This past Friday I got my first check from the freelance work I am doing for my father-in-law. It was roughly $450, of which I have only $100 left to put on a credit card. First, my brother needed cash so I sent him $100. Then I decided to invest in my computer so I can work on this freelance work at home.
I wasn’t working from my home computer because, even though I’m my employer’s Web master, I still had dialup. Slow as Christmas too. So, tired of the slowness and tired of waiting for my wife to get off the phone so I could go online, I decided to get DSL. I ended up with BellSouth’s DSL Xtreme 6.0.
The problem then was that browsing the Internet was faster, but our computer still pokes along. I have a Dell Dimension 2350 that is about 4 years old and has a 60GB hard drive and only 256MB of RAM. This is where I decided to invest some of my first freelance check. I purchased a 250GB external hard drive to move my music files to and to use as a backup, and I purchased two 512MB sticks of RAM to max out my computer’s RAM.
I hooked up the hard drive last night and will put in the new RAM today.
I know what some of you are saying out there. “That’s not an investment, that’s a purchase!” I beg to differ!
See, to do the freelance work, I needed to go to my father-in-law’s business, 45 minutes from my home. So for each 6-8 hours of work there, I spent an hour and a half on the road. I don’t know exactly how much that cost me in terms of gas, but I can save some of that money now. Now I can work some hours in the evenings from home and get more hours in each week.
So, I invested not only in any future freelance work I may be able to do, but the new Web site will get up and running faster, which means more money made by the company sooner, which very well could result in a bonus for me.
If you look at it this way, and knowing my father-in-law, the $225 I spent on the RAM and external hard drive could result in a $500 bonus. (More or less, but this would be a reasonable figure from him). I could more than double my initial investment.
