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<blockquote data-quote="Spud" data-source="post: 5202696" data-attributes="member: 78"><p>Haulage been the one I have first hand experience of. Have a few minutes on <a href="http://www.companycheck.co.uk" target="_blank">www.companycheck.co.uk</a> - Some machinery dealers are doing very well indeed, some the opposite. Its not always the big and shiny stacking up the profits either! There are some shops in the retail world fit the category too - you know the drill - expensive rented premises in town, lots of internet competition, lots of staff to pay, restricted trading hours, smaller margins, few assets.</p><p></p><p>There are many farmers (many) who have a solid 52weeks work a year, and rarely drop below 60hrs a week. There are also lots of pure combinable arable farms (no stock, roots or veg) with very little work for half the year. Divide your income across the hours you actually spend working, its not as bad as some make out.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Spud, post: 5202696, member: 78"] Haulage been the one I have first hand experience of. Have a few minutes on [URL="http://www.companycheck.co.uk"]www.companycheck.co.uk[/URL] - Some machinery dealers are doing very well indeed, some the opposite. Its not always the big and shiny stacking up the profits either! There are some shops in the retail world fit the category too - you know the drill - expensive rented premises in town, lots of internet competition, lots of staff to pay, restricted trading hours, smaller margins, few assets. There are many farmers (many) who have a solid 52weeks work a year, and rarely drop below 60hrs a week. There are also lots of pure combinable arable farms (no stock, roots or veg) with very little work for half the year. Divide your income across the hours you actually spend working, its not as bad as some make out. [/QUOTE]
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