How to Start a Simple Consulting Side Business
Why a Consulting Side Business Is a Low-Risk Way to Start
A consulting side business turns experience you already have into income without the overhead of a storefront, inventory, or full-time payroll. If you've spent a few years doing marketing, bookkeeping, operations, hiring, IT support, or project management, there's a small business somewhere that would happily pay you by the hour to solve a problem they don't have the time or in-house skill to fix themselves. This guide covers picking a narrow niche, setting up the basics, landing your first clients, and pricing your time so the whole thing is actually worth the hours it costs you.
Pick One Narrow Thing, Not a Vague Job Title
"Marketing consultant" is a job title. "I help local dental practices fix their Google Business listing and get more 5-star reviews" is a business. The narrower your consulting side business is, the easier it is to describe in one sentence, price consistently, and find through word of mouth. Start by listing three problems you've personally solved at work more than once — those repeatable wins are what clients will actually pay for, because you can point to a track record instead of a generic skill set.
Set Up the Boring Basics Before You Take Any Money
None of this is exciting, but skipping it is how side businesses turn into headaches. Before you send your first invoice, get these four things in place:
- A simple contract or statement of work — even a one-page document covering scope, price, and payment terms beats a handshake deal
- A separate bank account for business income, so tax season isn't a forensic accounting project
- A basic invoicing method — a free invoicing tool or a clean spreadsheet is enough when you're starting out
- A one-page rate sheet so you're not improvising a price live on a call
If your consulting side business grows large enough to need a formal business license or LLC, the Small Business Administration's step-by-step guide covers registration, licensing, and the paperwork that varies by state. And if you're not sure how the tax side works once money starts coming in, understanding freelance taxes for beginners is worth reading before your first invoice goes out, not after.
Find Your First Three Clients Without a Website
You don't need a polished website or a logo to land your first consulting client — you need three warm conversations. Start with former coworkers and managers who've already seen your work; a short message like "I'm doing a bit of consulting on the side, mostly around [your niche] — know anyone who could use help?" opens more doors than cold outreach ever will. From there, industry-specific Facebook or Slack groups, local small-business associations, and freelance platforms all work as a second layer once referrals dry up. Our guide to the best freelance platforms for beginners is a good next stop if you want a wider net than your personal network.
Price Your Time Like a Business, Not a Favor
New consultants almost always underprice, partly out of nerves and partly because they're pricing based on what feels fair for "just a few hours" rather than what the work is actually worth to the client. The fix is picking a pricing model on purpose instead of defaulting to an hourly rate you never revisit.
| Model | Best for | Watch out for |
|---|---|---|
| Hourly | One-off audits, ad hoc advice | Clients who want a fixed budget upfront |
| Project / flat fee | Clearly scoped deliverables | Scope creep eating your margin |
| Monthly retainer | Ongoing, recurring work | Under-scoping what "ongoing" includes |
Whichever model you pick, write the scope down. Our deeper breakdown on how to price your freelance services fairly walks through calculating a rate that covers your time, taxes, and the gaps between projects — not just the hours you bill.
The Real Payoff
Here's the math that makes a consulting side business worth the evenings and weekends: two clients at $75/hour for five hours a month is $750/month, or $9,000/year, from roughly ten hours a month of work you already know how to do. That's a meaningfully different number than a generic side gig paying near minimum wage, because you're selling expertise, not just time. It compounds, too — every finished project becomes a case study and a referral source, so client number four is almost always easier to land than client number one.
This is general small-business guidance, not legal or tax advice — check your employer's moonlighting policy and your local business licensing rules before you start invoicing, and browse the make-money category for more ways to build income on the side.