Test-Drive Your Dream Business

April 27, 2006 by Dane | 1 Comment
In Entrepreneurial Lifestyle, Ideas

Vocation Vacation

Business Week:

A two-year-old Portland (Ore.)-based company called Vocation Vacations, a business that gives people the opportunity to “test drive” their dream jobs. Creating temporary but intense mentor/apprenticeship experiences, Vocation Vacations enlists professionals from a variety of fields — everything from winemakers and makeup artists to architects and sword makers — and pairs them with people who fantasize about leaving their day jobs and want spend a few days in a profession that they had previously thought beyond their reach.

Last April, Ryan [a banker] signed up to do a two-and-a-half-day vocation working with a doggie day-care provider in Massachusetts. The following month, he spent three days working with a dog trainer in Oregon. Fairly quickly, Ryan figured out that he preferred training to day care and was confident that he could start his own business in the field.

Moreover, Ryan says the experience helped him to realize that he didn’t have to abandon the skills he developed as a banker. Rather, he says: “It became obvious to me that there were a lot of kennels and trainers that were very good with animals, but business was not their specialty.”

In June, Ryan resigned from HSBC (HTB) and enrolled in a dog-training school in Missouri for five months to get certified. In January, he launched Beyond Dog Training in Rye, N. H. “It really sounds weird,” he says. “But that two- to three-day experience has really been a lynchpin.”

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  • Musings of an Eco-Entrepreneur » An amazing idea- Vocation Vacations on April 27th, 2006 at 10:05 am

    [...] From Business Week via Business Opportunities: A two-year-old Portland (Ore.)-based company called Vocation Vacations, a business that gives people the opportunity to “test drive� their dream jobs. Creating temporary but intense mentor/apprenticeship experiences, Vocation Vacations enlists professionals from a variety of fields — everything from winemakers and makeup artists to architects and sword makers — and pairs them with people who fantasize about leaving their day jobs and want spend a few days in a profession that they had previously thought beyond their reach. [...]

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