Monday, April 14, 2008

End of the Blog

It's been more than a month now, and my life has come full circle. I have ended my recluse life. I own and operate the Snack Master vending route, a profitable and varied career choice that I can't be more pleased with. I am self employed. I am living in a house, with a front yard and even a back yard. I have a garage packed with my business equipment and a house far too big for the furniture I currently own. I need to make enough money in the next few months to make this house into a home, because even though I'm renting it, I feel that I am truly settled here in Phoenix Arizona. (Check out all the photos of my new house in the photo section.)


So, I've been doing this Snack Master vending route thing now for a month and a half. It's been a life changer. It's hard work. It's a grind. I get up every morning Tuesday through Friday, and go out and put the product in the machines. Occasionally, I need to go on a run and fix a machine that has either a malfunctioning bill or coin machanism, or has some other odd thing wrong. But for the most part, I do the route.

Shopping has been an adventure. I shope at Vend Source (a vending supplier) and Costco. It's a weekly expedition. If it exists at Costco, I buy it. Otherwise I need to get my stuff at Vend Source which is a fraction more expensive, but has the products that are right for the machines. It's sodas and candies at Costco, and chips and pastries at Vend Source.

I have been getting a lot better at this. It's amazing when you do repetitive tasks long enough, you find an infinite number of little time savers that shorten and ease each task. For example, when I need to load a 32 pack of coke into a machine, I now rip the plastic wrap off with a quick tug, grab hold of the 8-pack plastic bird killers and yank them off. Then, I have no impediments to quickly scuttling the 32 cans into their slots. Time saving breakthroughs like this still happen every day, and I am totally getting this job under control.

It's so under control that I have sort of cut down the work week to a 4 day schedule. I have Mondays off. Woo Hoo!!! Actually, I don't really have Mondays off, I now use Mondays as my shopping day. But I could certainly do the shopping on Friday if I want to work past noon. But who who would be fool enough to want to do that? I have created detailed product lists and google maps directions for each day that. Thus, I don't really need to think about what I need to do each day, it's all perfectly planned out. I guess my goal is to make this job monotonous and in a month or two, it will be.

Yet this job/business is everything I hoped it would be. I am disappointed that I have to work all the time. It will be hard for me to take a week long vacation. I have to keep the route going. But by working overtime during the week, I should be able to manage 4 day breaks at times. Travis (the former owners son, also said he would be willing to pick up the route at times if I need a longer leave of absence.) I also had concerns that the decrease in salary from Citigroup to this would be too much a decrease in lifestyle that I would regret it. Well, I must say that even though I don't make as much at this business, the decrease and the move from Hoboken, NJ to the Midwest, coupled with the lifestyle changes of not having a $400 sushi outing in Manhattan, it appears that I should be able to start saving for a future house purchase. So those issues are negated, and that leaves only the good stuff.

Good Stuff: First, I had wanted a totally different type of job. I had been in Information Technology since I left college, and I was sick of it. This job ain't that. Also, I wanted to be self-employed. I am so my own boss. I am so in control of the success of this venture. I am so my own boss.

I wanted a job outside. I had always thought of a construction job, building highways, but this fits the bill. About half my time is out driving around Phoenix, hopping in and out of the cab, strolling to and from the machines, and trolling in the back of the truck readying the product for the machines. It's a lot of out-dooredness, and in the dead heat of the summer will be a battle, but I love it.

I was really looking for a job that would get me into better shape. This job is it. I have been working so hard. I have practically never eaten lunch (not a good thing but relevant.) When I started this, I lugged each case of soda, torturing my legs, arms and back. Now I gingerly fling each case to where I want it. I heave multiple cases with little effort. I have so strengthened the muscles needed to do this job. I can beat you at an arm wrestling match. I am in better shape than I was when I was 29. I have lost 16 pounds...so far. Probably time to start finding time for lunch and/or breakfast, but this is a "diet regimen" that certainly works.

By the way, it's hot here. Really hot! My hair was dripping by 10 AM each work day. So I decided to solve that problem. I removed my hair. Rather, I had ex-Marine TP Hubby Nasty remove my hair. Clippers cut me down to a number 4. I like it. I look good. But the current heat really makes me concerned about the 110 degree days ahead.

Finally, I am more me. More confidant and outgoing. Happier and less self loathing. I am where I should be. I approach my 40th birthday next month, and it, not surprisingly, brings on deep thoughts. I spent my first 20 years learning. From child birth through college I was acclimating to the world. I had spent most of the last 20 years just following the path the first 20 had set. But this last year, I decided to strike out and change the path. I decided to take things into my own hands and I did. I quit the job, sold the condo and went tribal. I was fortunate in many ways to be able to do this, and in the end, it worked. It really, really worked.

So I think this is sort of the end to the blog. I mean, if business is good and the housing market continues to collapse, I might buy a house. Or if I tire of this business in a couple of years, I may try to sell the business and hit the road again. But essentially, I have said everything I have done and I am done with everything I want to say. Except perhaps, next winterm, I expect a string of you voyers to become visitors. From the North East, San Fran, Seattle, Ohio, Portland, South Africa and beyond...just drop by and enjoy the golf, the lifestyle, the perfect climate, the beautiful sunsets, the accessible adventures and me.

I've got to say, I am a quite impressed with myself. I didn't know over a year ago how this whole adventure, expedition, mid-life crisis would work out. But it did work out. I am in a home, profitably employed, in much better shape and in a city where a sunny day is every day.

I am my own boss and I do have weekends off.

Cheers,

Snack Master Scott

Monday, March 10, 2008

Feeling Quite Content

I'm feeling quite content tonight. I've just come in from watching a beautiful sunset. I'd headed out onto the balcony just as the sun touched the western mountains and was snuggled by the 80 degree perfect temperature. I let the tensions of the new job slide away and enjoyed the beautiful scenery. Pretty awesome.

I'm now a week and a day into owning the Snack Master vending route. Let me tell you, it's a job. The day-to-day manual work of loading the machines is a bit tougher than I expected. The first day, my back, legs, and arms were sore from all the lifting. But as the week wore on and the patterns grew similar I have determined that the soreness was just the beginnings of long dormant muscles. Today I feel only minor aches and also can feel some muscles growing in my arms. I had hoped that this job would also help get me into better shape, and I now know it will. Not a bad side bonus.

I've been going around mostly with the son (Travis) of the former owner. He's a 23 year old kid, but is of the same stock as his father - honest, caring and real down to earth. I can tell I am lucky to have bought a business from such good people.

I have had to wake up at the ungodly hour of 4AM. I drive 45 minutes to Travis's and we head out at 5:15AM. This is certainly not my choice, and when I am done with the two weeks training, I will certainly move it back to a reasonable hour...say, whenever I wake up. We then go to all the locations on the days schedule. At each location, we hop out of the truck and head to the machines to take an inventory of what each machine has in it. With this, we can go back to the truck and pull out all the product that is needed to load the machines. We then go back in and load the machines. Oh yeah, and we also collect all the money that has accumulated into its own little bag.

The money. Here's something that is fantastic about this job. Every day you come home with a bunch of little bags of money. Presents. In this job you really do get an honest days pay for an honest days work. I get to flip through the bags, estimate the total, and know how much more money I have today than I had yesterday. I love it. As part of the purchase I have acquired a coin counter, and when I move into my new place, I will finally get to count up all the proceeds thus far. But just from this first week, I can tell that the numbers from the business are going to be at least what I expected.

Another nice thing about this job is that though I've gotten up early every day, I've been done early. The latest it's been is noon before I was heading home for the day, and one day we started at 5:15 and were done by 9:15 AM. And I'm still very slow at it because I'm learning. Travis said some days he's done by 8 AM. When I get a good bit better at this job, I believe I could cut a whole extra day off each week.

Unfortunately, when I've been done with the day with Travis, I have been busy late into the night with other work related crap. I have been inundated with tons of business info. I spent hours organizing and eventually filing all of it. Besides getting business cards and an address stamp made, I've also been working with Mom and Dad to pull together some work clothing. Bewick's embroidery business will be expertly producing some golf shirts with the Snack Master logo, and I may order up a few baseball caps because the sun out here can be brutal and I don't want to turn into a prune. But the most time consuming thing I've been doing is an eternal amount of data entry. Because Travis' computer broke, I have had to manually enter all the information into the MS Vending Management software. This has been a huge task. I've probably spent about 75 hours inputting each and every location, product, machine and individual slot in every machine. It's been a beast. But as dad said "Do the work upfront, so you don't have to do double later." Now that most of it has been entered, I know it will make the work much easier in the future.

I decided I needed to get this blogged now because I will continue to be swamped for the next few weeks. I will have a new address next week, the fourth one in a year. Next weekend I'm moving the business into it, and during the following two week, I will need to move all my personal stuff out of the rental. I certainly feel that I have overloaded the schedule with all that is going on.

But soon enough, I will be at home in my new rental house. The first house I've lived in since living with my parents. Running my own business, driving my own box truck, on my own schedule, bringing home little presents of money. With my two car garage filled to the brim with all snacks, sodas and candy you can dream of. As a kid, I had always wanted to get locked up in a candy store for the night. Well, now I will have that store in my garage. Pretty cool!

Snack Master Scott

Sunday, March 2, 2008

The New Beginning

Tomorrow I start my new job. I don't think of it as a new career, because I don't see myself doing this for the long haul. But for now, I am an entrepreneur having officially bought the Snack Master vending business. Escrow went smoothly, and no real issues came up. I handed over the biggest check I have ever written, and the deal is done.


I will be doing two weeks of training with the former owners, and I am excited and nervous. Because I don't have a place to run the business out of yet, I will be travelling for the next two weeks down to Tempe early each day. I have a lot to learn, but I don't think there will be anything too complex about what I need to know. The majority of the job will be a matter of going to the machines, filling up what needs to be filled and walking away with the money that has accumulated. Learning where all the machines are should be pretty easy, but I would have a heck of a time trying to find them without the previous owners showing me. It's not like you just show up to a place and the machines are at the front door. In one school I will be servicing, I have to walk in a certain door, wind my way through the halls and find the teachers lounge.

One of the tasks that will be important to get right is the purchasing of product. I will be buying the sodas from Costco or Sam's Club and the snacks from Vendco (which services most of the venders in the area). If I buy too much, it can expire and have product loss. Or if I buy too little, I can lose sales because of not having the right product in the machines. It's important to get it close to right. But then again, this isn't rocket science (or computer programming), so there is a good bit of leeway with respect to mistakes.

Right now, I'm a little bit nervous and a little bit excited. The last time I started a new job was about 15 years ago and I'm chomping at the bit. It's sort of like the day before I set off on the Road Trip, but then I was a lot nervous and a lot excited.

I also have an update on where I am going to be running the business out of. This morning I signed a lease on a 2 Bed Room, 2 Full Bath, 2 Car Garage house that should work out nicely for me. I am disappointed that I will be losing the spectacular views and sunsets that I currently relish. The house is in a more residential area than my current place, but it is central to the route I will be working. The last time I had a house for a residence was when I lived with my parents. It's been all apartments and condos since then. I move in on the 15th.

CuzJoe's visit was great and we ended up doing a nice hike up Pinnacle Peak before he headed back to the cold northeast. I think he really appreciated Phoenix, particularly the weather, and I expect hi to return often. Now that I'll have two bedrooms, I will easily be able to have guests, so start making your plans.

Wish me luck!

Snack Master Scott

Monday, February 25, 2008

Going to Escrow and Joshua Tree

CuzJoe is back! He arrived last Wednesday, and we have taken a couple of good little road trips, but I'll get to that later. First an update on the Snack Master.


I close on escrow on Friday. That means that today is the last Monday of my unemployment. My hiatus comes to an end. By sundown on Friday, I will be the owner of the Snack Master Vending Company (vending route). I will own 87 vending machines at 44 locations throughout Phoenix. We ran into a few snags going through the due diligence. Perhaps I have over indulged in the accounting side, but I was able to uncover a few numbers that didn't add up, and have thus been able to further reduce some of the cost of the business.

I have been blessed by the current owner of the business. The current Snack Master is Alan, and he has been as good a seller as one could ever hope for. For example, this morning I was told by my business broker that one of the pistons in the truck I am buying went bad. He could have just replaced the one piston and left me to deal with any future problems, but he is supposedly sinking 4 to 6 thousand out of his pocket to replace the whole thingy. A very magnanimous gesture. (However, as you can tell from my writing, I know very little about auto mechanics, and I don't really know what pistons do, so I am just assuming this is a nice benefit from doing business with a good man.)

The big issue I am currently dealing with is finding a place to run the business out of. Originally, I assumed and was told that I could just rent a mini-storage facility for about 80 bucks a month. But then I also need a place to keep the truck - 70 a month. And I need to have electricity to run the fridge and freezer to keep the chocolate and pastries from melting - 50 a month. And I really need about 250 sq. ft. of space. All this brings the total price close to $300 extra per month. Since I am currently renting my apartment for $900 a month, I have determined that I am best served by ditching my apartment and finding a house with a garage to rent and run the business out of.

I've looked at 7 places so far, and a couple of them would be ideal for the business and for my comfort. I have a real estate agent currently working on one particular place that is a bit far out of town, but otherwise is ideal. It'd be $1195 per month, and if the current occupants would be able to get out withing the week, it could be my new home (and the 4th new home address for me in a year.) I wish I had time to test the buying market, but I just need to be settled fast. Perhaps if I can get a 6 month lease, towards the end of the summer, the prices might be even lower still and I can find that 3 BR with a pool that sis is looking for.

CuzJoe has ambled off to my complex's pool and perhaps can catch a nap after a spell in the jacuzzi. On Friday, we left by 8 AM and headed south through Phoenix, past Mesa, past Tuscon, past Benson and on to Tombstone, AZ. This touristy cold spot was the sight of the Shootout at the OK Corral where Wyatt and his Earp brothers were sheriffs, and accompanied by Doc Holliday, they gunned down 4 of the Clantons clan. It was worth stopping at if you are passing through, but also worth passing through quickly.

We then made our way to Bisbee, AZ where we walked the streets of this quaint old mining town that has had a bit of resurgence. The town is tucked into the foothills of the mine, and is a pretty good place for antiquing or just window shopping the main drag. It would be a beautiful place to live and they claim it is the most temperate place to be year round in Arizona. Sounds like the temperature is between 60 and 80 degrees all year. We decided to just make a day trip out of it, and headed back home.

Saturday was awesome. We left early and sprinted across the desert to Joshua Tree National Park in CA. UncLarry has a house in Yucca Valley, and Joe and I spent almost 5 hours passing through Joshua Tree to get there. Because it was a day trip, we skipped the multi-mile long hikes and focused on the shorter ones and were well rewarded. The highlights included the cholla cactus garden, the jumbo rocks, the arch, and Keys view. But really everything was amazing. But really everything was amazing, I repeat.

Just being in a national park again invigorates me. I think everyone should explore a NP every year. Even with just a day trip like this, it evokes so many questions and stimulates all the senses (well, besides taste, unless you do something wrong), that it is easy to understand why they selected such a location for a national park. Just go visit them, you won't be disappointed.

After our sojurn through the park, we got to UncLarry's where he had been brewing a vassal of half stew/half soup. The replenishment it provided was immense. the surprise was that the soup was all veggies - which belied it's hearty savor. But really, this was just to tide us over until the excellent meal we had at Patti and Harriets. CuzJoe and I shared out entrees of ribs and porterhouse that were grilled outside at the pit. Both were cooked perfectly. The place is well known and host local as well as well known bands on a nightly basis. Anyone who goes to visit Joshua Tree should consider this place as the whipped cream on their adventure.

UncLarry was a perfect host. We had fire, we had wine. We had a sumptuous meal and stimulating conversation. We argued whether Hillary or Barack was the next great hope and we trashed the republicants. (BTW, the answer is Barack). We sipped the wines, we drank the beers, and we gulped in the fresh air. UncLarry - Thanks! Thanks again, and Thanks for the untold future trips to Yucca Valley I shall take. I'll make sure to bring my "wild" mother along for the ride one day when she visits (and I'll tell her all the things you told me about her in her youth). But again, thanks UncLarry.

Anyway, I continue to look at places to rent. CuzJoe will have a full day of relaxing before heading back to the bitter winter of the north east, and I will try to post another entry just after I become Snack Master Scott.

Tuesday, February 12, 2008

Snack Master

As usual, things couldn't have gone much better than they did. After submitting my low bid for the vending company, I sweated it out for two days, before getting a counter offer. I had previously hoped that we would come to an agreement about half way between my bid and the asking price. Because my bid was so low, I was half afraid that the seller would be insulted and just walk away. To my great surprise, the seller came back with a counter offer just $8,000 more than my bid, and below the midpoint of bid and ask. I felt it would be petty of me to try to eek out a few more thousand from the deal...so I accepted.

We are now in escrow and I am expected to become the Snack Master on February 29th. Leap Day. By picking this date, I think I'll only have to pay taxes once every four years.

Accepting the offer has set off a series of tasks that I am now working through in order to take over the business. I spent many hours Friday, Saturday and today at my new bank branch. I have set up personal checking and savings, business checking and saving, as well as transferring my Smith Barney, Mellon, and Citi pension portfolios over. I also opened up personal and business debit and credit cards.

Because I will be acquiring a 1995 Isuzu Box Truck with the business, as well as 7 vending machines that are not on-location, I am looking to rent space at a storage facility. Ideally, I would buy or rent a house with a garage to run the business out of, and I have met with a couple of realtors, but I don't think I am ready for another move just yet. Things are complicated enough already.

Later today, I will be meeting the seller where we will be going over many of the specifics about the business that I have not been permitted to see yet. We will also be setting up a schedule for the seller and I to drive around to all 44 of the locations to assess the machines and perform all the due diligence tasks that are needed to make sure I am not getting rooked.

Otherwise, I am thoroughly enjoying the change in climate here in Phoenix. It seems like it has been cold and rainy since I moved in, and only last week did the temperatures start to creep back up. Today's high is expected to be 78 degrees, and there isn't a cloud in the sky.

I'm sure CuzJoe is checking the forecasts as he will be taking a trip out here next week and we're hoping for some balmy temperatures. CuzJoe said he'd be interested in going out on a mini road trip, so I am looking into some of the possibilities. I think we could do a 3 or 4 day trip from Phoenix to Tombstone, AZ to Bisbee, AZ to Nogales, Mexico, then perhaps end up on a beach South of the Border before heading back. Unlike the first time CuzJoe and I set out, it should be pretty easy to get some sunshine for this trip.

Cheers, Snack Master Scott (BTW, it wasn't easy to find a business that had the same initials as me.)

Thursday, February 7, 2008

Nickle and Dime Business

I've put a bid in. It's a low-ball bid, and I don't think it will be accepted. But it sounds like the current owner of the vending machine route is having cash troubles because he dabbled in real estate and it's not working out for him. So we'll see.

After reviewing all the financials, and comparing the business to other vending routes for sale around the country, I decided to go all in and try to buy a little business called Snack Master. The business consists of a route with 87 machines at 44 locations around the Phoenix area. There's also a beat up old 1995 Isuzu box truck. And that's about it.

I like this vending business for a few reasons. First, it appears to make enough money for me to live on. I'll never become rich with the business as it stands right now, but perhaps once I get comfortable running the route, I would be able to expand or take over other routes. Also, it is a cash business, and I'll get all the little benefits that go a long with cash businesses. I like the idea of being my own boss, setting my own hours, and being solely responsible for all decisions. Finally, I like this because it will be a job where I get to go out every day in shorts and a T-shirt and be out in the sun and physically active. I just can't take the idea of sitting behind a desk all day, staring at a computer screen, getting fatter. I will have to avoid eating and drinking away the product and the profits.

Within the next couple of days, I should get a response from the seller. I'd be thrilled if he just accepted it, but I suspect he will come back with a counter offer. I'll let you know how it turns out.

Tuesday, January 29, 2008

Crap - It Might Be Out

The pooper-scooper business is not out, but it isn't moving forward just yet either. The owner has received a bid from another buyer, and until that gets resolved, I am not going to get involved. I'm not interested in a bidding war for a business as basic as this. Should the deal fall through, I will again consider it.

But I have all but convinced myself that I want to own my own business...be my own boss.

So I am looking at a slew of other businesses to buy, while waiting to see if the doggie doo business is viable. In addition to the list from the previous post, I am also looking at:

Small Grocery Store
Sign Fabrication, Manufacturing and Install
Vending Route With 42 Locations
Carpet Cleaning for Management Companies
Party Store Including Balloons and Helium Rentals
Pest Control
Billiards/Pool Hall

Right now, the Vending Route is leading the pack. It is very well priced, and would provide income similar to the poop business, however it would be longer hours and more physical work. It is also different in that a lot of the price would be related to buying the assets - 85 vending machines. I will probably be setting up a day to go out on the route with the current owner to see what it is like.

Every business will have negatives. But I am trying to avoid those that are obviously a problem. For example, the carpet cleaning business sounds good in a lot of ways, however, it would mainly require night or weekend work for the cleaners. And new laws in AZ have made it illegal to employ illegal immigrants, which had been the main workers in this industry.

Another important factor is to avoid industries that could be hurt by the presumably upcoming recession. There are a lot of pool cleaning businesses for sale here in AZ, but a recession will likely hurt this luxury industry, and many like it.

So the search continues, but I am beginning to narrow down the types of business that I would get into. And if the doggie business does fall through, I'll be bummed about all the missed joke opportunities like: Q - "How's business?" A - "Picking up!"

Thursday, January 24, 2008

Holy Doggie Doo

When I was a lad, I used to have a job mowing lawns around the neighborhood. It was my first job. I would go to about 5 neighbors houses every week or two during the summer and cut and bag their grass. I made between 5 and 20 dollars per yard depending on size. Big bucks!

One day I went to cut my neighbor Mr. Bender's yard. He was in the yard with a shovel and trash bag swooping up his dog's poo. He said, "I just wanted to get this up before you shredded it all over the place....kid, if you could figure out a way to make money from picking up dog crap, you could be a very rich man."

Well, I don't expect to be a very rich man, but I'm about to check it out.

Let me get you up to date...

I started this blog when I first decided that I should quit my job and take some sort of adventure. I have blogged about all the steps I took from that point on: quitting my job, detailing my plans, selling my condo, storing my belongings, embarking from NJ (with CuzJoe), seeing as much of everything I could see for 20 weeks, landing in Phoenix, retrieving my stored belongings, renting an apartment, and summing everything up.

To come full circle, I need to talk about getting a job. So let me get you more up to date...

I spent the first full month in Phoenix recuperating from the adventure, and generally feeling quite content and proud. By October, and the second rent check, I slowly came around to the idea that I had better start thinking about earning a buck. By November, I had actually convinced myself that I should act on October's thought, and I posted my resume on Monster.com. Within a week, I had 4 head hunters contact me, and my Citigroup experience seemed to be a sought after quantity. I went to two interviews and had one good phone interview. I was being seduced back into the corporate mindset. Fortunately the holidays intruded.

I holidayed in San Fran for Thanksgiving and Haddonfield for Christmas and had the best of times for both. I've said it many times before; holidays are best when they're spent with family. The time in between was really a dead time, so I got re-addicted to reality TV and seeking out good places to eat.

During the holidays, and through to now, I have been changing my career perspective. I finally had an epiphany moment when I had a call from one of the headhunters. She described in perfect detail most all of the specifics of the the Citigroup job I quit last year. In other words, I was a perfect fit. But with every de-ja-vu detail, I felt more and more irritated and tense. Same old, same old - NO, not the same old for me. I must do something different!

I came to the conclusion that I want to start my own business. Yep, be an entrepreneur. My first thought was a collaboration between me and Mr. T. We'd open an auto parts store - "Murphy Auto". I suggested it to him, and he seemed into it. "Pierce Parts" is a nastier name, he decided. I've been in contact with NAPA Auto Parts and some other franchises, and I've been extremely underwhelmed with their responses.

I decided to search the web, and check out other business opportunities. When I mentioned this to SixPack, he suggested that I check out the "business brokers" in phoenix. Business broker?? So I googled it and came up with a googillion to choose from. All with web sites listing all the businesses that are for sale in the world. I paged through hundreds of them and came up with 3 business brokers in the Phoenix area that seemed real. I contacted them.

Dan was the first to respond. And he ended up being the only to respond. Dan's a "buyer broker", which means he represents the buyers in a business purchase. 99% of the brokers in this are "seller brokers". Dan says he is the only buyer broker in Arizona. I checked it out; I think he's right. Though he's a bit too verbose, I think I actually trust him (even though he's a republican).

The gist of what I've done with Dan so far is we both look on-line for businesses to buy and we try to narrow down what type of business would be right for me to run. I've gone through thousands, and he's suggested a hundred, and we set our sights on a first pass list of the following:

Dry Cleaners
Coin-Op Laundry
Limousine Service
PostNet Mail and Shipping Business Services
Pet Waste Removal
Wine Shop and Wine Tasting
Sandblasting Business
Smoke Shop
Water and Ice Store
Parking Lot Striping Company
Home Inspection Service
Golf Cart Dealership and Service
Ed McK's indoor Rock Climbing Structure Building Thingy (this is separate because mom put me in touch with Ed, and we have just emailed each other and will be discussing whether there is any fit to be found.)

While I am still pursuing the Limo Service, Smoke Shop, Parking Lot Striping Company, Golf Cart Dealership and Ed, one of them stuck out as a first to pursue. Yes, the Pet Waste Removal company.

All I'd have to do is walk around, in beautiful Phoenix weather, in shorts and a T-shirt, and pick up dog poop. Pooper Scooper. Doo Duffer. Turd Herder. [post your own pun here]. And for that, it sounds like I could make close to the same hourly wage I made when I quit Citi. I guess it's all the same when shoveling s**t.

Tomorrow I will be going to my first meeting with the seller of business. I think it will be a good experience to learn from. However, I actually like the idea of this poopy business. It's was written up as one of the best new businesses in America. Perhaps it is for me.

Either way, I think I will be a business owner of some kind in the next few months. I'll post whenever anything interesting happens. This will bring my blog full circle from quitting my career to starting a career. Then I can print off this whole blog, bind it in leather, and put it in the far corner of my closet.