I thought this was a great question and have found the answers very interesting. I thought I would put my two cents in.
I spent 20 years in the U.S. Army. I was an NCO, not an officer, I mad my rank pretty quick and was pretty successful in that career field. I made it to the rank of First Sergeant. I believe it is on the lines of Company Sergeant Major in the UK Army. While in the Army I started attending University and recieved a Bachelor of Science in Business Administration with an emphasis on Management from the University of Hawaii (4.0 GPA pretty proud of that, I believe it is equal to First Class Honours). I retired from the army in 2005 and spent 14 months working at John Lewis as a manager in thier supply chain and then got the offer I could not refuse from ASDA (around a 50% pay rise) to work for them. When I retired I though retail would be my preferred avenue into business but I did not like it as much as I thought. I really enjoyed the selling parts but the back room stuff was not as challenging. Pretty monotonus really. So I decided to start up my own business and trying to decide which way to go forward I considered what were my strengths and where my experience could help. I decided on cleaning becaus:
1. 20 Years in the army, I know what clean looks like and I know how to get to the end result as quickly as possible with a meticulous outcome.
2. I had a sales background because of my time in the Army. I spent 3 1/2 years on recruiting duty. If you think selling contract cleaning is hard try selling someone their life for the next 4 years, and they do not get to try it out first. The army paid for training from some of the US's best. Zig Zigglar, Lee Dubois, I do not know if you have heard of them but they are some of the foremost sales trainers in the US.
3. I wanted to use my degree, I love business, I love the challenges, the numbers, everything about it and I dont mind cleaning, been doing that for 20 years lol.
4. I have a high tollerance for work. My wife would say a work-a-holic. I will work as much or as little as needed, up to and including 15 hour days 7 days a week (as a matter of fact I have not took a day off in the last 3 weeks) Not that it is always necessary but to build cash flow, increase margins, gain the on site experience I do a lot of my own cleaning plus all the records, the website is completely ran by me. All payroll, quotes, sales are fit around my cleaning at present. I have 3 Cleaners that work for me but I still clean on sites 31 hours a week.
I have been at it for 18 months now and would be a bit further ahead but the one business decision that really messed me up was I started out with a franchise and I got mixed up with a couple of cowboys. Not all franchises are bad but this one was pretty bad. They had all the right answers when I started but it went down hill quick. Then last January they liquidated and took 2 1/2 months of my invoices with them. That almost put me under, but again I love challenges and am now out of that mess and back on my feet swinging but with my own company now. I like it better on my own even though it took a lot of money to get me here lol.
Quite a few answers to your question Nat, so what about you, what brought you here?