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How to Start a Business

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How to Start a Business












Starting a small business can be a headache, but hopefully with my guides, it doesnt have to be.  I hope you find some good, relevant information if you’re planning to start a small business.









Instructions




1

Decide What Products or Services Your Small Business will Offer

The first of the steps to starting a small business is to carefully consider these questions:

What do you have to offer?

What makes you an expert?

Do you have all of the education and skills you’ll need to compete successfully in the marketplace or will you need to do some brushing up or retraining first?

Does the product or service meet a need?

Is this a seasonal product or service, or can you market it all year long?

How sensitive is marketing this product or service to general economic conditions? When the economy is weak, how do you think your business will be affected?

Will you be energized by going through the steps to starting this particular small business – is it something you’ll love to do or sell – or are you just going through the motions of starting a small business to try to make some money?

The saying, “Do what you love, love what you do” should not be taken lightly. Your business is going to be your livelihood – you should have a good time doing it. If not, it will be difficult to get motivated at times.

If you are excited about your business, your customers will notice and it will be easier to get them excited, too. Plus, completing the steps to starting your small business will be fun and much more enjoyable.

Know Your Market and Your Competition

When you are starting a small or home business, understanding small business marketing concepts, like getting a handle on the potential market for what you small business will have to offer and the value proposition of your small business is very important. Here are a few things to consider:

Who is going to buy your product or service?

Will you market to businesses, to consumers, or to both?

What traits do you think your “typical” customer or client will have?

Is the need for your product or service not currently being met or is it already saturated?

Is there something about what you have to offer that will allow you to beat your competitors?

How will you differentiate yourself from your competition?

What is your value proposition? What is your competitive advantage?

Make Sure You Can Do the Tasks Needed Before Starting a Small Business

Before starting a small business, you need to understand and carefully consider that you’ll have a lot of daily tasks that will need to get done. If you can’t do them, who will? If there’s no one to take care of these tasks properly, is it worth starting a small business?

Answer this question honestly. Can you handle the day-to-day general tasks that starting a small business requires, like:

setting appointments

ordering supplies

bookkeeping
marketing
filing

answering the phone

checking and replying to e-mail

If you’ll have help, great. If you can afford to pay someone else to do some of these tasks for you, all the better. But a great majority of home businesses are a one-person operation starting on a shoestring budget, and most other small business are not much larger and don’t have substantial budgets to hire help. That means there’s a good chance you’ll have to do everything or it just won’t get done.

You’ll want to think twice about starting a small business if you are going to be run rugged with the mundane tasks to the point that you won’t have adequate time to do the things you love that will make you money.

 Make a List of What Needs to be Done to Prepare Your Home for Business

Create a Home Office

 

With the product or service you have in mind, can you handle the business from your home the way it is right now? If not, what do you need to do to get it ready?

Will you need space for inventory, supplies, records and/or equipment?

Do you already have an area you can use for your office or will you need to bargain with another member of the family to give up some space?

Is the nature of your inventory or equipment such that special climate needs must be accommodated?

Do you need to add a room, enclose a patio, convert a garage or basement, or stake out the attic?

What kind of power needs will you have and will you have to make any alterations to accommodate them?

As you determine what you’ll need, keep track of your estimate costs because you’ll need them later in this exercise.

Handy Tools to Consider

WhiteboardMultifunction Inkjet Printer
Understand Legal Barriers to Starting Your Business

Check your zoning laws before starting a small business.

If you live in an area that is subject to the rules and regulations of a homeowners’ or community association, check for restrictions. Find out what, if any restrictions exist on starting a small business in your home and how you might work within them before you invest one cent in your home business.

If you plan on starting a small business in your home, you may not be able to do so if you welcome clients or customers into your home, if you will be operating machinery, storing or working with hazardous materials, making noise, etc. These and other issues surrounding the nature of your small business may all have an impact on what you can and cannot do and can prevent you from starting a small business at entirely.

Will you need a special zoning exemption? Will getting one be a difficult and drawn out exercise? Is it even legal to operate the business you’re planning? Will you need to secure a license before starting your small business?

Are your products and services potentially subject to patents, trademarks or copyrights? More on understanding patents, trademarks and copyrights…

 Review Your Small Business Insurance Needs

When you go into business, you’ll potentially be exposing yourself, your home and your family to a variety of risks. You need to think about how you’ll manage those risks and find out if you need small business insurance to help handle them before it’s too late.

Consider this:

Will you need health insurance? If so, how can you get it and how much is it going to cost? When one spouse is still working, the ideal situation may be to get the other included on the working spouse’s health insurance coverage if you can. If not, either the cost or the lack of availability, or both may prevent you from starting your business. More on health insurance…
If you’re carrying inventory, need equipment or are storing hazardous materials what kind of property insurance will you need to avoid suffering financial hardship? Will you need a small business insurance policy for this purpose and how much will it cost?

Will you need liability insurance? Where can you get liability coverage under a small business insurance policy and how much is it going to cost? Will you need errors and omissions coverage?

What about your auto insurance? Will you be using your car for business?

Remember, your homeowners’ and auto insurance policies weren’t designed to cover your small or home business. Your best bet is to shop for small business insurance that can help you manage your exposure to loss, so do your small business insurance and health insurance shopping ahead of time to save aggravation and surprises later.

Small business insurance can be a major expense of doing business, but some coverages like General Liability may be quite reasonable depending on the nature of your business.

Record any small business insurance cost estimates for this step – you’ll need them to determine your startup and operating costs.

Learn the Risks and Benefits of the Legal Forms of Business Organization

Before you start a small or home business is the time to understand the various legal forms of business organization. Will you operate your business as a sole proprietorship, a limited liability company (LLC), an S corporation, a partnership, or a full blown C corporation?

You’ll want to research issues surrounding the legal form of business organization carefully now, because your decision will affect your startup costs. It will also affect your tax situation and your personal liability for the actions and debts of the business. Take advantage of the IRS for free tax information on the various legal forms of business organization.

Finally, your decision on which legal form of business organization you will use will largely determine what steps you need to take in order to set up your business when you’re ready to do so.

Determine Your Startup Costs

Calculate your startup costs – the amount of money it’s going to take to get up and running. At this point, many of your items are going to be nothing more than estimates, but do the best you can.

By completing the previous steps you should have a much clearer picture of your startup costs than before you started this exercise. Here are some additional questions that may help you not to overlook something:

Will you need to hire specialists, like a lawyer or an accountant?

Will you need to buy some office furniture or equipment?

What supplies will you need on hand for Day One? Do you need to purchase a beginning inventory?

Are you going to buy a business or franchise?

Will you have construction costs, and if so, how much needs to be done by professionals and how much can you do yourself?

What can you do to lower your costs?

Take your time with this step. Do some price checking and look for legitimate bargains. You’re bound to think of things and adjust your estimates all the way up to your opening day.

The closer you get to opening day, the more accurate your estimate will be.

Consider Your Break Even Point, Your Cash Flow and Your Funding Options

There are several issues questions you need to consider with this step:

How much will you need to pay your bills until the money starts coming in from your home business?

Will you be keeping your full-time job or is there another breadwinner in the family that can help you until you develop an income stream?

What will your continuing outlays be for items like equipment, salaries and/or inventory?

How many products must you sell or how many hours of service will you need to provide before you reach the break even point?

Where will the money come from? Will you need to borrow or draw down a savings account or sell some investments and/or assets?

Will you need a silent partner to help provide working capital, especially until you reach your break even point and being making a profit?

Are you willing to use your home equity to finance your business?

Have you checked into SBA loans from the U.S. Small Business Administration?

Is there any possibility of getting a grant to start your business?

Knowing these answers will help you decide if you can act now. If not, it can also help you to plan to secure the money you need and help you set a target startup date.

Gauge Your Family’s Support for Your Home Business

Hopefully you won’t leave this step for last, but doing so won’t diminish its importance.

Members of your family, at least those still at home or any family members who may need to make sacrifices or lifestyle changes in order to accommodate your business, need to know what you’re up to and how it might affect them. If you have a spouse or significant other or children living with you, your home business will be a big part of their lives too.

Communication is key to helping them understand. Ask for their support – you’ll find that’s much more effective than demanding it. Try to understand where they’re coming from. If they have questions, issues, or objections, discuss them openly. Caring and open discussions now help you avoid problems later.

Couples who plan to operate a business together need to have a pretty good idea in advance if that will work for them. It’s a good idea to discuss who will be responsible for specific tasks. If you can’t agree on this now, there’s a very strong likelihood you won’t agree on it later.

Don’t let your business damage your family relationships. We all need an occasional getaway and we all need to keep our priorites straight.

A strained family situation is bound to show in your business activities – work hard to keep everyone happy!




2

More brief, breakdown way of starting a small business

Starting a small business requires determination, motivation, and know-how. Here are the critical steps to provide you with the know-how to have a successful small business startup:

Identify Your Business Opportunity:

Choosing what kind of business to start can be an immobilizing task when confronted with the multitude of opportunities. It’s important to determine where your passions lie and to understand your personality type. Yet, equally important is what skills you bring to the table and whether you are entering a dying industry or a fast growing emerging business.

Read More…

Build a Business Plan:

For any start-ups, a business plan allows you to gain a better understanding of your industry structure, competitive landscape, and the capital requirements of starting a small business. A study mentioned in “Business Plans For Dummies” by Paul Tiffany states that companies with a business plan have 50% more profits and revenue than non-planning businesses. Writing a business plan just makes good business sense.

Read More…

Find Start-up Money:

To start a business, you must invest in the business. The journey of finding start up funds will be different for each individual. Some start ups such as consulting, requires a few thousand to get a website and business cards whereas a retail store could need 0,000 or more. Finding the money you need may come for a source you never thought of or may just end up being the frugal bootstrap method.

Read More…

Name Your Business:

What’s in a business name? Everything and nothing. The right business name will help distinguish you from a sea of bland competitors, provide your customers with a reason to hire you, and aid in the branding of your company. Learn what you need to know to find a name for your business.

Read More…

Choose a Business Structure:

Deciding on the structure of your business is not a decision to be taken lightly. Whether you choose the popular LLC, a sole proprietorship or form a corporation; your choice will have an impact on your business liability, fund-ability as well as taxes due. Don’t fret over your ultimate business structure, because as your business evolves, so too, may your structure.

Read More…

Get Your Business License and Permits:

Starting a small business requires the mundane, yet necessary, paperwork and regulations. Depending on your chosen business structure, may need to register your business with the state authorities. Setting up your small business may require an employer identification number(EIN) which is also used by state taxing authorities to identify businesses. Additional paperwork can entail sales tax licenses, zoning permits and more.

Read More…

Set Up & Determine Your Business Location:

One of the multitude of tasks in starting a business is the setting up of your office. There are many steps in office set up including where to locate your office (home or office space), buying the necessary office equipment, designing your work space and getting supplies.

Read More…

Get Business Insurance:

As a new small business owner, you have the responsibility to manage the risks associated with your business. Don’t put your new start-up at risk without getting the proper small business insurance to protect your company in the event of disaster or litigation.

Read More…

Create an Accounting System:

Unless you’re a number person, the accounting and bookkeeping aspect of running your business can’t be avoided. Setting up your accounting will help you understand the financials of running a business and help you advert failure.















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parveen86, 5 months ago



good article very good points :-)

















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Related Business Articles

Money,money,money

When money is used to intermediate the exchange of goods and services, it is performing a function as a medium of exchange. It thereby avoids the inefficiencies of a barter system.

Unit of account

A unit of account is a standard numerical unit of measurement of the market value of goods, services, and other transactions. Also known as a “measure” or “standard” of relative worth and deferred payment, a unit of account is a necessary prerequisite for the formulation of commercial agreements that involve debt. To function as a ‘unit of account’, whatever is being used as money must be:

Divisible into smaller units without loss of value; precious metals can be coined from bars, or melted down into bars again.

Fungible: that is, one unit or piece must be perceived as equivalent to any other, which is why diamonds, works of art or real estate are not suitable as money.

A specific weight, or measure, or size to be verifiably countable. For instance, coins are often milled with a reeded edge, so that any removal of material from the coin (lowering its commodity value) will be easy to detect.

Store of value

To act as a store of value, a money must be able to be reliably saved, stored, and retrieved – and be predictably usable as a medium of exchange when it is retrieved. The value of the money must also remain stable over time. In that sense, inflation by reducing the value of money, diminishes the ability of the money to function as a store of value.

Standard of deferred payment

While standard of deferred payment is distinguished by some texts, particularly older ones, other texts subsume this under other functions. A standard of deferred payment is an accepted way to settle a debt – a unit in which debts are denominated, and the status of money as legal tender, in those jurisdictions which have this concept, states that it may function for the discharge of debts. When debts are denominated in money, the real value of debts may change due to inflation and deflation, and for sovereign and international debts via debasement and devaluation.

Money supply

In economics, money is a broad term that refers to any financial instrument that can fulfill the functions of money (detailed above). These financial instruments together are collectively referred to as the money supply of an economy. Since the money supply consists of various financial instruments (usually currency, demand deposits and various other types of deposits), the amount of money in an economy is measured by adding together these financial instruments creating a monetary aggregate. Modern monetary theory distinguishes among different types of monetary aggregates, using a categorization system that focuses on the liquidity of the financial instrument used as money.

Market liquidity

Market liquidity describes how easily an item can be traded for another item, or into the common currency within an economy. Money is the most liquid asset because it is universally recognised and accepted as the common currency. In this way, money gives consumers the freedom to trade goods and services easily without having to barter.

Liquid financial instruments are easily tradable and have low transaction costs. There should be no (or minimal) spread between the prices to buy and sell the instrument being used as money.

Money is simply an exchange. Besides allowing money to help you trade and become successful in life, appreciate the impact money has on society and how vulnerable the money supply system really is. There’s a lot of history behind money. Both good and bad, but the fact remains, whatever mankind invents it is never perfect.

?

People tend to seek money for different reasons, without actually taking the time to know what it really is. Why do people place so much thought and effort in acquiring it? Make no mistake; like anything else money is a serious investment of your precious resources and time that warrants your scrutiny. Otherwise why bother acquiring it at all?
Money is any object that is generally accepted as payment for goods, services and repayment of debts in a given country or socio-economic context. The main functions of money are distinguished as: a medium of exchange; a unit of account; a store of value; and, occasionally, a standard of deferred payment.

Money originated as commodity money, but nearly all contemporary money systems are based on fiat money. Fiat money is without intrinsic use value as a physical commodity, and derives its value by being declared by a government to be legal tender; that is, it must be accepted as a form of payment within the boundaries of the country, for “all debts, public and private”.

The money supply of a country consists of currency (banknotes and coins) and demand deposits or ‘bank money’ (the balance held in banking accounts and savings accounts). These demand deposits usually account for a much larger part of the money supply than currency. Bank money is intangible and exists only in the form of various bank records. Despite being intangible, bank money still performs the basic functions of money, being generally accepted as a form of payment.

The word money is believed to originate from a temple of Hera, located on Capitoline, one of Rome’s seven hills. In the ancient world Hera was often associated with money. The temple of Juno Moneta at Rome was the place where the mint of Ancient Rome was located. The name Juno may derive from the Etruscan goddess Uni (which means; the one, unique, unit, union, united) and Moneta either from the Latin word monere (remind, warn, or instruct) or the Greek word moneres (alone, unique).

However, did you know that anything can constitute as money in an economic system? Look around and you may spot children using candy as money between themselves, or card collectors trading basic card types for other more exotic versions. Pick up a History book, and you may also read that at one point in ancient China copper knives were traded as currency, whereas for meso-American civilizations coffee beans were highly prized.

Generally speaking, if it’s collected in mass quantities for the sake of trading it anytime and anywhere then chances are that it’s money. Of course, it’s only money if most people you know are willing to buy it!

Who First Discovered Money?

Money historically evolved from bartering. To trace its origins is extremely difficult, but there is historical information leading back to the greek and roman empires. For now its beginnings remain as mysterious similarly as whom first created fire or invented the wheel. In the past, money was generally considered to have the following four main functions, which are summed up in a rhyme;

“Money is a matter of four functions, a medium, a measure, a standard, a store.”

Money functions as a medium of exchange, a unit of account, a standard of deferred payment, and a store of value. However, most modern textbooks now list only three functions, that of medium of exchange, unit of account, and store of value, not considering a standard of deferred payment as a distinguished function, but rather subsuming it in the others.

Given how anything can be money under the right circumstances, there are particular qualities that make certain kinds more attractive than others:

1) Divisibility- Can be easily cut, added, and measured at any fraction to match a certain price.

2) Valuable non-monetary uses- Has special properties that make it useful in the production processes of other items.

3) Durability- Does not easily lose its physical integrity over time.

4) Scarcity- Is not too plentiful nor too rare to acquire from natural resources.

5) Portability- Its storage does not pose a challenge or threat to other forms of wealth, and can be shaped to fit any container.

Having revewied these five major elements, it’s no surprise to understand why gold and silver have been popular monies for thousands of years. Both metals share in all of the ideal traits, and their only major differences are in their rarity and usefulness. Although no longer in common use among citizens of most developed nations, it’s difficult to say whether both currencies are truly dead. Given their history and continued use in some official coins, there’s a good chance that we may see their revival sometime in the future.

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