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Getting Started...
...what's available and what
you can do.
What Work Is Available
and
How To Get Started.
I firmly believe that most anyone who wants to be a full-time RVer can be and that he/she can find a suitable way to financially support him/herself and his/her family in the process.
There are far too many types of jobs available for working
RVers to list them all, but here's a small sampling...bus driver, actor, musician, tour guide, computer programmer, clown,
grain harvester, baker, mobile dental clinic dentist, manufacturer's rep, MLM sales, party planner, crafter, brain
tanner, mechanic, nurse, construction worker, pizza delivery, tobacco stripper, windshield repairman, bathroom cleaner,
steam train engineer, tree planter, bookkeeper, sign maker, dog show judge, teacher, masseuse, apple picker, carpenter,
bus driver, writer, tattoo artist, inventor, sales clerk, solar equipment installer, image consultant, product demonstrator,
property caretaker, day labor, mini-storage managers, video maker, landscaper, cook, gas line inspector, Christmas tree lot
manager, magician, woodworker, business consultant, security guard, seamstress, events organizer, speaker, heavy
equipment operator, fence installer, waitress, fair vendor....
Some practical suggestions for getting a better idea of what
work might be suitable for you....
Make a list of the things you are able to do; your skills and
abilities; things you have been trained for; tasks that you do in your present job; work that you do around the home and
yard; things that you do for fun or in your volunteer work.
Secondly, make a list of things that you enjoy doing or think
you would enjoy if you had the time.
Compare the lists to see what overlaps or how things on one
list can be combined with something on the other. How might you use some of those combinations to make money? What do
you like to do, that you know how to do or could learn to do, that people would pay you to do?
For example, my husband is a fixer. I have some sales
background. We enjoy bargain hunting and going to auctions and flea markets. Our first
few years out on the road, we bought used merchandise at auctions, much of it hand and power tools that needed to be
cleaned and repaired, and we sold them at flea markets.
Something else that will help is to determine what travel and
work style you would prefer, or would at least like to start with. Answering the following questions will help you do that.
How often do you want to move -- every few days, once a
month, seasonally? Where do you want to stay -- fancy RV resorts, family campgrounds, boondocking spots? What do you
want to travel in -- small conversion van, motorhome and cargo trailer, mid-duty truck and fifth-wheel? What is your
travel purpose - visit every state, learn about subcultures,
trace Route 66?
Do you want to work for someone else or be self-employed or
both? Do you want to work all year long, traveling along the way, or do you want to work long and hard for a time and
then have months to play without working at all? Do you want to do one thing or be involved with several different things at
once? Do you want to have a career or do a variety of jobs? Do you want a position that challenges your abilities or one
that may be less stressful? Do you want a desk job or to work
with your hands?
Why do you want to work? How much do you want or need to
earn? What other things besides money would be valuable to you -- parking site, store discounts, use of gulf course or
other facility, the satisfaction of helping others, social contact, chance to learn a new skill? What are the best
things about your current work and what are the worst? Do you want to do something similar or something very different?
It is very common for full-timer's to change their work and
travel styles after being out on the road for a spell. And, that flexibility to be able to make those changes is one of the best
things about the lifestyle. Because much of the work is temporary or seasonal by nature, or is a business that is
self-created, the transition to other travel and work styles can be done smoothly and as part of the RVing adventure.
You might consider some job in the tourist industry or a
tourist town, which includes a vast number of things -- working in a restaurant, cleaning motel rooms, designing
advertising brochures, leading walking tours, mowing grounds and doing landscape work, acting in plays, repairing
equipment, taking photographs, fishing, handing out information pamphlets, operating carnival rides, caring for
children, presenting seminars...and much more.
You might consider registering with temporary staffing
agencies, either those specializing in a particular employment field (day labor, medical professionals, technology specialists,
etc.) or general temp. placement firms. Once registered, it is oftentimes possible to have the registration transferred to
another office within that company so you do not need to do all the paperwork in each city.
If you haven't checked out the rest of our website, spend
some time reading the other information here. The FAQ will give you basic info. The various articles, profiles, interviews,
and letters by working RVers will give you ideas about what others are doing and how they handle various aspects of
working and living on the road. Also, be sure and subscribe to our free e-mail
newsletters.
Workers On Wheels E-zine is
now the Work For RVers and Campers Newsletter. Subscribe at
http://www.work-for-rvers-and-campers.com/about-us.html
Subscribe to the RV Life and Travel E-zine
at
http://www.rv-life-and-travel.com/about-us.html.
The back issues of the Workers On
Wheels E-zines are filled with information that is still relevant.
Read them in e-books.
**********
FREE E-Book -
Download Your Copy Today!
CLOTHING OPTIONAL:
FINDING A NEW CAREER IN YOUR UNDERPANTS
A short, little and fun e-book that one of the Dream Jobs
To Go authors developed to help people use and benefit
from online job-hunting tools and resources. And, best
of all, they're giving it away FREE! For details, go to:
http://dreamjobstogo.com/titles/djtg9001.html?10716
An alternative to volunteer work camping. Working RVers earn money while RVing.
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