he has a job that he knows, that's been stable, that has benefits, and which he can do without it bleeding outside of work hours - ALL FROM HOME ...
it's clearly virtual - via computer etc ...
i think he said he would be a brewery ASSISTANT ...
i would have a hard time entrusting a brewery with my career if they didn't believe in providing insurance ... but especially since it's a physical job ...
65k is cool, but he could have the reliability of his remote job for whatever bigcorp it is (i didn't notice if and when he ever said), and make the better part of that and have consistency, and make up the difference of the two salaries by starting his own brewing business ...
he could run a blog, a podcast, a magazine, and probably make AND OWN the difference ...
i told you the same thing ...
you can't entrust a brewery to promote you, it's counter what they want ... they don't want to train you up, and then have you go off, so most aren't going to be participant to that ...
if you can't see how to get where you want to get to eventually, it's errant to believe that they will be helpful towards that ...
i would absolutely make sure there's no reason why i couldn't Do My Thing while working, because some places get weird about shit like that ...
weird non-compete type shit ...
wheebz said:
I was just a brewer at Wyndridge and I made 65k a year, so its not that bad
however I do know brewers that make like 12 dollars an hour so
contract brewing and building a brand ahead of time seems prudent ...
i always figured if i ever wanted to take a shot, later, that i would get pricing for contract batches from people starting up, who might like to get some extra cycles on their equipment or rented space they aren't utilizing ...
i mean ... i dunno ...
i could imagine having a business that only brews kegs for weddings, made available to wedding planners, and where i bought some volume of wort, broke it down and made a bunch of beers off the base via yeast/hops/adjuncts, and stored it in a walk-in in the backyard ...
you could totally start to develop a brand while contract brewing, and then you'd be confronting the real deal ... selling your beer.