Category: Work from home

The Skills You Already Have That Can Make You Money as a Virtual Assistant

Starting your VA business? That part’s actually the easiest.

Where most people tend to get stuck before they even open the doors is what do I actually offer?

And then comes the advice everyone throws at you:

“Pick a niche.”
“Find your ideal client.”
“Get ultra specific.”

While yes, eventually that matters, and it can help you in your marketing, but here’s the truth:

Most of us don’t actually know our niche on day one. I didn’t, and spoiler alert: to this day, I still don’t fit into one tiny box.

When I started, I remember stressing and trying to pick a niche or certain services I thought I should offer because that’s what everyone online said to do. And all it did was make me doubt myself and delay getting started.

What if, instead of trying to squeeze yourself into a niche before you really know what you enjoy…  You simply began with the skills you already use every single day?

What if your natural strengths, the things you do without thinking, at work or in your personal life, are the exact place you’re meant to start?

Because they are.

 And you don’t have to have it all figured out to actually begin.

Everyday Skills That Can Become VA Services

Are you the planner & organizer?

Are you the one who takes charge of the family calendars, plans vacations, or builds systems to keep everyone on track?

Services you can offer: 

  • Calendar & inbox management
  • Scheduling & travel planning
  • Personal assistant support
  • Project coordination
  • Event planning & creating digital invitations
  • Digital organization & file setup

Are you the creative one?

Love designing birthday invitations, party flyers, or Etsy listings?

Services you can offer:

  • Canva design services
  • Social media graphics
  • Basic branding kits
  • Digital product creation
  • Newsletter layout support

Are you the social one?

Always knowing what’s trending, sharing ideas online, or helping friends craft the perfect post?

Services you can offer:

  • Social media management
  • Community engagement
  • Content planning
  • Hashtag research & caption writing

Are you the seller or the side hustler?

If you’ve ever sold things on Etsy, eBay, Facebook Marketplace, or Poshmark, you already understand:

  • Product listing
  • Inventory tracking
  • Customer messages
  • Order coordination

Which means you can help support:

  • E-commerce shops
  • Boutique retailers
  • Influencers with digital shops
  • Real estate or service businesses with CRM & follow-ups

The customer service go-to

The one that always handles customer service calls, solves problems, and manages communication like a pro?

Services you can offer:

  • Inbox & DM communications
  • Client onboarding & support
  • Customer service for online brands
  • CRM updates and follow-up systems

Think your previous job doesn’t translate online? Think again.

If you worked in retail → client support, ecommerce support, or social media help.
If you worked in a medical office → scheduling, forms, and admin coordination.
If you worked in education → curriculum support, community moderation, or admin help.
If you supported realtors → transaction support, lead follow-up, appointment booking, and creating posts for listings.

Your experience is valuable; don’t underestimate it.

The #1 Rule: Offer What You Enjoy

You don’t have to offer tech services if tech stresses you out, or admin if you find it boring. You don’t have to build someone else’s dream service list, build yours.

Ask yourself:

✨ What tasks do people naturally come to me for?
✨ What do I enjoy doing the most?
✨ What feels easy for me but stressful for others?
✨ What type of work would I be excited to do every week?

Those answers are your starting point.

Final Thought

You already have valuable, useful, and profitable skills. The only difference between you and a paid Virtual Assistant is learning to package those skills and confidently offer them.

Start where you are.
Build from what you already know.
Grow toward what lights you up, not what drains you.

Your next client isn’t looking for someone with every skill under the sun; they’re looking for someone who can do what they need and enjoys doing it.

And odds are, that’s already you. 💫

If you need some more inspiration for services, download my free Virtual Assistant Service Ideas to Inspire Your VA Business PDF to help you get started.

If you want a real jumpstart in setting up your VA business, without the confusion, second-guessing, or starting-from-scratch overwhelm, I’ve got you.

My No-Fluff Step-by-Step Guide to Launching Your Virtual Assistant Business gives you the exact roadmap to:

  • Set up your business the right way
  • Build services you actually enjoy offering
  • Get visible and attract paying clients
  • Start earning money faster, without the guesswork

You don’t need to figure this all out alone.

Why Q4 Is the Best Time to Start Your Virtual Assistant Business

It’s October, que all of the pumpkin spice 🎃🍂(if that’s your thing). Living in 30 degrees all year round, I’ve been known to turn down the AC, put on a hoodie while enjoying my coffee with pumpkin spice creamer.. Just me?! 

To me, the Autumn months always feels like a fresh beginning. The weather changes, kids are back in school, and just like that, the end of the year is right around the corner.

But the thing is, Q4 isn’t just about cozy sweaters and holiday prep, it’s also the perfect time to start your Virtual Assistant business.

Most business owners don’t just wing it; they plan their year in quarters. And Q4 is one of the busiest because it’s all about finishing strong and preparing for the new year.

Why Q4 Is a Goldmine for Virtual Assistants

Business owners are coming out of summer, ready to hit the ground running. 

With back-to-school schedules, holiday prep, and Q4 revenue goals overhead, they’re juggling more than ever, and many realize they can’t do it ALL alone.

Another reason Q4 is the perfect time to start your VA business is that you can tie the season into your own marketing.

Think about this: you’re sharing in a networking group or your social media pages about the upcoming holiday season, and you say: “I help business owners by handling holiday planning tasks, client gifting, and year-end organization, so they can enjoy the holidays and spend time with their family” or “I help business owners hit their final Q4 goals, allowing them to confidently step into the new year prepared and stress-free.”

How quickly do you think people will pay attention?

This kind of seasonal positioning makes you stand out, you’re speaking directly to the pain points business owners are feeling right now or if they have been in business for any length of time, know they will soon be feeling.

How to Use Q4 in Your Marketing

Another reason Q4 is the perfect time to start your VA business is that you can tie the season into your own marketing.

Think about this, you’re sharing in a networking group or your social media pages about the upcoming holiday season, and you say: “I help business owners finish Q4 strong by handling holiday planning tasks, client gifting, and year-end organization, so they can actually enjoy the holidays and more time with their families.” or “I help business owners hit their final Q4 goals allowing them to confidently step into the new year prepared and stress-free.”

How quickly do you think people will pay attention?

This kind of seasonal positioning makes you stand out, you’re speaking directly to the pain points business owners are feeling right now or know they will soon be feeling, if they have been in business for any length of time. 

Why You Should Start Now, and Not Wait Until January

 Truthfully, anytime is a good time to start your Virtual Assistant business. But the thing is, if you’re waiting for January, you might be holding yourself back for no reason.

Think about it, January is when everyone sets resolutions and big goals. By starting now in Q4, you’re giving yourself a head start. You will already have systems in place, maybe even your first client or two, and you’ll be moving into the new year with momentum.

Instead of having “start my VA business” as a new year goal, you’ll already be ahead of the game.

Final Thoughts

Q4 is busy and can be downright chaotic, making this the exact reason why it’s the best time to start. Business owners are actively looking for support, families are gearing up for the holidays, and there’s no better season to step in and provide relief.

How to Start a Virtual Assistant Business Without Quitting Your Job

When I first moved to Mexico, I had no idea that a laptop and a bit of creativity would eventually lead me to start my own Virtual Assistant business.

Picture it, Sicily, 1922… Just kidding (iykyk, I grew up with the Golden Girls).. but back to my story.. 

Newly married, I packed up my life and moved to Mexico with my husband (who’s from here). Palm trees, sunshine, endless tacos, living the dream, right? Except, one tiny detail: I had no job, no plan, couldn’t even order those tacos in Spanish, and just found out I was pregnant.

Eight months in, my savings account was crying for help and reality was knocking on the door.

So, in true Terri fashion, I did what any resourceful (and slightly panicked) new mom-to-be would do: I spent the last of my savings on my very first laptop and landed a remote job taking pizza orders for a Canadian call center. Glamorous? Not exactly. But it paid the bills.

After my daughter was born, I was clicking away with one hand on the mouse while holding and breastfeeding my daughter with the other. It wasn’t easy, but I was so grateful to have that job, mainly because it was the first step toward building something bigger.

After a few months in, my daughter eventually got into a napping routine, and I found myself sitting around bored, which I do not do well with! I had always been a creative person, and with a laptop, I had tried vlogging during my pregnancy, but I realized I enjoyed the editing process far more than being on camera, so I shifted my interest into blogging. I taught myself how to build a WordPress site strictly through YouTube tutorials and a bit of googling. That opened up a whole new world for me and down some rabbit holes of SEO, structuring a blog, marketing, and sponsorships, you name it, and I loved it! But I also knew blogging would be a long game and I was trying to get myself out of having a schedule and the j-o-b structure, not to mention I was increasingly having issues with with either the internet, the power randomly shutting off, or just having barking dogs in the background all while I was supposed to be on calls simply trying to take a pizza order!! 

In addition to absorbing as much knowledge on Youtube, I had also joined Facebook groups for bloggers and entrepreneurs. That’s when I stumbled across the term Virtual Assisting. It really got me thinking, as years earlier, I had completed an Executive Assistant certificate at my local community college, but I had no idea I could use those skills remotely. To be honest, I kind of ignored it as I had only worked in an office for a couple years but mostly my working background was waitressing and bartending for the past 10 years prior to moving to Mexico, so I really didn’t think I was qualified to offer my services professionally, let alone to actual business owners! 

Eventually I kind of gave into the idea and joined some webinars and workshops on starting a VA business. One day, I saw a post from someone looking for help filing receipts, and I figured, that was easy enough and responded. That one small gig turned into something bigger almost overnight. When the world shut down due to COVID after 2 weeks of signing on with this clients, I was suddenly tasked with helping a brick-and-mortar school transition into a fully remote program. It was trial by fire, and I loved every minute of it! 

The best part? I was able to do this alongside working the call center as it did not have a set schedule and I was able to work on tasks with my little one right there and I would just do the call center shifts in the evenings when my husband got home. That gave me a safety net, so I could learn, experiment, and confidently turn down offers from people who wanted to pay me pennies and at times to work for free for the “experience.” Eventually, I built up enough clients, skills, and confidence (with the help of online training, webinars, and eventually investing in a coach) to create an exit plan and leave the call center behind.

And that’s what I want you to know: you don’t have to quit your job tomorrow to start your VA business. You can build it slowly, intentionally, and with a plan.

The Myth of “You have to go all in to prove you’re committed”

There’s this idea floating around online that to succeed, you need to  go “all in.” For some, that works. But for most of us, especially those with families or responsibilities, that’s not realistic.

Starting your Virtual assistant business on the side isn’t “playing small.” It’s strategic. It’s giving yourself the space to grow without putting yourself under unnecessary financial pressure.

Step 1: Use the skills you already have

You don’t need to reinvent yourself to become a VA.


Think about what you’re already good at:

  • Customer service. I used mine from the call center.
  • Scheduling and organizing. Even though I didn’t want to take on the extra responsibility, I started another project with the call center as a scheduler for supportive housing to gain more knowledge.
  • Writing emails or editing documents.
  • Even hobbies like blogging, social media, or light design work making digital designs in canva.

Almost every job you’ve had, has taught you skills that can translate into VA services.

Step 2: Start building with just a few hours a day

When I started, I only had nap times and when she was occupied either snacking in her high chair or in her bouncy chair watching Elmo’s world, maybe 2–3 hours max during the day. But those hours made all the difference.

Instead of hustling nonstop, I worked in short, productive blocks. That rhythm stuck with me, even now. Today, I still run my business in just 2- 3 hours a day, and it’s enough.

Your VA business doesn’t need to consume your life, especially when you are first starting out. You can start part-time, test services, and get your first client with just a couple hours of focused effort.

Step 3: Set up a safety net

This part is key. Having another income source, whether it’s a job or side gig, allows you to:

  • Learn without desperation.
  • Say no to clients asking you to take on tasks that are intended for multiple roles for lower pay.
  • Build slowly and intentionally.
  • Create a clear exit plan when you decide it’s time.

That safety net was what gave me the confidence to invest in myself, work with a coach, and start charging rates I felt good about.

Final Thoughts

Starting a Virtual Assistant business doesn’t have to mean quitting your job overnight. It can begin with small steps, using the skills you already have, working a couple of focused hours a day, and creating a safety net that supports your growth.

With Love,

Terri

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