I've arrived to this thread a bit late I'm afraid, having been away for the weekend.
First of all Steve, I feel for you. Very few people manage to make a go of things first time in business; it is a totally different environment to being in paid employment.
However, having read your comments in this thread and in your original thread where you described setting up on your own, I suspect all is not lost just yet.
I just did a search for cabinetmakers in your area and the best I came up with was this;
http://www.yell.com/ucs/UcsSearchAction ... 823038&M=0
I presume that this is you.
The thing is, you are not easy to find and you don't have a website. I would imagine that the number of leads you get coming via the internet is tiny. Yet for a very small outlay you could have a website working for you 24/7 selling your services across your local area.
As you may or may not know, I share a workshop with another cabinetmaker. 18 months ago he was in just the same position as you; on the verge of packing it all in due to not making a decent living and, in his case, the trauma of going through a difficult divorce.
I meanwhile, had a big workshop on the other side of town employing a number of staff and losing money by the day. I hankered after a simpler life just making furniture without any of the attendent hassle of running a significantly sized business.
We got our heads together and I closed my company, moving in with John (Phil to his family & friends) and operating as a sole trader.
Neither of us has looked back. We are both now making good profits and have order books full for 6 months or more. Our overheads are shared and so are tiny in comparison to those inevitably taken on by a guy working by himself.
It sounds to me that you have a workshop all set up with decent gear. To give up now and flog it all off piecemeal would be tragic. Now is the worst time in 20 years to be selling woodworking equipment - you would be lucky to get more than a couple of grand for the lot in the current climate!
You obviously enjoy woodwokring as a career. You have done a lot of the most difficult things already; going full time pro, finding premises, setting up the workshop etc. All you need to do now is find a way making it pay.
I would urge you to look at the idea of getting someone else in to share the costs of the workshop. Two people working don't need much more space than one. Our shop is only 800 sq ft and accomodates two of us easily - and that includes a full sized spray booth.
I would also urge you to look at your marketing. A website alone should bring in enough work for a self-emplyed cabinetmaker
so long as t is optimised properly and appears on the first page of a Google Maps search.
The other thing ito consider is the type of work you are looking for. If you insist on only doing commissions in solid wood with hand-cut joints and a high level of 'design input' the chances are that you will go bankrupt - just like Thomas Chippendale did!
Twice.
If however, you are happy to give people what they actually want; good quality fitted furniture at a price that meets their budget - then you will find that there is plenty of work out there.
The recession is being blamed for all manner of businesses going to the wall. In the main however, these are businesses that were pretty crap anyway.
There are huge numbers of people completely untouched by the global economic meltdown. My current clients include a police inspector, a GP, a school headmaster, and the chief executive of a major clearing bank. I don't see these types of people cutting out any further expenditure on nice things for their homes. What they might do though, is choose a relatively inexpensive local craftsman over a national company charging twice the price!
I am convinced that a recession is the perfect time to be setting up a low-cost bespoke furniture business. You are in an ideal position to be undercutting your fat and bloated competitors, so long as your marketing is in place and people actually know you exist.
I am not so convinced that a recession is the best time to be attempting to re-enter the world of paid employment. Particulary in IT!
Cheers
Brad