THUMBTACK RELEASES NEW RESEARCH ON BABY BOOMER ENTREPRENEURSHIP
Baby boomers are starting small businesses as second and third careers, view experience as asset in landing customers
SAN FRANCISCO, March 28, 2018 – Today Thumbtack, the app and website that finds you local professionals for any project, releases its latest research on baby boomer entrepreneurs. Thumbtack surveyed more than 14,000 small business owners 55 and older across the United States, to evaluate the business friendliness of their local governments, what motivated them to start their own small business and how their experience impacts their business success.
“Nineteen percent of Thumbtack pros are 55-years-old or older, and this is the fastest growing group of entrepreneurs on the platform,” said Thumbtack economist Lucas Puente, PhD. “While these baby boomers love the freedom and flexibility their Thumbtack businesses offer, they also feel economically empowered with expectations of higher earnings serving as one of the primary motivators for launching their own business.”
Highlights from the research:
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Career Transition – Increasingly, workers in their fifties and sixties are becoming small business owners to find meaningful second and third careers later in life. Nearly two-thirds (66 percent) of baby boomers using Thumbtack reported they were on their second or third career compared to only 54 percent of Thumbtack users under 55.
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Experience is an Asset – Baby boomers overwhelmingly believe their years of experience is a major asset in landing clients, with 86 percent reporting they choose to highlight their years of experience in their pitch to customers.
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Supplement Interests and Income – A majority of baby boomers chose to work primarily because they enjoy providing services (36 percent) and to supplement income for extra expenses (16 percent) compared to 48 percent who work primarily to pay basic necessities. This is significantly higher than pros under 55 where only 27 percent report working primarily for enjoyment. In addition, nearly two-in-five pros in this age bracket tell us that the ability to increase (not just maintain) their take home earnings was a primary factor in taking the plunge into self-employment.
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Pride in Business Ownership – Ninety-two percent of baby boomers reported they were proud to be small business owners.
“I do this because I love it,” said Deb Goldstein, a Thumbtack pro life coach from Boston who left corporate America and went back to college at 58. “When people hit mid-life, they really need more mission and purpose, care and motivation in their lives. That’s when I started my business. It is just so enormously rewarding.”
In terms of the best cities for baby boomer entrepreneurs to start, operate and grow a small business, this year Boston ranked first for the 55 and older cohort, while Tampa came in at #7, and West Palm Beach at #8. 47 percent of the baby boomers running a small business in Tampa had a positive view on their local government’s support for small businesses, with only 14.7 percent having a negative sentiment. In West Palm Beach, 48.4 percent of baby boomer entrepreneurs had a positive view on their local government’s support for small businesses. Additional top cities include: Phoenix (2), Riverside, Calif. (3), Washington, D.C. (4), Denver (5), and Houston (6). For more details, please visit our interactive survey results page.
Top Cities for Baby Boomer Entrepreneurs
Top Occupations for Baby Boomer Entrepreneurs (by volume)
Survey Methodology
Across four months in 2017 and 2018, Thumbtack Economist, Lucas Puente, PhD, surveyed 14,902 skilled professionals from across the U.S., operating across hundreds of categories, including as electricians, music teachers, wedding planners, wellness professionals and more. The survey asked these entrepreneurs about the policies of their states and cities toward small business, as well as what it’s like to start and run a small business in their community. For the survey methodology, please visit: https://www.thumbtack.com/
About Thumbtack
Thumbtack, headquartered in San Francisco, was created to solve a seemingly simple problem: local professionals need customers so they can run and grow their business. Customers need local pros too, but have trouble finding the right ones. So in 2008, the Thumbtack founders developed a marketplace bringing the two together. Since then, the platform helped hundreds of thousands of skilled professionals build successful businesses and 25 million customers with everything from plumbing, to catering, to personal training to math tutoring. Learn more at www.thumbtack.com.
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