| Digg it UP |
Hubs | Hubbers | Topics | Request |
| #1 in Business | Subscribe Email Print |
|
You are here: Home > Business > Small Business > The Three Keys To Starting Your Own Successful Business |
|
Digg it UP - The Three Keys To Starting Your Own Successful Business
Business Software Free of Charge - Legally re's not a whole lot you can do about a major economic downturn or a natural disaster. If you are selling high-end vacuum cleaners and people don't have the money for luxury goods, your business is going to be hit hard. If you are running an Internet business out of your basement and it floods it can kill you off pretty quickly. Having adequate insurance is a necessity. Planning ahead for such instances will give you a leg up on not seeing your hard work go down the drain.One of the largest overheads that small and home based business encounter is the often high cost of computer software. The majority of business ventures start with modest or very little capital, many are home based initially and every spare dollar is vital to success.Whether you already have your own small business or are just seriously considering it, appropriate business and protection software for your computer is vital. Chances are you will need at least a word processing program, a spreadsheet program, an accounting package, perhaps a database and presentation program. If you are looking at setting up a website you will also need a program to edit HTML and web pages, word processors do not do a good job. Don’t forget the most important of all computer security - even if you only use your computer to receive email and for research on the internet – anti-virus, anti-spyware, anti-malware and firewall programs are essential.All of this software is readily available commercially, however it will cost you many hundreds, possibly several thousand dollars. If you are like me, working full time just to make ends meet, you may not be able to justify or afford the expenditure, when every spare dollar goes into promoting your fledgling business. After all this business is meant to get you out of the red not put you deeper in it! Well, there is a solution – open sourced software and freeware software both completely legal. Many software companies have a free but limited home or one user version of their product. When you can afford it or when the program becomes indispensable to your operations upgrade to the full version.- Word processing, spreadsheets, database, presentation manager, drawing program, the open source free alternative, is also compatible with MS Office formats. http://www.openoffice.org/- Turbocash accounting 6. Death and disability 7. Owner and personnel burnout All of these failures can be avoided through planning. While disasters such as a fire in your main office cannot be avoided, it can be planned for so that your business can continue running. * Forming Your Company * How many founders do you have? Some of these sound like unnecessary questions to address. Why should I have a friend I trust sign an NDA? Why should we make employment agreements? I'll tell you now from experience that it is necessary. You may be friends now, but you never know what will happen in the future. In addition, when forming your company it is an entity unto itself, which means it can be sold, traded or dissolved. Who knows who may be in charge of the company in the future? Having all of these loose ends done from the beginning will help avoid future headaches and conflicts. Actually forming your company legally isn't that difficult. A company really is only some paperwork in a filing cabinet. There are a number of places you can go to and actually form a company online. Just remember there are tax requirements for a company and that you should look into all the legal and tax issues when you form it. One of the main reasons you would want get all of these things completed and get incorporated is in preparation for t Case Study; Mobile Car Washing of Fleets of Rent-A-Cars * The Three Keys *For over 20 years in my career I had run a company specializing in the washing of car and truck fleets for corporate customers. There is money to be made for the mobile car wash company who pays careful attention to niche marketing within the car dealership and rental car industry sectors.Our company did just that and we were able to regional dominate over 110 cities without too much problem from competitors, as few competitors had used the bundling of those two sub-sectors and thus it proved to be a niche which was much better than originally anticipated.When we began to roll out our rapidly accelerating dominance in many cities as the leading washer for Car Dealerships for cars on their lots. We had worked for both new and used car dealers; some of the largest, as a matter of fact all of the top five largest car dealership consolidators. Which was not so difficult as many of these largest companies are in multiple markets and many secondary smaller markets.Sounds good? Indeed and if you own a mobile car wash company and want to expand you could easily do the same thing you see? But who sells the most cars? Sure Auto Nation and the other top 4 sell the most new cars but who sells the most used cars? Auto Auctions, Car Max and the major Car Rental Agencies. There are also many multi-state used car dealerships such as Internet Car Sales, CarTemp and Ugly Duckling (1-800-The-Duck). Then there are many large rent-a-car companies, which just happen to work with all these companies already. It is wise to get in good with the entire network of new and used car dealerships and rent-a-car companies in whatever market it is your primary stomping ground in your mobile car wash company. So, please consider this in 2006. There are 3 key ingredients to starting a successful business: - Good people - A wanted product - Low overhead If you can achieve these three things your business has a great chance of succeeding. Lacking in one of these key areas will almost ensure that your business will fail. If you look at a business plan these three items are highlighted as the backbone of the plan. Management, use of funds, and the products and/or service or competitive landscape sections of a business plan show that you have looked into these three areas and done your research. This is why it is recommended by so many that you write up a business plan. If you fudge the numbers, lie to yourself about the items or do inadequate research, in the end it will come back to haunt you. * Good People * What do I mean by good people? Good people for your business are those who are knowledgeable and hardworking. These people put their nose to the grindstone and get things done. When I was in the Navy they called it "attention to detail". In other words people who will not stop until the task is done and done well. Some may think I am describing a perfectionist. That is not entirely the case. A perfectionist never quits but they also never fully finish anything either. They endlessly toil away never knowing when they have reached a point of stopping. A perfectionist on your team can kill your business. For example, say you're running a technology company that is rolling out a new Internet product. If your lead programmer is a perfectionist they may never get to the point of completing the project and giving the green light. They'll run past deadlines, run your expenditures through the roof and never end up with a completed project. The other side of the coin is getting someone incompetent. In our Internet product example above, having an incompetent lead programmer is just as bad as having a perfectionist. First, they won't know when to declare it complete and doing so prematurely with bugs in it could doom your business from the start. This was seen time and time again during the dot-com boom when companies would bring in millions and never complete their actual product. Many went belly up never having actually launched a product. Most of this was due to incompetent people. The final litmus test for the people involved is in personality. Can the people involved actually get along together? It's surprising the number of businesses with good people that fail because they simply can't get along. The most important person to ask questions about is yourself. Are you ready to undergo the stress and strain of starting a business? Are you willing to call investors and ask for money? Can you make it financially? If you are a procrastinator or hate doing any work outside your immediate field of knowledge you may not be the right type of person to start a startup. However if you love trying new things, don't mind putting in some hard work and sacrificing both time and energy, running a startup may be a fun and rewarding experience for you. * The Right Product or Idea * You don't have to have "the better mousetrap" or "the next great thing" for your product or service. There's an old saying that "ideas are a dime a dozen" and it is very true. There's no real secret to finding the right product or service to sell. All you have to do is provide what a business or individual wants and needs. By right product I mean something that is needed or wanted by people or other businesses. If your potential customer base is male and you come out with a pink dress then you've failed in doing your research. Granted there are some men out there who may like to wear pink dresses, but the market isn't large enough for your business to succeed. If you are providing a service you should definitely do your research on the "competitive landscape". If you come out with a mediocre product compared to your competitors, you have just cut your company off at the knees from the get go. Improving upon an existing product, service or system that already works can make your company fly. It has already been proven to work. For more on researching your product and the competitive landscape see the article "The 5 easy steps to researching your market". The hardest part of settling on a product or service is determining what a client wants or needs. Don't expect your new company to become the next big name brand. With a lot of new businesses they project heavy volume as if they are going to become the next Nike within the first year. Don't do this. Keep your growth numbers conservative. You don't have to be a huge company to make a lot of money. Settling on a smaller niche market can make you a fortune. * The Money Game * Andrew Carnegie said the sole purpose of being in business is to make a profit. If profit is not your goal from the start, then you are probably looking at starting a hobby and not a business. There are a number of sources for funding your company. These include: - Self-funding, such as credit cards, savings, personal income or friends and family - Traditional financial, such as banks and financial institutions - Venture Capital - Sale of stock Self-funding is usually a bad idea. With the failure rate of new businesses you stand to risk losing it all on one mistake. By self-funding you are taking all of the risk onto yourself. Traditional financing and Venture Capital both come down to your reputation. If you haven't started a successful business in the past and have an active and working relationship with these groups your chance of receiving funding is virtually nil. Sale of stock of your new venture comes down to the old quote of "would you rather have all of a small pie or a smaller piece of a large pie?" Without adequate funding you could end up having no pie at all. Your company will not succeed without adequate capital. A sale of stock, while lowering the amount of the company you own, dramatically increases the chance of its success in the long run. We'll take a more in depth look at fund raising later. For now though let's talk about the other half of the coin... fund spending. As noted above one of the three keys to a successful business is low overhead. Running out of capital by hiring too many people, having an expensive location or spending too much on unneeded goods, can run you into the ground immediately. Keeping down costs is a key part of financially managing your company and as we'll see below lack of financial knowledge is a key reasons businesses fail. Don't be cheap however. Sometimes it's worth it to spend the extra on something that will save you money in the long run. Clearly defined long range goals and planning will help you keep your overhead down, your efficiency up and your business running within it's budget. I'm a firm believer in automating as many tasks as you can. With automation you don't need to hire personnel to fill those rolls and it lowers your "burn rate" and capital requirements. When I started a sports news website in 1998 we were competing with companies that had 150-250 employees. Through automation and smart design I was able to keep our total overhead down and reduce our actual hands on employees to about 6 for all 24 hours in a day. Take a look at your business and see where you can streamline it and automate things from the start and you'll reap the benefits of needing less capital and the ongoing monthly "burn rate". If you need office space and won't be meeting a lot of clients face to face you may look into renting an apartment and furnishing it with cheap used furniture. A lot of people work from their homes. There's no standard that says you have to have an office. You can get a P.O. Box or mail store as an address. Don't hire a ton of people! For each person on the payroll you have then incurred a monthly cost and added to your "burn rate". On top of their pay, there are the payroll taxes, workers comp insurance, office space and equipment and other expenses that you have to pay for each employee. Don't go overboard with your capital. Right when you think you have enough is when you'll run out. * Business Failure * SBA statistics tell us that 60% of small businesses fail within the first 5 years and 90% fail within 10. So how do you get to be the 1 successful startup left standing? Well there are a number of answers to that question. Knowing what the key reasons businesses fail is a start. Let's look at some of the main reasons businesses fail. 1. Under-Capitalization 2. Bad Debt 3. Not enough or too many sales 4. Financial mismanagement 5. Acts of God, disasters and economic downturns 6. Death and disability 7. Owner and personnel burnout All of these failures can be avoided through planning. While disasters such as a fire in your main office cannot be avoided, it can be planned for so that your business can continue running. * Forming Your Company * How many founders do you have? Some of these sound like unnecessary questions to address. Why should I have a friend I trust sign an NDA? Why should we make employment agreements? I'll tell you now from experience that it is necessary. You may be friends now, but you never know what will happen in the future. In addition, when forming your company it is an entity unto itself, which means it can be sold, traded or dissolved. Who knows who may be in charge of the company in the future? Having all of these loose ends done from the beginning will help avoid future headaches and conflicts. Actually forming your company legally isn't that difficult. A company really is only some paperwork in a filing cabinet. There are a number of places you can go to and actually form a company online. Just remember there are tax requirements for a company and that you should look into all the legal and tax issues when you form it. One of the main reasons you would want get all of these things completed and get incorporated is in preparation for th Cash Flow Management e that fail because they simply can't get along.Why a Cash Flow Statement?Many business owners believe their financial statements will give them all the information they need. Financial statements are an historical tool that shows you where your business has been. A Cash Flow is the fancy name for a working budget that tells you how much cash your business actually has. Working in sync with your balance sheet your cash flow should be an easy-to-read tool that allows you to monitor sales, costs, profitability, collections and cash. It allows you to plan for future cash needs for growth, while identifying operational issues requiring immediate action.Successful cash flow planning does not require a degree in accounting. What you need is real-time understanding of where the cash is originating, where it is going, and how much is left over (just like you do at home). Businesses need to operate with a cash flow model that looks ahead one year, month by month, and is updated with actual results every week.Create a WorksheetThe formula for successful cash flow management is deceptively simple. Money in. Money out. Money left over. If there isn’t any money left over, then you need to do something differently.Start with Sales. Sales is work performed that is documented by cash register receipts, guest checks or invoices. Project the amount of sales you anticipate month-by-month starting with the current month. Sales should fluctuate when you consider the seasonality of your business. Break the sales into categories and be conservative.Project your collections month by month. Collections are the money you put into the bank in the form of cash, checks or charge card vouchers. If Sales do not equal Collections, you either have accounts receivable or a cash control problem.Review your expenses. Define your expenses into two major areas: Cost of Sales (expenses t The most important person to ask questions about is yourself. Are you ready to undergo the stress and strain of starting a business? Are you willing to call investors and ask for money? Can you make it financially? If you are a procrastinator or hate doing any work outside your immediate field of knowledge you may not be the right type of person to start a startup. However if you love trying new things, don't mind putting in some hard work and sacrificing both time and energy, running a startup may be a fun and rewarding experience for you. * The Right Product or Idea * You don't have to have "the better mousetrap" or "the next great thing" for your product or service. There's an old saying that "ideas are a dime a dozen" and it is very true. There's no real secret to finding the right product or service to sell. All you have to do is provide what a business or individual wants and needs. By right product I mean something that is needed or wanted by people or other businesses. If your potential customer base is male and you come out with a pink dress then you've failed in doing your research. Granted there are some men out there who may like to wear pink dresses, but the market isn't large enough for your business to succeed. If you are providing a service you should definitely do your research on the "competitive landscape". If you come out with a mediocre product compared to your competitors, you have just cut your company off at the knees from the get go. Improving upon an existing product, service or system that already works can make your company fly. It has already been proven to work. For more on researching your product and the competitive landscape see the article "The 5 easy steps to researching your market". The hardest part of settling on a product or service is determining what a client wants or needs. Don't expect your new company to become the next big name brand. With a lot of new businesses they project heavy volume as if they are going to become the next Nike within the first year. Don't do this. Keep your growth numbers conservative. You don't have to be a huge company to make a lot of money. Settling on a smaller niche market can make you a fortune. * The Money Game * Andrew Carnegie said the sole purpose of being in business is to make a profit. If profit is not your goal from the start, then you are probably looking at starting a hobby and not a business. There are a number of sources for funding your company. These include: - Self-funding, such as credit cards, savings, personal income or friends and family - Traditional financial, such as banks and financial institutions - Venture Capital - Sale of stock Self-funding is usually a bad idea. With the failure rate of new businesses you stand to risk losing it all on one mistake. By self-funding you are taking all of the risk onto yourself. Traditional financing and Venture Capital both come down to your reputation. If you haven't started a successful business in the past and have an active and working relationship with these groups your chance of receiving funding is virtually nil. Sale of stock of your new venture comes down to the old quote of "would you rather have all of a small pie or a smaller piece of a large pie?" Without adequate funding you could end up having no pie at all. Your company will not succeed without adequate capital. A sale of stock, while lowering the amount of the company you own, dramatically increases the chance of its success in the long run. We'll take a more in depth look at fund raising later. For now though let's talk about the other half of the coin... fund spending. As noted above one of the three keys to a successful business is low overhead. Running out of capital by hiring too many people, having an expensive location or spending too much on unneeded goods, can run you into the ground immediately. Keeping down costs is a key part of financially managing your company and as we'll see below lack of financial knowledge is a key reasons businesses fail. Don't be cheap however. Sometimes it's worth it to spend the extra on something that will save you money in the long run. Clearly defined long range goals and planning will help you keep your overhead down, your efficiency up and your business running within it's budget. I'm a firm believer in automating as many tasks as you can. With automation you don't need to hire personnel to fill those rolls and it lowers your "burn rate" and capital requirements. When I started a sports news website in 1998 we were competing with companies that had 150-250 employees. Through automation and smart design I was able to keep our total overhead down and reduce our actual hands on employees to about 6 for all 24 hours in a day. Take a look at your business and see where you can streamline it and automate things from the start and you'll reap the benefits of needing less capital and the ongoing monthly "burn rate". If you need office space and won't be meeting a lot of clients face to face you may look into renting an apartment and furnishing it with cheap used furniture. A lot of people work from their homes. There's no standard that says you have to have an office. You can get a P.O. Box or mail store as an address. Don't hire a ton of people! For each person on the payroll you have then incurred a monthly cost and added to your "burn rate". On top of their pay, there are the payroll taxes, workers comp insurance, office space and equipment and other expenses that you have to pay for each employee. Don't go overboard with your capital. Right when you think you have enough is when you'll run out. * Business Failure * SBA statistics tell us that 60% of small businesses fail within the first 5 years and 90% fail within 10. So how do you get to be the 1 successful startup left standing? Well there are a number of answers to that question. Knowing what the key reasons businesses fail is a start. Let's look at some of the main reasons businesses fail. 1. Under-Capitalization 2. Bad Debt 3. Not enough or too many sales 4. Financial mismanagement 5. Acts of God, disasters and economic downturns 6. Death and disability 7. Owner and personnel burnout All of these failures can be avoided through planning. While disasters such as a fire in your main office cannot be avoided, it can be planned for so that your business can continue running. * Forming Your Company * How many founders do you have? Some of these sound like unnecessary questions to address. Why should I have a friend I trust sign an NDA? Why should we make employment agreements? I'll tell you now from experience that it is necessary. You may be friends now, but you never know what will happen in the future. In addition, when forming your company it is an entity unto itself, which means it can be sold, traded or dissolved. Who knows who may be in charge of the company in the future? Having all of these loose ends done from the beginning will help avoid future headaches and conflicts. Actually forming your company legally isn't that difficult. A company really is only some paperwork in a filing cabinet. There are a number of places you can go to and actually form a company online. Just remember there are tax requirements for a company and that you should look into all the legal and tax issues when you form it. One of the main reasons you would want get all of these things completed and get incorporated is in preparation for t Franchises - A Proven Business System make a profit. If profit is not your goal from the start, then you are probably looking at starting a hobby and not a business. There are a number of sources for funding your company.Franchises offer the first time business owner a proven and successful business opportunity. If you are looking to start your own business for the first time, franchises provide you with the greatest opportunity for success. When you purchase a franchise from the "Franchisor", and become a "Franchisee", you are not only purchasing a business, but a complete business system.Franchises have over a 90% success rate, compared to about a 15% success rate for those indidviduals starting their own businesses from scratch. Franchises have spent years developing and modifying their systems of doing business, and they pass that "trial and error" knowledge on to their Franchisees. Initial training exists for every aspect of the business, which can last anywhere from 1 to 2 weeks. Training usually takes place at one of the franchises existing locations or their corporate office. Training may consist of the day to day "hands-on" positions required to run the business, to marketing, hiring, purchasing, bookkeeping, management and supervisory techniques.Assistance is available with "demographic" reports to aid in selecting the right location. Support is also available for lease negotiation and "build outs", if necessary. Pre-opening strategies and marketing materials for newspapers, print-ads, handouts, yellow page advertising, radio and even TV ads are are complete and professional.During the first few weeks of business the Franchisor may provide its own personel to the Franchisee for assistance and support. This helps ensure a smooth opening. Additionally, once the business is open, a Franchisee will receive ongoing assistance and support from the Franchisor, not to mention support from the other franchisees, all who are all just a phone call away.Once a year or more Franchise Meetings occur between the Franchisor and their Franchisees These include: - Self-funding, such as credit cards, savings, personal income or friends and family - Traditional financial, such as banks and financial institutions - Venture Capital - Sale of stock Self-funding is usually a bad idea. With the failure rate of new businesses you stand to risk losing it all on one mistake. By self-funding you are taking all of the risk onto yourself. Traditional financing and Venture Capital both come down to your reputation. If you haven't started a successful business in the past and have an active and working relationship with these groups your chance of receiving funding is virtually nil. Sale of stock of your new venture comes down to the old quote of "would you rather have all of a small pie or a smaller piece of a large pie?" Without adequate funding you could end up having no pie at all. Your company will not succeed without adequate capital. A sale of stock, while lowering the amount of the company you own, dramatically increases the chance of its success in the long run. We'll take a more in depth look at fund raising later. For now though let's talk about the other half of the coin... fund spending. As noted above one of the three keys to a successful business is low overhead. Running out of capital by hiring too many people, having an expensive location or spending too much on unneeded goods, can run you into the ground immediately. Keeping down costs is a key part of financially managing your company and as we'll see below lack of financial knowledge is a key reasons businesses fail. Don't be cheap however. Sometimes it's worth it to spend the extra on something that will save you money in the long run. Clearly defined long range goals and planning will help you keep your overhead down, your efficiency up and your business running within it's budget. I'm a firm believer in automating as many tasks as you can. With automation you don't need to hire personnel to fill those rolls and it lowers your "burn rate" and capital requirements. When I started a sports news website in 1998 we were competing with companies that had 150-250 employees. Through automation and smart design I was able to keep our total overhead down and reduce our actual hands on employees to about 6 for all 24 hours in a day. Take a look at your business and see where you can streamline it and automate things from the start and you'll reap the benefits of needing less capital and the ongoing monthly "burn rate". If you need office space and won't be meeting a lot of clients face to face you may look into renting an apartment and furnishing it with cheap used furniture. A lot of people work from their homes. There's no standard that says you have to have an office. You can get a P.O. Box or mail store as an address. Don't hire a ton of people! For each person on the payroll you have then incurred a monthly cost and added to your "burn rate". On top of their pay, there are the payroll taxes, workers comp insurance, office space and equipment and other expenses that you have to pay for each employee. Don't go overboard with your capital. Right when you think you have enough is when you'll run out. * Business Failure * SBA statistics tell us that 60% of small businesses fail within the first 5 years and 90% fail within 10. So how do you get to be the 1 successful startup left standing? Well there are a number of answers to that question. Knowing what the key reasons businesses fail is a start. Let's look at some of the main reasons businesses fail. 1. Under-Capitalization 2. Bad Debt 3. Not enough or too many sales 4. Financial mismanagement 5. Acts of God, disasters and economic downturns 6. Death and disability 7. Owner and personnel burnout All of these failures can be avoided through planning. While disasters such as a fire in your main office cannot be avoided, it can be planned for so that your business can continue running. * Forming Your Company * How many founders do you have? Some of these sound like unnecessary questions to address. Why should I have a friend I trust sign an NDA? Why should we make employment agreements? I'll tell you now from experience that it is necessary. You may be friends now, but you never know what will happen in the future. In addition, when forming your company it is an entity unto itself, which means it can be sold, traded or dissolved. Who knows who may be in charge of the company in the future? Having all of these loose ends done from the beginning will help avoid future headaches and conflicts. Actually forming your company legally isn't that difficult. A company really is only some paperwork in a filing cabinet. There are a number of places you can go to and actually form a company online. Just remember there are tax requirements for a company and that you should look into all the legal and tax issues when you form it. One of the main reasons you would want get all of these things completed and get incorporated is in preparation for t Stretch Your Marketing Reach One of the most cost effective marketing strategies you can utilize is an online newsletter, also referred to as an E-Zine.You can provide valuable content to your customers and potential customers with an E-Zine. The beauty of utilizing the Internet to distribute your information is often people will forward your information to others who have similar interest.The key to success with an E-Zine is consistency in distribution. It won’t be beneficial to have a sporadic schedule. Distribution of your online publication should be done like clockwork. With all the automation tools available you can develop a system that is relatively trouble free.For many, the greatest challenge will be the development of content. There are a few ways you can handle this. One, take a day to write several articles and put them in a file that you can easily access. That way, the writing is over and done.Second, have others write articles for you. Many people are anxious to write for online newsletters.Third, a quick Internet search is bound to produce several places you can access articles that are there for the taking. Usually, the only requirement is that you give full credit to the authors.Because I love to write so much I prefer to write my own articles. And yet, if ever in a pinch, I know there are many options.Here are some examples of well done E-Zines. Each has produced excellent results for name recognition, promotion opportunities and back end business. Notice all have a place to leave an email address. I highly recommend this in that this helps you to build a solid database of interested readers.http://www.justbearsandstuff.com/newsletter/newsoctober2004.htmhttp://www.greatsmilesutah.com/october-04.htmhttp://www.kathleengage.com/newsletters/enewsoctober2004.htmIn my experience, I have fou Take a look at your business and see where you can streamline it and automate things from the start and you'll reap the benefits of needing less capital and the ongoing monthly "burn rate". If you need office space and won't be meeting a lot of clients face to face you may look into renting an apartment and furnishing it with cheap used furniture. A lot of people work from their homes. There's no standard that says you have to have an office. You can get a P.O. Box or mail store as an address. Don't hire a ton of people! For each person on the payroll you have then incurred a monthly cost and added to your "burn rate". On top of their pay, there are the payroll taxes, workers comp insurance, office space and equipment and other expenses that you have to pay for each employee. Don't go overboard with your capital. Right when you think you have enough is when you'll run out. * Business Failure * SBA statistics tell us that 60% of small businesses fail within the first 5 years and 90% fail within 10. So how do you get to be the 1 successful startup left standing? Well there are a number of answers to that question. Knowing what the key reasons businesses fail is a start. Let's look at some of the main reasons businesses fail. 1. Under-Capitalization 2. Bad Debt 3. Not enough or too many sales 4. Financial mismanagement 5. Acts of God, disasters and economic downturns 6. Death and disability 7. Owner and personnel burnout All of these failures can be avoided through planning. While disasters such as a fire in your main office cannot be avoided, it can be planned for so that your business can continue running. * Forming Your Company * How many founders do you have? Some of these sound like unnecessary questions to address. Why should I have a friend I trust sign an NDA? Why should we make employment agreements? I'll tell you now from experience that it is necessary. You may be friends now, but you never know what will happen in the future. In addition, when forming your company it is an entity unto itself, which means it can be sold, traded or dissolved. Who knows who may be in charge of the company in the future? Having all of these loose ends done from the beginning will help avoid future headaches and conflicts. Actually forming your company legally isn't that difficult. A company really is only some paperwork in a filing cabinet. There are a number of places you can go to and actually form a company online. Just remember there are tax requirements for a company and that you should look into all the legal and tax issues when you form it. One of the main reasons you would want get all of these things completed and get incorporated is in preparation for t Change Is A Constant No Matter What Industry You Are In re's not a whole lot you can do about a major economic downturn or a natural disaster. If you are selling high-end vacuum cleaners and people don't have the money for luxury goods, your business is going to be hit hard. If you are running an Internet business out of your basement and it floods it can kill you off pretty quickly. Having adequate insurance is a necessity. Planning ahead for such instances will give you a leg up on not seeing your hard work go down the drain.All industries have change and we know change is a constant and something the executive management teams should be able to deal with and if they expect to make their companies successful. Have you noticed change in your industry? Or has it happened gradually without much notice? If change is slow sometimes it is because of fear and because you did not adequately see opportunity and create change to take advantage of it. Change need not be evil, change is good, especially if you act.Personally, I ran a company, a Franchise Company, I founded and we were in the Service Industry serving large companies in 22 market sectors or industries. And well, I can tell you this change is a Constant no matter what industry you are in. Over the years in trying to service all these various industries I have subscribed to their industry trade journals.Indeed, I have seen change, much change in all the industries, some industries have gone thru rapid bursts of change and others slow and gradual, occasionally something revolutionary. I have watched how IT, CRM, new materials, technologies have been the cause, sometimes to the point of disruption, nevertheless heed this advice and insight and when change comes act. You will look brilliant and you have a good chance of being Johnny on the stop and right on the money more often than not. Consider this in 2006. 6. Death and disability 7. Owner and personnel burnout All of these failures can be avoided through planning. While disasters such as a fire in your main office cannot be avoided, it can be planned for so that your business can continue running. * Forming Your Company * How many founders do you have? Some of these sound like unnecessary questions to address. Why should I have a friend I trust sign an NDA? Why should we make employment agreements? I'll tell you now from experience that it is necessary. You may be friends now, but you never know what will happen in the future. In addition, when forming your company it is an entity unto itself, which means it can be sold, traded or dissolved. Who knows who may be in charge of the company in the future? Having all of these loose ends done from the beginning will help avoid future headaches and conflicts. Actually forming your company legally isn't that difficult. A company really is only some paperwork in a filing cabinet. There are a number of places you can go to and actually form a company online. Just remember there are tax requirements for a company and that you should look into all the legal and tax issues when you form it. One of the main reasons you would want get all of these things completed and get incorporated is in preparation for the next topic. * Funding Your Company * Funding your company is a necessary step to getting it off of the ground. Sure, you can try and bootstrap it along in hopes that it will succeed, but the point of all of this information is to give you the best chance at success, not to start a business on hopes. This is probably the scariest part for those engaging in their first startup company. Having all of your ducks in a row through proper planning is a necessity. You don't have to go overboard and end up in "analysis paralysis", but you sure better know who your people are, what your product is and how it can be sold and what proper amount of funding you need. A common source of startup funding comes from investors known as "angels". "Angels" are people who have made money in business and are looking to put their money to work. Most "angels" will require a business plan and possibly a description, prototype or demo of your product or service and how you intend to implement your plan. "Angels" will be looking at your three keys above. Your product, your people and your funding uses. A key step to raising funding is determining the value of your company. How much is your company worth now? Remember that you are not only determining the current worth, but the future worth of the company as well. This is a hard number to determine. There are some investors that won't even look at a company that values itself at less than a million dollars. Investors aren't going to put money into something that is going to remain at the current valuation, they are looking towards the future. Once you have settled on a value for your company, you have to determine how much startup capital you will require. Let's use an example. You value your company at an even $1 million dollars. You have also done your homework and you have determined you will need $100,000 in startup capital to purchase equipment, pay salaries, acquire insurance, etc... Breaking the numbers down shows that you would need to give up 10% of your company to get the needed capital. Just remember that when you approach an investor that you are offering them an opportunity. You aren't simply panhandling, but are giving them the opportunity to profit off of your hard work, research and know how.
HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
Related Articles:Singapore Internet Home Business Small Companies Really Can Compete - Here's How
|