Let’s start with the elephant in the room. I, Raul Tiru (founder of GlobalOwls), landed a fulltime job but we’re still ever so confident that GlobalOwls will succeed.

Why?

Because we’re playing the infinite game. We have low monthly costs, no investors, no pressure from the marketplace, no risks at all. We can go as fast or as slow as we want. We’re not afraid of competitors “stealing” the idea and gaining the first-mover advantage. If you’re a social entrepreneur and want to help thousands of nonprofits to achieve their goals, be our guest, we applaud you.

Why take on a fulltime job?

Well, I need to pay the bills. We could have built-in a revenue stream at GlobalOwls, but we didn’t feel comfortable asking for money yet. We don’t feel our services are that great yet and we certainly don’t want to rush anything. That’s the great part about being self-funded, no pressure.

I really don’t understand why the majority of people nowadays start raising money even before having a viable business case. How often do you hear, I have an idea, give me one million dollars. They either don’t understand that going bankrupt means not finishing their project, or they might not really care. They’re most probably playing the finite game.

Having financial stability to do things right

I now have a great monthly income and we can invest in proper tools, marketing, development and great freelancers to help where needed. We still have great volunteers who each contribute to making GlobalOwls a great success.

Also, I got a job at a great family owned international, AutoBinck. They exist for over 110 years and have a revenue of over 1.2 billion euro a year. The CEO is 80 years old and is still in office. We clicked very well because the company and I share the same values and work approach. They started a new startup, Bynco (Buy Your Next Car Online), and I’m fortunate enough to be able to help them grow the platform. First in the Netherlands and later, internationally.

Managing and growing your Social Enterprise while having a fulltime job

As you can see in the image below, there is plenty of time left to manage and grow your social enterprise. Even with a fulltime job. Especially if you use parts of your income to automate parts of your organization and hire staff. Of course, you would need to design sustainable growth.