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Planning for the future: How Tammy May created MyBudget

Name: Tammy May Company: MyBudget Location: Adelaide, South Australia When young Rich Lister Tammy May was 22, she took a leap of faith. She left her comfortable job at an Adelaide law firm and founded her own business. She’d been working in the firm’s debt collection department when she realised the impact debt was having […]
Yolanda Redrup
Planning for the future: How Tammy May created MyBudget

Name: Tammy May

Company: MyBudget

Location: Adelaide, South Australia

When young Rich Lister Tammy May was 22, she took a leap of faith. She left her comfortable job at an Adelaide law firm and founded her own business.

She’d been working in the firm’s debt collection department when she realised the impact debt was having on people’s lives. Recognising that people, regardless of the amount they earned, couldn’t afford to pay back their debts motivated May to found a budgeting service, to help people work toward their financial goals.

A few months later, at the end of 1999, MyBudget was born. Little did May know that she would go on to became an EY Young Entrepreneur of the Year, South Australian Business Woman of the Year and the owner of a Fast 100 company.

May sees starting the business in her early 20s as an advantage. “Sometimes you’re braver when you’re young and I figured if it didn’t work out I’d have plenty of time in the future to recover. I wanted to take the risk because it was making such a big difference in people’s lives.”

Since starting, the business has grown at 50% year-on-year, but carving out a whole new market had its challenges. May had to educate the market about MyBudget’s service and why it was important. It gained customers through referrals from clients and other financial businesses and now its main clientele is people and couples in their early 20s to mid-50s.

In the year to June 30 the business turned over around $24 million and it’s now on track to reach $34 million in 2013-14. May spoke to SmartCompany about how she’s managed My Budget’s fast growth and how having a family improved her business.

Mornings

Mornings largely revolve around May’s kids, but at the latest she’s up by 7am.

“I get up, get organised for work and then get the kids organised for school. We have breakfast and then I drop the kids to school on the way to work,” she says.

“I’m in the office just before 9am and then we have a daily executive meeting that goes for an hour once a week, but 15 minutes daily.”

May’s day is generally filled with marketing, sales, finance and HR meetings.

“My day is largely spent meeting with department heads and also the executive team in general. I also have a daily meeting with all of our interstate managers.”

Daily life

When May started MyBudget she used to be in more of a hands-on role, but now she takes on a senior management executive position.

“Now it’s more about strategic thinking and planning. I used to do a lot more of the work, as well as the strategic planning, but as it has grown I do less and less of the day-to-day type work,” she says.

“It was very much a natural progression to mentor staff who have worked with me into a position where they could take on more and more responsibility. It wasn’t daunting, it felt very natural to delegate.”

Unlike some business owners, May acknowledges that sometimes jobs can be done better by others.

“I know we always think it’s done best by ourselves, but I feel fortunate in having people around me who are great at their jobs.”

My Budget now employs around 250 people and to ensure all management are performing at their best May provides them with regular training.

“We provide senior management with both in-house and external training. There is a culture of learning at MyBudget.

“We hold quarterly professional development days and during those days it’s all about team building, sharing stories about clients and ourselves and sharing stories about our values and our value system. This brings the whole team together.”

May believes the sharing of stories and communicating the MyBudget values helps to build a positive company culture.

“It’s like a big family… a lot of this is fostered through our development days and then we have a social club which runs activities. We have casual days, sausage days, and the majority of the boys are doing Movember,” she says.

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