Making Lemonade From Your Workplace Injury

Collaborative post – may contain affiliate links

Sometimes, even a positive person may struggle to look on the bright side. Say that you receive an injury at work. You have no choice but to take time off, and you’re in a whole load of pain. What’s more, a negligent employer is behind it. On the surface, it’s a terrible situation with no silver lining. But, does it have to be that way?

Undeniably, injuries like these can feel like a terrible blow. We trust  our employers to look out for our best interests and when they don’t…well, it sucks. But, to say that there’s no silver lining may be to simplify the issue. In reality, there are ways to look on the bright side. Just look at Pollyanna. She took her horrendous injury and used it for good. And, despite the clear negatives, your workplace injury could do the same. Don’t believe us? Keep reading to find out how.

You could use compensation to advance your career

The first thing you should do after receiving injury due to workplace negligence is to seek representation from Hughey Law Firm LLC or others like them. The chances are that you have a pretty strong legal case for a decent amount of compensation. This can then go on to be your first silver lining if you use it to advance your career. At this stage, you’ll have the money and the time spare to do things you would have been unable to do before. That could include taking online courses or even signing up for training if you’re able. That injury will still be a terrible memory, but at least this would give you a distinct benefit when you look back. What’s more, your injury will, in a roundabout way, shape your future career as a result. How’s that for making lemonade?

You could highlight issues to help others

Far from just helping yourself, you could push further and use your injury to help others. By taking legal action against your employer, you ensure that they’ll have to stick to the law in the future. That means they’ll have to improve working conditions or provide better training for any employees which follow after you. Even if you don’t go down a legal route, speaking out about what’s happened could see changes afoot. If that saves others from experiencing what you’ve been through, it’s a legacy well worth leaving.

You could take the chance for a change

You could always use this experience to embark on a complete career change. Often, we stay in fields we don’t love because we’re worried about managing money between jobs. But, with compensation and this drive behind you, this is the ideal time to take the leap. Your compensation money could see you through financially. Plus, this incentive not to return can stop you from putting this off. Ultimately, then, your injury alone could see you pursuing the career path you’ve always wanted to go down. You can bet that lemonade will taste pretty sweet.

Are You Really Rich?

time

Time, not money, has become the most valuable currency. As professionals we spend a third of our waking hours at work. There’s nothing wrong with being career driven, but if you don’t value personal time at an early age, once you starting thinking about dating, marriage or starting a family it may be too late.

Think about it. You don’t look back on your life and say, “I wish I had more money.” You wish you had more time to spend it with your loved ones. That’s why time management is so important. You work hard, so you can play hard. Freedom and flexibility of schedule is what matters. Aim to be “rich in time” and through this 8-week online course I’ll help you do that!

The Pie Strategy

When I look at a pie, I imagine cutting it into pieces and devouring it slice by slice…

A whole pie is actually a great illustration for looking at your business. Let me explain.

cherry pie, apple pie, dessert, pie ala mode, piece of the pie

Ever since I started my coaching business, I thought coaching was what I was offering. It was, and still is, but it’s just a piece of the pie – not the entire pie itself.

If I rely on coaching as my only source of income, I’m dead. Even the busiest coaches don’t dream of coaching people all day. They may make a lot of money, but it’s tiring and dependent on your time as the coach being involved.

The “pie strategy” has changed the way I think of my business

Instead of putting “all my eggs in one basket,” I’ve decided that coaching is one of many things I offer.

I also do training, recruiting, events and I’m working on online marketing and online courses.

By following different lifestyle entrepreneurs, the key insight that hit me was: time ≠ money.

That means you shouldn’t be dependent on making money solely when you’re involved with it.

I offer a service (coaching), but people don’t really want to work with me. What they really want is the knowledge I can impart so they can apply it to their own lives/business.

That being said, online courses make a lot of sense. People can purchase them when they want. It’s cheaper than coaching. I can create them on my own time and I don’t have to be a part of it once it’s live. An in-person event may be overall more engaging, but with the convenience of watching it in your own home, it’s a value that’s hard to beat.

So think about ways to “take yourself out of your business.” Almost like putting it on auto-pilot.

Each new stream of income is like another piece to the pie. Mmm…that tastes good.