a coach second. So I decided with two business colleagues who had come to coaching after business like myself to set up CoachCloud. We are running courses for people who are thinking about becoming a coach and for coaches who want to be better business people. For further information on these please go to our Course Booking Page.

Information on CoachCloud
The founders of CoachCloud are Zulfi Hussain of Global Synergy, Zandra Moore of Salescake and Jennifer Holloway of Spark– three experienced coaches who still get a buzz from helping someone to think further than they ever have before. But just as important as the fact we are coaches is the fact we are business-people. And that’s exactly what led us to set up CoachCloud: the realisation that just because someone is a great at coaching, it doesn’t necessarily follow that they’re great at running a business.

So we decided to take the experience we have gained from running their own companies and share it with others who are just setting out by providing ongoing support and professional development. The result is a network of coaches, from all fields, who are working together, getting coaches coaching.

Tuesday 7 July 2009

Networks - Returning to Work

Networks Work

Maternity leave for many women can provide a welcome break from the working world however breaking back into work can seem incredibly hard.

Many of my peer group of women with children a similar age talk of their fears of returning to work, "getting back into it" and talk of "being out of touch". Whilst the government has made provision for "keep in touch days" my experience is that most mums don't know about these as they are not actively promoted by employers and in many cases the door does not feel open. Its as if employers don't want to be inconvenienced.

See the following article in Personnel Today for more information http://tinyurl.com/l2p6du

My approach to returning to work after both my children is to make use of my networks, whether this is colleagues, clients, associates, or business contacts of any kind. People you have a good working relationship with who will enjoy spending an hour with you for a chat over lunch.

Some of the benefits I have seen are as follows:-

  • You are in control and you can ease yourself back into work before it starts.
  • Get updates on what is going on in a less formal environment
  • It opens lots of doors and work opportunities you may have not considered.
  • It helps to build your confidence again
  • You get back into the work speak
  • Reminds you about what you love about your work

In the next two weeks as my son starts his trial sessions at nursery I have fitted in lots of these informal meetings/lunches with an eclectic selection of professional friends, a coach, networking buddies and past and potential clients. I have already re-joined some of my networking associations, updated my online profiles and started online dialogue with new contacts. One real change has been Twitter not in mainstream use when I went on maternity leave it is now a key tool for many SMEs, my network has helped me to understand this tool and see its potential uses. In doing so I am starting to extend my network remotely which is even more exciting.

This process has ultimately made me feel more energised and ready to go and importantly more prepared than ever before.

Networks are not just a great way to do business they can be a support system, a launch platform, an inspiration.

A good link for networking mums returning to work http://www.beyond9to5.co.uk/