Baking Bread Through the Recession in Ohio
Overqualified Doesn't Belong to Only Those with College Degrees
I've been underemployed in central Ohio since May 2007. I quit my job as an operations manager for Reliant Inventory Services after more than four years. Of course, I didn't see how tight the job market would become at the time. I only wanted my life back -- a life that didn't involve non-essential telephone calls at midnight, a life that didn't include cancellation of approved vacations. Even with the company-paid travel all over the country, my annual salary and bonuses of $35,000 didn't come close to justify the mannequin strings I was dangling from.
Since that time, I haven't made $10,000 a year.
I didn't know I'd be baking bread and selling it at farmers markets when I began my job search six months before I quit. I was unhappy, but I didn't have a large enough safety net to just quit a job. At that time, I sent resumes to dozens of companies, completely willing to step down and even take a cut in pay. I didn't want to be in charge any longer. I applied for clerical positions. I'd spent several years in the real estate field and applied to law offices.
During my first job search, I landed an interview with Alliance Data Services. My initial telephone interview with the credit card collection company led to a face-to-face interview. Within the first few minutes, I knew the direction things were headed. My lack of experience in collections was of no consequence. The starting hourly pay, before bonuses, was something I could definitely live with. But Alliance Data Services was not willing to hire me because I was overqualified.
I've heard tales of friends losing jobs because of mergers, acquisitions and closures. And of friends in their late 30s to early 40s having trouble getting hired at a fast-food restaurant because they were overqualified.
I was then over 40 with no college degree and in that overqualified demographic. The state of Ohio dubbed me "likely to exhaust benefits before finding suitable employment." So I trudged along, reporting my earnings when I was making money. The Ohio Department of Job and Family Services recently told me the government considered extending unemployment benefits.
I can't do it. I would probably qualify, but that safety net has got to go.
In the late winter of 2007, I discovered I could bake bread. I'd always enjoyed being in the kitchen and dreamed of making a living doing something I loved. I researched and learned about Ohio's cottage food regulations.
Now, during my fourth farmers market season, I bake roughly 250 to 300 loaves of artisan-style bread a week and sell it for an average of $3.50 a loaf. Tastes fluctuate from market to market. Sometimes, my Asiago, Sweet Onion & Garlic Bread will sell out within 30 minutes. At another market, senior citizens pounce on anything sweet.
I love baking, but it doesn't sustain me through winter. If I wasn't living with my boyfriend and business partner, I couldn't pay bills of less than $1,000 a month. We live frugally, with necessities outweighing luxuries, such as haircuts. I'm one of those millions with no insurance, so I refuse to get sick.
I have worked a couple of part-time jobs in the winter months, including bartending and as a cake decorator at the local Kroger bakery. I spent six months there as the very mediocre cake decorator and grew to hate the disappointment I saw in the customers' faces.
I no longer look for a job. The competition is fierce and age and experience seem to be more of a liability than an asset. If things get really tough, I know I can walk into the nearest all-night waffle diner and work three or four nights a week.
During the winter, I always know summer -- and baking bread -- will arrive soon.
Published by Debbie Henthorn - Featured Contributor in Business & Finance
Debbie has been blessed with an incurable wanderlust. Former jobs included extensive travel throughout the United States, making it possible for this self-proclaimed "food/beer/wine geek" to taste the countr... View profile
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4 Comments
Post a CommentCan you sell your bread to your during the winter out of your home? Print up business cards, give a discount on their first order or referral. Everyone loves bread and if your farmers market customers knew they could get the same bread during the winter you could probably work year around. Good luck!
Very intriguing article! :)
Great article! Unfortunately, a lot of people are in the same position. I, too, quit my job as a manager of a Central Station for the same reasons...I wanted my life back. Calls in the middle of night, not being able to get back to sleep, and being on-call for emergencies 24/7 is no way to live your life. I now earn more money as a freelance writer and love every second of it. Remember, it is not about how much you make but how much you enjoy doing it.
Great job on this.