Starting a Small Business: Don’t Bite off More than You Can Chew
When I first decided I needed to really understand money if I was ever going to become wealthy, I turned to a lot of reading materials. I inhaled books and articles, trying to build a brain inside my head that could compete with the other great financial minds. At the end of the day, it was worth the effort; I built a strong foundation of knowledge that helped with all the future decisions I would make.
Still, that reading and research was only a small part of my education. All of those books, all of the blogs and radio shows, all of these efforts to find and absorb information didn’t teach me half as much as what I learned from taking action. Understanding commerce is a lot like learning to ride a bike – you can recognize the concepts of momentum and balance, but until you push off and do the pedaling, you’re not really going to understand how that two-wheeled thing stays upright.
The only way to truly learn how to start a business is by starting one.
If you’re thinking of starting a small business, you have a ton of prep work ahead of you. You need to create a strong business plan, figure out expenses and lending rates, conceptualize the type of brand you want to build, and all of this should be done before you try to sell a single thing. And, even with all that preparation, you’ll continue learning and altering your strategy every single day.
While you need to experience starting a business before you can really understand it, there are a lot of things that are very helpful to know ahead of time. When I say a lot, I mean thousands of things, but we’re going to limit it to a small handful for now. Your startup launch will face unique challenges, but there are still some universal truths that will help you in the early going. No matter what your business does, expect the points below to factor into your practices in one way or another.
1. You Need a Good Team
Even if you plan on being a solo operation, you still need a team. This isn’t to say you have to bring on multiple owners and investors and partners, but you will have to work with others. Those people and companies will be part of your team. For example, here are some matters that will likely fall outside the scope of what you’re able (or want) to handle while you’re tied up with all that goes into starting a small business:
● Marketing
● Direct/Electronic import
● Shipping
● Landlord/Tenants
● Coding
● Cleaning
● Payroll
● Data analytics
And the list of potential business problems you’ll need help to solve goes on and on and on. Whether you’re planning to start renting out a room in your house or open a little shop that sells handmade pillowcases, you will work with others in some fashion. To think otherwise puts you in a predicament where you work too much and don’t get enough done; one of the many entrepreneur’s challenges you’re likely to face.
Because we have so much digital access and many aspiring young business owners are so tech-savvy, it’s easy to think you don’t need support to run a company. While people manage to start and run LLCs and it seems as though everything hinges on one individual, the best businesses have lots of helpers and associates waiting in the wings.
I emphasize the concept of teamwork because I really think people benefit from feeling that support. I may run a company called Kovar Capital, and the name could suggest that everything falls on my shoulders, but I have incredible people around me making sure things get done and get done right. In addition to those I work with on a daily basis, I’m connected with third-party companies and freelance workers who are vitally important to the work I do. Could I get by without these relationships? Maybe. Would I want to try? Not in a million years.
Before starting a small business, think about how cooperation can help your efforts and who you might want to connect with. Consider these collaborators part of your team and do what you can to make sure everyone benefits from the arrangement. As your business grows and things start taking off, my guess is you’ll be really happy to have extra hands on deck. Trying to juggle all those balls yourself just means you’ll have less time for your family without being any more effective.
2. You’ll Do a Little of Everything
Shortly after my business took off, I wrote a book. Up until the moment I started writing, I had never planned on doing such a thing. But there I was, outlining my thoughts and putting them on paper because people had told me this would be a good way to teach and market. You might not write or publish anything, but you should absolutely expect to do all sorts of things that weren’t on your radar when you first decided to start a business. If you want to be a life coach, you’ll probably have to learn a lot about personal marketing and perhaps get into web design. For those with computer smarts who want to develop apps, there’s a good chance you’ll need to learn how to do some basic graphic design and get really good at price adjusting. A business has a lot of moving parts, and the owner oversees almost all the levers.
One of the most common mistakes entrepreneurs make is to focus too specifically on the one thing they do best. When you work as an employee, this works reasonably well; a lawyer at a firm can care almost exclusively about a certain type of law and a handful of open cases. When you’re a lawyer opening your own practice, you have to handle insurance, pricing, rent, marketing, and every other thing that drives your business.
Hopefully, you have a team built to help with some of these things. Even so, if you’re the entrepreneur, every challenge is your responsibility and you have to be ready to call the shots. If you pay a marketing director, you still need to have an idea of how branding and marketing work. Before you can settle on an insurance policy for your business, you need to understand the risks you face and how to mitigate those factors.
As you consider these bigger issues, don’t forget the smaller business problems that will end up in your lap. You’re going to be sweeping, landscaping, emailing, buying printer paper and registering domain names; you’ll be going to events and fundraisers to pitch your company and dropping off flyers at coffee shops. You might think those efforts are unnecessary, but once you hitch your wagon to a business and need it to succeed, every task, big or small, is fair game.
3. You Have To Spend – Do So Cautiously
See those petty tasks listed above, like sweeping and shopping and emailing? Wouldn’t it be nice to pay an assistant to handle those lesser details? Don’t pull the trigger on that hiring just yet. You will not launch your business for free. You might get out of the starting gate with minimal costs, but it’s always best to expect the unexpected when it comes to business expenses. If you don’t have a realistic financial model and you spend frivolously, you might sink your enterprise before it ever has a chance.
Think about the monthly expenses you deal with in your personal life – phone, internet, electricity, garbage, etc. Those services don’t become free when you rent a commercial space or get an EIN. In most cases, people who need office space pay a premium for dependable services you and your clients can rely on. If you choose to run your company from your home, you’ll likely still need to upgrade some services and pay a little bit more.
The point is, smaller expenses add up very quickly, and larger expenses will come out of nowhere and can’t be avoided. You need insurance to guard against a myriad of lawsuits, everything from a person falling outside your front door to an accident during shipment that results in a client not receiving goods on time. You need to plan on licensing fees and all sorts of tax situations you might not have had the pleasure of dealing with before. When you run a company, you’ll find no shortage of places to spend your money.
The hardest part is balancing the need to spend carefully with the desire to throw money at problems. When it comes to insurance, marketing, renting, and equipment leasing, those costs have to be covered for you to keep your business in operation. The other expenses you might consider, things like food delivery and subscription services, should be approached with caution. Blue Apron is a cool service that might reduce the time you and your spouse spend cooking and shopping, but is that really a necessary expense for your business? Are you paying more for food because you need it, or because you like the idea of writing it off? We should all beware of the company credit card, especially when it belongs to our own company. Since business ventures almost always start in the red, we sometimes accept overspending as a necessary evil of starting a small business.
There’s something to be said for having faith in your enterprise and expecting it to succeed; that’s very different than pretending you have a lot more money than you really do. In the areas where it makes sense, try to practice frugality. Don’t buy a fancy scanner because it’s fancy, buy it because you’ll constantly be scanning and sending high-quality images to clients. If you decide you need to wear a suit to the office every day, do your shopping at a suit emporium instead of a boutique tailor who only deals in Armani.
You may have to go into the red to get your company off the ground, but that doesn’t mean all bets are off when it comes to debt. Your spending should be very purposeful, intended to increase business activity and improve the experience for your clients. If you let your goals drive your expenses, you can expect to avoid unnecessary debt and see better returns in a shorter amount of time.
4. Efficiency Is Essential
When you try something for the first time, with no real idea of what to expect, it’s very difficult to make all the right choices. When you start your first business, you shouldn’t be surprised when you make mistakes and are forced to spend some time backtracking. These growing pains are totally normal – it’s how you deal with them that matters. To run a company effectively, you need to rely on established and useful processes. From how you organize your files to who manages communication, established structures keeps you from repeating tasks unnecessarily and wasting time on matters that don’t actually matter. Again, when starting your first business, it’s hard to know how to handle all the issues that arise. As you learn, you need to have systems in place that will help you avoid repeating mistakes.
The more you can streamline, the better your life will be. For example, when you create a new product or service you want people to know about, you have to communicate that. Should you email every potential client individually? Not if you have a lot of clients. Does everyone get the exact same email or do you have customer tiers? Do you stagger the email blasts so you can keep up with demand? Who’s in charge of managing subscriptions after a mass email goes out?
The answers to these questions usually come through experience. However, you don’t get to experience these issues more than once before you need to implement a good strategy. If every product release reveals a new version of the same problem, your model for efficiency needs to be corrected. That’s the trouble with being efficient – it means something different for every person and every company. For some, it’s knocking out a phone call while on the treadmill; for others, a 15-minute nap at
2 pm leads to efficient and effective time management in the afternoon. You will figure out your systems as you go, and you need to be very attentive to what you learn and apply those lessons in the future.
Remember: multitasking and efficiency are not synonymous. If you do three things in one hour instead of doing those same three things in two hours, that might seem like an efficient use of time. However, if the work you do in an hour is subpar and needs to be redone, that’s not effective at all. It’s important to be honest with yourself about the quality of your efforts and how long things really take. You’ll have days when it feels impossible to do your work well, and efficiency gets replaced with a frantic push to get things done. It’s these moments when having strategies and protocol makes a huge difference, reducing that feeling of panic and offering a guiding blueprint for how to accomplish what you need to accomplish.
Doing extra prep work for your business launch, even when you aren’t quite sure what you’re preparing for, always makes things easier. You become more efficient, you find your team members, you avoid arbitrary expenses and you get a better idea of the many things that will be on your plate. None of this work and planning is easy, but it will all pay off once your business is up and running.
Being a business owner has been constantly challenging and endlessly fulfilling for me. One of the most enriching aspects has been the knowledge I’ve gained that can now be passed on to friends, family, clients, and perhaps even one day my children when they start endeavors of their own. If entrepreneurship seems like the path for you, I hope some of this information helps you get started. Stay positive, stay the course, and I’m sure you can accomplish great things.
Make it happen!
Taylor & Megan Kovar
The Money Couple
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