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Showing posts with label Small Business Idea. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Small Business Idea. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 04, 2007

Your Small Business Idea - Start from Scratch or Buy One from Someone Else?

Starting a business requires you to complete a number of steps and make some key decisions. Though part of your overall plan, you’ll need to decide on a business structure, and obtain the necessary licenses and permits. In addition, determining which financing options will meet your short-term needs and long-term goals is crucial.

But nothing happens until you get the idea!

Many people dream of someday owning their own business. Starting a business, however, can be very daunting. Imagine this: You are a talented seamstress and someday would like to open your own clothing shop, but have not found the time to do so. You love the store where you currently work, but always feel like you could run it in a better manner. One day, the owner tells you that she is putting the business up for sale. The price is right, and you don't have to worry about starting a business from nothing-it is falling into your lap already planned! So, is buying an existing business better than starting your own?

Remember first off that the owner is selling the business for a reason. If you work at the establishment, such as in the situation mentioned before, you probably know why the business is being sold. However, if you do not have a personal relationship with the owners, you may be left in the dark. Ask. It could be as simple as the owners wishing to retire. In this case, buying the business could be an excellent investment.
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Did you know?

In starting a small business you should never think you can do it alone! One of the best ways to insulate yourself against business failure is to find and work with a mentor, someone with business experience who can guide and assist you.

A good resource are the Small Business Development Centers which can link you to organizations to help your small business grow and prosper.
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On the other hand, perhaps the business is being sold because it generates no profit. If you consider purchasing a business that failed for someone else, it is important to analyze why. Perhaps there was no customer base or demand for the product or service. Maybe the owners made bad business decisions. In some cases, the business has a bad reputation. These are all things to consider when buying a business instead of starting your own.


How will you change the business to avoid your own failure? In some cases, this simply cannot be done. For example, if your community is largely made of families or retirees, there is not much of a demand for a nightclub in the neighborhood, and this may be why the previous business failed. On the other hand, you may be able to make some positive changes in a business that prevents failure. If the previous owner of your clothing store invested the company's money largely in high priced merchandise, perhaps you want to consider readjusting the business to sell affordable clothing instead.


Always consider changing the name, unless the business is a very traditional and successful staple in your community. By changing the name, you convey to consumers that the business is not the same and they should give it a try even if they have not liked the goods or services in the past. So, should you buy the clothing shop or start your own? That's a question only you can answer, but research the option of buying a business thoroughly because it could be a great chance for you to finally achieve your dreams.


About the Author: Michael Saunders has an MBA from the Stanford Graduate School of Business. He edits a Websites on Starting a Small Business and Ideas to Start Your Own Business.

Thursday, August 23, 2007

Best Small Business Idea -- Get Focused and Get Going

Michael Clark


I used to give a talk titled, “10 Ways to Overcome Overwhelm in Business and In Life”. It was an excellent resource for getting into action and taking charge of your business. If you’d like a copy, just email me and I’ll send it to you. After I’d given this talk for awhile, I realized that getting out of overwhelm was even simpler. You don’t need 10 ideas. That’s overwhelming in itself. You just need one essential key. If you can master this one key, you can pretty much get whatever you want out of your business and your life. Here it is. Don’t blink or you’ll miss it. Focus.

That’s right, focus. When you are entirely focused on what you are doing in the moment, you don’t have any attention left for being in overwhelm. Focus and overwhelm are opposites. Think about it. You are overwhelmed because you are thinking about all the things you’ve got to get done today, tomorrow, and the day after. You aren’t solidly focused in the present moment doing what’s in front of you. But when you are stuck in overwhelm, it’s really hard to get focused. So what can you do?

It’s actually very simple. Get back to basics. Go back to your core values, your mission statement, your vision. Stop right now and think about the vision you had for your business when you first started it. What did you want to accomplish? Why did you want to do it? Were you looking for freedom? Did you have a better way of helping people? Completely let yourself be absorbed in the dream you had. Feel how it was when you started. Now you are focused. Take this vision and write it down again. Go into detail about what you really want to do with your business.

Now from this focused state, get into action. It should be much more clear to you now what the most important tasks are. Focus your energy on those and get going. Any time you start feeling overwhelmed, stop and go back to your dream, your vision. Ask yourself why you are doing what you are doing. Really feel it and then start again. I guarantee you this will get you focused and get you out of overwhelm. Now you can get what you really wanted out of your business.


About the Author: Start up business resource guide and consultant, Michael Clark has been crafting best small business ideas for over 20 years. Michael is a serial entrepreneur having opened multiple successful small businesses over the last 12 years. For more small business success stories and business resource groups, visit his web site at http://biznbeyond.com.

Feel free to copy this article and post it on your website as long as you keep the link to http://www.biznbeyond.com intact and give credit to Michael Clark at Business and Beyond.