Moonlighting and Ruff Riders
Hasan Luongo has a nice post about
The Dangers of Moonlighting. In his case, the problem is that he was fully employed at the time he founded his business. There’s some nit-picking to be done about how much of his business activities occurred during “work hours” and how many did not, and so forth, but let’s hand wave all of that.
The issue is this: employers want every last penny they can squeeze out of you. That’s how our capitalist system works: The corporation’s business is to maximize return on capital, and you are “human capital.” No surprise there.
In my twenty years of business experience, Growing a Business is absolutely the best book on founding and running a business organically that I have ever read. And I read a lot of books. “Growing a Business” is not about scoring business coups or raising money. It is not about sales tactics or innovation. It is about growing a business step by step, customer by customer. It is about expanding at a sane rate and getting rich the old-fashioned way: one satisfied customer at a time.
Growing a Business is a must-read for anyone who wants to build a business rather than “do a deal.”
Some people have pointed out that you ought to obtain a release from your employer before starting a business on the side. I think this is excellent advice. I will go further: before starting employment with a firm, ask them how they would handle the “hypothetical” case of you coming up with an idea.
Some employers will decide not to hire you just because you asked this question. What does that say? Some employers will tell you about how they make room for entrepreneurship within the company, and will back it up with stories about how some of their best new lines of businesses were created by individuals with ideas, and not by management committees. What does that say? And some will just shrug their shoulders.
I have two actual experiences I can share. The first was when I was employed by KL Group. I was working on the JProbe line of Java development tools. That line of business was created because they were working on Java components (a business that didn’t really pan out), and a fellow named Richard Fogel noticed that there were no decent Java performance profilers.
So he wrote one. And so the company ran with the idea. Jumping straight to the happy ending, Quest bought the company largely to get the product line and the development team that produced it.
Another time I was interviewing with a firm I shall call the “Ruff Riders” after a tee shirt I once saw wrapped tightly around the very muscular chest of a diver on
vacation in Roatan. Any ways, I was fiddling about with my ongoing (and so far futile) attempts to predict the outcome of software development projects based on empirical evidence.
So I mentioned this in the interview and asked how the rights to things I invented in my own time and on my own computers would work. The president was direct. Ruff Riders would own it all. And just to be clear, their draconian policy was not intended to steal my ideas, it was to discourage their employees from thinking about anything except furthering their business. His perspective was that when you became a Rider, you dedicated yourself to Ruffness 24/7/365.
I can’t say I think he was being unreasonable, but I can tell you that as I was driving away from his office, I placed a call to my Estate Agent and put my house up for sale. There was absolutely no way that I ever wanted to be in a position where I had no alternative but to give my every creative thought away in exchange for a fixed salary.