EngineeringDr said:
I believe my knowledge is unique and can offer solution to sophisticated and complex unconventional problems.
EngineeringDr said:
That is the problem even large head hunters can not find suitable jobs!
If nothing else i would urge you to look at these conflicting statements and perhaps realise that the first one says
"Look at me I'M AMAZING"
The second says
"Yes you're AMAZING, but no one wants to hire you"
I fear that either starting your own business or joining up with someone else to market your skill set will simply eat your savings for little benefit.
Unless you can identify a firm which manages to make a living offering the same services/skills you profess to have, then I would think very long and hard about whether this is a real business idea or not.
If you do find such a firm then you might be able to essentially buy yourself a job by "investing" in a small firm or partnership to get access to their client base.
You could get lucky and find a rich vein of work, but luck and engineering never seem to go together very well.
I fully agree with my fellow posters here - do a trawl though some recent posts and you can see that small engineering consultancies have no intrinsic value when a key person leaves / retires / dies. Even a hand over period / no compete period is fraught with difficulties and rarely works out like everyone wants it to. Unless the company is probably 20+ strong, most simply die a natural death once the owner jacks it in.
To be frank this sounds like a much better plan, but is equally hard to get off the ground - "Another idea, would be to start an engineering training and/or teaching business and offering consultancies."
At the moment though not many people are paying for training when they are busy letting people go.
Let us know how you get on.
Remember - More details = better answers
Also: If you get a response it's polite to respond to it.