I picked up a copy of THE MARTHA RULES by Martha Stewart and found it to be a surprisingly "down to earth" read on profitting from your passion. I found it to be very inspirational. Her first catering job was a disaster but she came out of it smiling and excited for her future.
There are also a couple of books about turning your passion into a business by Victoria Magazine. THE BUSINESS OF BLISS and TURNING YOUR PASSION INTO PROFITS are good success stories.
Also, if you are looking at the craft industry, pick up some Barbara Brabec books (www.barbarabrabec.com). She`s one of my "mentors" and has great advice for turning your craft hobby into a career.
I guess my advice would be to decide which one has the biggest chance of success or fills the biggest need.
Good luck!
~Kim
I am starting up a concierge biz focused on seniors. I think this is
more important than my other passion which I am thinking about at this
time. I love making jewelry so I do that at night if I`m not too tired
from doing everything that has to be done in the daytime. But I
figure after I get up and running I should have more time for the
jewelry business. I just file away the ideas I get on that until I have
the time to really do something about it. I used to make my own wedding
accessories, bridal favors, gifts, baskets (baby and bridal &
wedding). Everyone loved what I made. I sold a lot to people at
work and family. But I also was working 40 to 60 hours a week at my job
so I had to give it up or just die from the stress! In your case
what I would do is put in down in writing, I always do. When you have
an hour or so sit by yourself and make columns and headings such
as: my passion is: initial start up costs, target date for profit
to be realized, difficulty to start it up, room at your home to set
aside for this, market for your product (I would think event planning
would certainly be more lucrative in an upscale market than making
gifts), other benefits to event planning would be meeting people
vs making gifts (you would be isolated at home sewing yourself) unless
you outsourced them, outsourcing has its own list too like: where to
outsource, do you travel to find a mfr or do it online. I think
you should take the time to talk to family and friends and this forum,
get some feedback and then put the pros and cons on paper and then wait
a while before making a decision.
jo