It is so cool that we can discuss this here. I have a full-time business, like Matt, I'm lucky enough that it doesn't take all my time. (going back to your college lecturer days I mean) I have 30 hours per week for music, my other business of 19 years takes 30 hours also but In the early days I worked around 14-16 hours per day. Now I do about a 6 hour day and can take time off pretty much when I please. I'm not saying this to brag, I'm just saying that I am extremely fortunate that after 19 years of grit and slog, my day job, isn't that all consuming anymore. So I can spend 30 hours a week working on what I love. I am truly lucky in that respect.
I agree it will be closer to 5 years, realistically, from what everyone says, before my music income, passes my other business income. Don't get me wrong, I'm not a wealthy man, but I get by on less hours these days because I have staff. Work-life balance is vital as I'm now 52. I realise how valuable the time we have is. I'm not shy to learn, nor take advice. Most of all I understand this is a business, with all the frustrations, let downs, highs and lows, that frankly make life interesting. (I'm not so upbeat when my system crashes,) but I am used to hard work. So perhaps, when I said full-time, I should have said working 30 hours per week and making a reasonable time/reward rate. I did think two years from a track forwarded is reasonable but now see that it often won't pay ever, so we need to keep submitting, but also as someone else said, a track placed in the US can take 2 years to pay-out in the UK (I'm near London) So 5 years could even be optimistic - ha, what a crazy business to get into
