Posts Tagged ‘how to start a small business’

Expanding your reach without going crazy

Monday, July 6th, 2009

Most reluctant entrepreneurs aren’t terribly motivated by money. It can be a huge stumbling block in building a business.

If you’re like me and most of my clients, you want to be making a difference, and you believe your product or service makes a difference. This is often at the heart of why you went into business in the first place.

So let me ask you this…would you like to reach more people? Of course you would. The more the better…until you think about all the work involved in delivering your product or service to large numbers of people.

That’s when things start falling apart. It’s just too much to meet with 50 clients a week. It’s not humanly possible for any solo service professional to see that many people (though I know a few who have tried), do a good job and continue to grow.

Then again when you think about the kind of impact you want to make, fifty people really isn’t very many people.

The best way to expand your reach is to start creating products…ebooks, books, audios, podcasts etc…that deliver what you know in a form that doesn’t require your time once you’ve created the product.

You will get your message out to many more people, make money and control your spiraling time commitment.

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The #1 Question You Need to Be Asking

Wednesday, July 1st, 2009

Where’s the money?

It’s the first question you need to ask yourself when you start thinking about starting a business.

Doing good research before you roll out your product, your website or do any networking, can make a huge difference, often making the difference between success and failure. See New Niche Finder for help with your market research.

Once you’re identified a great niche market, you then need to ask yourself this question every singe day. It helps keep you focused on the activities that bring in the money rather than frittering away your time on things like email.

Where’s the money is the most important question you will ever ask in your business.

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Are Websites the New Business Card?

Thursday, June 25th, 2009

This is really embarrassing, but I’m going to share it because I think a lot of you are doing the same thing with your websites. You never have to share your embarrassment with anyone else, but you do need to do something about it…pronto.

When I first started my psychotherapy practice, I obsessed about my business cards. I don’t mean I gave it some thought and ordered them from Vista print. I mean obsessed for weeks and months about those darn business cards. It felt like my whole business depended on those cards.

The result…the business card became a huge hurdle to getting my practice up and running. While I could have been spending time serving clients or networking with referral sources, I was obsessing about the cards (and the stationary and the brochure).

Then when I got them designed to my satisfaction…and of course I was doing this all myself (yes I was very dumb back then)…I would get them printed. Then I would have boxes of business cards sitting on a shelf. I never used more than a small portion of them and ended up throwing them all out the last time I moved.

Funny now because I don’t keep any business cards on hand since I took my business online.

Yes, business cards are useful and when I’m spending time doing offline networking, I do print some up, but for the most part I don’t need them.

What I obviously didn’t know way back then was that the basic business card is merely a means to convey contact information to people you meet. Yes, it can be more than that. Yes it is a first impression, but let me ask you…what do you do with business cards you collect?…how many of them do you remember?…how often does the business card make a difference in whether you buy?…how often do you even follow up with the people you meet?

That’s my point exactly. They sit in a pile or thrown in a drawer where they rarely see the light of day.

Today, what I’m seeing is many fledgling businesses getting equally hung up on their websites. Prospective customers and clients are passing you by because you can’t decide on a domain name or the blogging software or the header or the logo…

The truth of the matter is many imperfect and downright ugly sites do just fine in the marketplace. Furthermore they don’t have to be ugly anymore. Just go out and pick a Wordpress (or Typepad) template and you can have your website up in a day.

So stop with the obsessing and get it up. The beauty of blog websites is you can change them quickly and easily as needed. Just because you start with one design doesn’t mean you have to stay with it.


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Start a Business or Get a Job?

Monday, June 15th, 2009

I will admit to being biased because I love being self employed and I love running online businesses…and I especially love teaching others how to start a small businessonline.

If you’re sitting on this edge trying to decide where to put your time, energy and effort, I would like to invite you to consider the three most common myths I hear from job hunters…

Myth #1 - A Job is More Secure

Many people go for the job because they think it’s more secure. It may have been true back in the day when our parents went to work, but not now. Just take a look around (and it doesn’t take much looking) to see all the people who have lost their jobs over the past 9 months. Their jobs were not at all secure even though many of them thought they were.

One of the things I’ve learned through internet marketing is that the most secure business is one with multiple streams of income. It’s exactly the same as diversifying an investment portfolio. The more diversified you are the safer your income…and jobs just aren’t diversified enough to be truly secure.

So even if you do go for the job, I would like to encourage you to think about starting a business on the side so you have something to fall back on…just in case.

Myth #2 - A Business Consumes All Your Time

Some job hunters have told me they just want to go to work and do their work then leave it when they come home.

Does it really work that way? Not in my experience…at least not since I left cashiering at Whole Foods (back then it was Bread and Circus but I digress). The truth is there are very few jobs worth having that let you leave them behind. So unless you want to go work for MacDonalds, Walmart or the Job Lot, chances are the job will follow you home.

And that’s not even taking into account all the technological ways your job can suck you back during your off hours.

As a small business owner you can use that same technology combined with some judicious outsourcing to actually gain greater control over your time including your after hours time.

The real bonus is more than not having work follow you home. In your own business you really do control your time. For example, my summer hours are very different from my winter hours. In the winter I tend to hunker down (in front of the woodstove) and work. It’s my most productive time of year.

During the summer I lighten up and spend a lot of time outside. Right now my schedule is this…if it’s raining, I’m working on the business and if it’s sunny, I’m painting the house. I’m actually working the same number of hours but have the flexibility to work on the house when the weather allows.

Myth # 3 - Most Businesses Fail

I have to admit this isn’t entirely myth, but I will tell you why most business fail…they don’t do any market research.

Again back in the day, there was a reason for this…it was way too expensive for any business other than large corporations to do the kind of market research needed.

Now there’s no excuse to skip the research. There are online tools that can tell you with a high degree of likelihood, whether there is a market for what you want to offer in your business.

That’s why I am launching ‘New Niche Finder‘ to help you do the research you need to get started without breaking the bank.

As I said, I’m biased but that’s my 2ยข. I just don’t think any job can compare to owning your own business.

If you agree, I hope you’ll come back often, or better yet subscribe to ‘Prospering Biz’ for a complete education on how to start a small business especially if you want to do it online.

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