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Starting a Business All-in-One For Dummies
Starting a Business All-in-One For Dummies
Starting a Business All-in-One For Dummies
Ebook1,171 pages18 hours

Starting a Business All-in-One For Dummies

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  • Marketing

  • Entrepreneurship

  • Business Planning

  • Business Management

  • Business Operations

  • Mentorship

  • Business Competition

  • Mentor

  • Hero's Journey

  • Underdog

  • Underdog Story

  • Power of Trust

  • Overcoming Obstacles

  • Self-Improvement

  • American Dream

  • Business

  • Accounting

  • Branding

  • Franchising

  • Customer Loyalty

About this ebook

All the essential information in one place

Starting a Business All-in-One For Dummies, 3rd Edition is a treasure trove of useful information for new and would-be business owners. With content compiled from over ten best-selling For Dummies books, this guide will help with every part of starting your own business—from legal considerations to business plans, bookkeeping, and beyond. Whether you want to open a franchise, turn your crafting hobby into a money-maker, or kick off the next megahit startup, everything you need can be found inside this easy-to-use guide. This book covers the foundations of accounting, marketing, hiring, and achieving success in the first year of business in any industry. You'll find toolkits for doing all the paperwork, plus expert tips for how to make it work, even when the going is rough.

  • Access six books in one, covering the whole process of starting and running a new business
  • Learn how to easily jump the hurdles that many new business owners face
  • Tackle taxes, determine the best business model for you, and create a solid plan
  • Keep the engine running with marketing tips, accounting ideas, and the basics on how to be a manager

This book is perfect for any new or veteran entrepreneur looking to build a business from the ground up.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherWiley
Release dateMar 7, 2022
ISBN9781119868590
Starting a Business All-in-One For Dummies
Author

Eric Tyson

Eric Tyson, MBA, is a financial counselor, syndicated columnist, and the author of bestselling For Dummies books on personal finance, taxes, home buying, and mutual funds including Real Estate Investing For Dummies.

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    Starting a Business All-in-One For Dummies - Eric Tyson

    Introduction

    Welcome to Starting a Business All-in-One For Dummies, 3rd Edition!

    It’s a good bet that you share the popular dream of starting your own business and being your own boss. Increasingly, this dream is becoming more relevant to the challenges of the economy that has emerged. It’s not just a pie-in-the-sky dream anymore; starting a business is a reality that has created opportunity and satisfaction for many people who decided to take the plunge — just as it can for you.

    This book presents and explains a wide variety of information, all aimed at enlightening you on what you need to know and ensuring your success. Whether you need know-how and advice on turning your idea into reality, creating a business plan and business model, finding funding, picking a legal structure, setting up your books, marketing and promoting, or staying in business for the long haul, you’ll find the help you need here. Most of this book is applicable to you whether your business is a local business, a start-up corporation, a franchise, or based out of your home.

    The aim of this book is to provide you with the very best ideas, concepts, and tools for starting and successfully operating your business. Using the info here, you should be able to create exactly the kind of business you’ve always dreamed of and find exactly the level of success you’ve always wanted.

    About This Book

    This book is a generous conglomeration of material from a number of For Dummies business books, carefully selected with an eye toward getting the new business owner/entrepreneur up and running. Your current level of business experience (or lack thereof) doesn’t matter. Don’t worry about not having years of management experience under your belt or about not knowing the difference between a balance sheet and an income statement.

    For a fraction of the amount you’d pay to get an MBA, this book provides you with an easily understandable road map to today’s most innovative and effective business techniques and strategies. The information you find here is firmly grounded in the real world. This book isn’t an abstract collection of theoretical mumbo-jumbo that sounds good but doesn’t work when you put it to the test. Instead, you’ll find only the best information, the best strategies, and the best techniques — the same ones that top business schools teach today.

    This book is also meant to be at least a little fun — running a business doesn’t have to be a bore! In fact, maintaining a sense of humor can be vital when facing the challenges that all new business owners face from time to time.

    A quick note: Sidebars (shaded boxes of text) dig into the details of a given topic, but they aren’t crucial to understanding it. Feel free to read them or skip them. You can pass over the text accompanied by the Technical Stuff icon, too. The text marked with this icon gives some interesting but nonessential information about starting your own business.

    One last thing: Within this book, you may note that some web addresses (URLs) break across two lines of text. If you’re reading this book in print and want to visit one of these web pages, simply key in the web address exactly as it’s noted in the text, pretending as though the line break doesn’t exist. If you’re reading this as an e-book, you’ve got it easy — just tap the web address to be taken directly to the web page.

    Foolish Assumptions

    This book makes a few assumptions about you. For example, you have at least a passing interest in starting your own business. (Duh.) Maybe you’ve already started a business and are looking for tips to refine the techniques you’re already developing. Or perhaps it’s something you think you may want to try and are looking to read up on it before you make your move. In any case, you’ve come to the right place.

    It’s also safe to assume that you can — or believe you can — produce and deliver products or services that people will be willing to pay you for. These products and services can be most anything. You’re limited only by your imagination (and, of course, your bank account, about which you’ll soon be reading quite a bit).

    Finally, this book assumes that you’re eager to scoop up and implement new tips and tricks and that you’re willing to acquire some new perspectives on the topic.

    Icons Used in This Book

    Icons are handy little graphic images that are meant to point out particularly important information about starting your own business. Throughout this book, you find the following icons, conveniently located along the left margins:

    Remember Remember the important points of information that follow this icon, and your business will be all the better for it.

    Technical stuff This one points out slightly advanced material that you can safely skip if you’re in a hurry. But by all means, read these if you want to stretch yourself a bit.

    Tip This icon directs you to tips and shortcuts you can follow to save time and do things the right way the first time.

    Warning Danger! Ignore the advice next to this icon at your own risk!

    Beyond the Book

    In addition to the material in the print or e-book you’re reading right now, this product comes with some access-anywhere goodies on the web. Check out the free Cheat Sheet for answers and helpful tips online. To get this Cheat Sheet, simply go to www.dummies.com and search for "Starting a Business All-in-One For Dummies Cheat Sheet" in the Search box.

    Where to Go from Here

    If you’re new to starting a business, you may want to start at the beginning of this book and work your way through to the end. A wealth of information and practical advice awaits you. Simply turn the page and you’re on your way! But you can start anywhere. If you already own and operate a business and are short of time (and who isn’t?), feel free to use the table of contents and the index to zero in on particular topics of interest to you right now.

    Regardless of how you find your way around this book, the sincere hope of this endeavor is that you’ll enjoy the journey.

    Book 1

    Moving from Idea to Reality

    Contents at a Glance

    Chapter 1: Your Business in Context

    Getting an Overview of Feasibility Analysis

    Understanding Your Industry

    Researching an Industry

    Defining Your Market Niche

    Zeroing In on a Brand-New Product

    Chapter 2: Refining and Defining Your Business Idea

    Recognizing the Power of a Good Idea

    Brainstorming New Business Ideas

    Identifying Business Opportunities

    Putting a Promising Idea to the Test

    Chapter 3: Creating a Business Model

    Identifying Who Needs a Business Model

    Assessing Common Aspects of All Business Models

    Understanding Business Models in Their Simplest Form

    Checking Out Examples of Business Models

    Finding Success with a Business Model

    Chapter 4: Finding Your Target Market

    Gauging the Target Market

    Determining Industry Attractiveness

    Looking for Niche Attractiveness

    Checking Out Customer Attractiveness

    Finding Your Place on the Industry Value Chain

    Chapter 5: Considering a Franchise

    Understanding What a Franchise Is

    Recognizing the Importance of Brands in Franchising

    Identifying the Three Types of Franchising

    Being Aware of the Roles and Goals of Franchisors and Franchisees

    Reviewing Franchise Relationships

    Knowing the Nuances of the Franchisor/Franchisee Relationship

    Considering the Pros and Cons of Franchising

    Chapter 1

    Your Business in Context

    IN THIS CHAPTER

    Bullet Analyzing the feasibility of your business idea

    Bullet Figuring out your industry

    Bullet Doing research on your industry

    Bullet Determining where you fit in

    Bullet Targeting a new product for the market

    This chapter starts at the very beginning, looking at how to step back and see a potential start-up business in the context within which it operates. If you’ve already started your business and are committed to it, or if you know exactly what kind of business you want to run and nothing will change your mind, or if your idea is to start rather small, with a modest idea that doesn’t require finding much funding to get you going, you can skip this chapter. Good luck to you.

    But it could be to your advantage to stick around anyway, because the fact is, not every business is a good idea at the time and place where it is born. You could save yourself some heartache by examining the external factors that will affect your business whether you like it or not. If you choose the right business at the right time and the right place, your chances of success are much higher.

    Every successful business operates inside an environment that affects everything it does. The environment includes the industry in which the business operates, the market the business serves, the state of the economy, and the various people and businesses the business interacts with. Your business doesn’t exist in a vacuum. Now, more than ever before, understanding your industry is a critical component of your business venture’s success.

    If you position your company well inside a growing, healthy industry, you have a better chance of building a successful venture. By contrast, if your business niche is a weak position in a hostile, mature industry, your fledgling business may be doomed. Conducting a feasibility analysis can be a good way to get a clear picture of the landscape. The first section of this chapter provides an overview of this process.

    Getting an Overview of Feasibility Analysis

    A feasibility analysis consists of a series of tests that you conduct as you discover more and more about your opportunity. After each test, you ask yourself whether you still want to go forward. Is there anything here that prevents you from going forward with this business? Feasibility is a process of discovery, and during that process you will probably modify your original concept several times until you get it right. That’s the real value of feasibility — the way that it helps you refine your concept so that you have the highest potential for success when you launch your business.

    Today, you can often go for financing on the strength of a feasibility study alone. Certainly in the case of Internet businesses, speed is of the essence. Many an online business has gotten first-round financing on its proof of concept alone and then done a business plan before going for bigger dollars in the form of venture capital. But even if your business is a traditional one, feasibility can help you avoid big early mistakes.

    Executive summary

    Remember The executive summary is probably the most important piece of a feasibility analysis because, in two pages, it presents the most important and persuasive points from every test you did during your analysis. An effective executive summary captures the reader’s attention immediately with the excitement of the concept. It doesn’t let the reader get away; it draws the reader deeper and deeper into the concept as it proves your claim that the concept is feasible and will be a market success.

    The most important information to emphasize in the executive summary is your proof that customers want what you have to offer. This proof comes from the primary research you do with the customers to find out what they think of your concept and how much demand there is. The other key piece to emphasize is your description of your founding team. Even the greatest ideas can’t happen without a great team, and investors put a lot of stock in a founding team’s expertise and experience.

    Tip For an online business, you may want to prepare what’s called a proof of concept. This is essentially a one-page statement of why your concept will work, emphasizing what you have done to prove that customers will come to your site. That may be in the form of showing hits to your beta site or a list of customers signed up and ready to go when the site is finished. Similarly, if you’re developing a new product, your proof of concept is your market-quality prototype.

    Business concept

    Remember In this first part of the body of your feasibility analysis, you are developing your business concept. Essentially you are answering these questions:

    What is the business?

    Who is the customer?

    What is the value proposition?

    How will the benefit be delivered?

    Make sure you can state your business concept in a few clear, concise, and direct sentences that include all four of the components of the concept. This is what is often called your elevator pitch — a conversation that begins when the elevator door closes and ends when the door opens at your floor. That means you have only a few seconds to capture your listener’s attention, so you better be able to get it all out quickly and confidently. If you’re preparing a feasibility analysis that will be shown to investors, you should state your business concept right up front in the concept section. Then you can elaborate on each point as a follow-up. Here’s an example:

    Rural Power Tools is in the power equipment business, providing contractors and developers solutions to power needs in remote areas through rental equipment outlets.

    As you find out more about your business concept, you’ll also want to consider the various spin-off products and services you may be able to offer.

    Warning One-product businesses often have a more difficult time becoming successful than multi-product/service companies. You don’t want to put all your eggs into one basket if you can help it, and you want to give your customer choices.

    Industry analysis

    Testing whether or not the industry in which you will be operating will support your concept is an important part of any feasibility analysis. Here you look at the status of your industry, identify trends and patterns of change, and look at who the players in terms of competitors may be. Also, don’t forget that one way to find a great opportunity is to study an industry first. More details on how to do an industry analysis are covered in the later section "Researching an Industry."

    Market/customer analysis

    Here you will be testing your customer. Ideally, inside your industry, you find a market segment appropriate to your business. Then you identify a niche that is not being served so that you have an entry strategy with the lowest barriers possible and the highest probability of success. In this part of the analysis, you also look at what your potential customer wants and what the demand for your product/service is. You will also consider a variety of different distribution channels to deliver the benefit to the customer. To find out more, see the later section "Defining Your Market Niche."

    Genesis or founding team analysis

    Investors look very carefully at the founding team because even the best concept won’t happen without a team that can execute it. In this part of the analysis, you want to consider the qualifications, expertise, and experience of your founding team, even if that consists of only yourself. Be aware that today’s business environment is so complex and fast-paced that no one person has all the skills, time, and resources to do everything him- or herself.

    Product/service development analysis

    Whether you’re planning to offer a product or a service or both (and that’s usually the case), it’s going to take some planning. Consider which tasks must be accomplished to prepare the product or service for market, whether that is developing a product from raw materials and going through the patent process or developing a plan for implementing a service concept. Identify these preparatory tasks and figure out a realistic timeline for completion of them. Put that timeline in your analysis.

    Financial analysis

    In this part of the feasibility analysis, you figure out how much money you need to start the business and carry it to a positive cash flow. You also distinguish among the types of money, which will be important in defining your financial strategy. You can find out more about finding funding in Chapter 2 of Book 2.

    Feasibility decision

    After you have gone through all the various tests that comprise the feasibility analysis, you are ready to make a decision about going forward. Of course, throughout the process of doing the tests, you may have decided to stop — because of something you found out from analysis of the industry, market, product/service, and so forth. But if you’re still on the mission, now’s the time to define the conditions under which you go forward.

    Timeline to launch

    You always need to end a feasibility analysis with an action plan so that you’re sure that at least something will happen. Establishing a list of all tasks to be completed and a time frame for completing them will increase the probability that your business will be launched in a timely fashion. The research you have done along the way will help you make wise decisions about the length of time it takes to complete everything and open the doors to your business.

    Understanding Your Industry

    New industries emerge on a regular basis. In fact, with e-commerce holding so much of the attention of young businesspeople today, you may well ask, Is e-commerce an industry? That’s a great question. If you define an industry as a group of related businesses, then all e-commerce businesses have one thing in common: the Internet. But retail businesses, manufacturers, wholesalers, and service companies are all on the Internet, so every member of the value chain is found in one location.

    All retail businesses have retail in common, and all manufacturers have manufacturing in common. Are retail and manufacturing industries as well? Within retail, you find clothing retailers and book retailers among many others. Is clothing an industry? Is publishing an industry? The answer to all these questions is yes.

    Actually, there are layers of industries, starting with the broadest terms and working down to the more specific terms. Take an e-commerce business that almost everyone knows: Amazon.com. If you consider e-commerce to be an industry, a grouping of like businesses, then Amazon is definitely part of that industry. Within e-commerce, Amazon is also a retail business that happens to be using the Internet as its marketing/distribution channel. Within retail, it operates in the publishing, music, toys, and video industries, among others. What this means to you is that when you study Amazon’s industry, you’re really looking at multiple distinct industries, and it’s important to understand what’s going on in each.

    Tip You need to study the industry you have chosen for your feasibility study. Start at the broadest level of industry definition and work your way down to the segment that includes the product or service that you are providing.

    Using a framework of industry structure

    One way to begin to look at the industry you’re interested in is to use a common framework. One useful framework is based on the work of W.H. Starbuck and Michael E. Porter, two experts on organizational strategy. This framework steps you through analyzing your potential industry by assessing the outside forces that work upon it and then assessing the countermeasures that you’ll need to implement against those outside forces. According to Starbuck and Porter, new businesses must be constantly on the lookout for forces that affect them in every area.

    The business environment, especially the entrepreneurial environment, often looks like a battlefield. But for every threat there’s a countermeasure. The first step is to look at what these outside forces really are.

    Carrying capacity, uncertainty, and complexity

    This first environmental factor explains why so many industries today are changing, moving more rapidly, and making it more difficult for businesses to succeed. Carrying capacity refers to the extent to which an industry can accept more businesses. Industries can become oversaturated with too many businesses. When that happens, the capacity of businesses to produce their products and services exceeds the demand for them. Then it becomes increasingly difficult for new businesses to enter the industry and survive.

    Uncertainty refers to the predictability or unpredictability of the industry — stability or instability. Typically volatile and fast-changing, modern technology industries produce more uncertainty. But these same industries often produce more opportunities for new businesses to take advantage of.

    Complexity is about the number and diversity of inputs and outputs in the industry. Complex industries cause businesses to have to deal with more suppliers, customers, and competitors than other industries. Biotechnology and telecommunications are examples of industries with high degrees of complexity in the form of competition and government regulation.

    Recognizing threat to new entrants

    Some industries have barriers to entry that are quite high. These barriers come in many forms. Here are the main ones:

    Economies of scale: These are product volumes that enable established businesses to produce goods more inexpensively than a new business can. A new business can’t compete with the low costs of the entrenched firms. To combat economies of scale, new firms often form alliances that give them more clout.

    Brand loyalty: If you’re a new business, you face competitors that have achieved brand loyalty, which makes it much more difficult to entice customers to your products and services. That’s why it’s so important to find a market niche that you can control — a need in the market that is not being served. That will give you time to establish some brand loyalty of your own. Later in this chapter you find out more about niches, and Chapter 4 in Book 5 covers branding in detail.

    High capital requirements: In some industries, you encounter high costs for the advertising, R&D (research and development), and plants and equipment you need to compete with established firms. Again, new companies often overcome this barrier by outsourcing expensive functions to other firms.

    Buyer switching costs: Buyers don’t generally like to switch from one supplier to another unless there’s a good reason to do so. That’s why after a person invests the time to learn and use the Windows environment, for example, they’re reluctant to start all over with a different platform. Entrepreneurs must match a need that isn’t being met with the current product on the market to get the customer to switch.

    Access to distribution channels: Every industry has established methods for getting products to customers. New companies must have access to those distribution channels if they’re going to succeed. The one exception is where the new business finds a new method of delivering a product or service that the customer accepts — for example, the Internet.

    Proprietary factors: Established companies may own technology or a location that gives them a competitive advantage over new companies. However, new ventures have often entered industries with their own proprietary factors that enable them to enjoy a relatively competition-free environment for a brief time.

    Government regulations: In some industries, a long and expensive governmental process, such as FDA approval for foods and drugs, can be prohibitive for a new business. That’s why many new ventures form strategic alliances with larger companies to help support the costs along the way.

    Industry hostility: In some industries, rival companies make it difficult for a new business to enter. Because they typically are mature companies with many resources, they can afford to do what it takes to push the new entrant out. Again, finding that niche in the market where you’re giving the customer what your competitors are not helps your company survive, even in a hostile industry.

    Identifying threat from substitute products/services

    Your competition comes not only from companies that deal in the same products and services that you do, but also from companies that have substitute products. These products accomplish the same function but use a different method. For example, restaurants compete with other restaurants for consumer dollars, but they also compete with other forms of entertainment that include food. You could go out to dinner at a restaurant, take in a movie, and stop off at a pub for a nightcap. But there are movie theaters now where you can do all three — eat, watch a movie, and enjoy a drink.

    Spotting threat from buyers’ bargaining power

    Buyers have the power to force down prices in the industry when they’re able to buy in volume. Established companies, if they are worth their salt, have this kind of buying power. New entrants can’t purchase at volume rates; therefore, they have to charge customers more. Consequently, it’s more difficult for them to compete.

    Distinguishing threat from suppliers’ bargaining power

    In some industries, suppliers have the power to raise prices or change the quality of products that they supply to manufacturers or distributors. That’s particularly true where there are few suppliers relative to the size of the industry and they are the primary source of materials in the industry. Don’t forget that labor is also a source of supply, and in some industries such as software, highly skilled labor is in short supply; therefore the price goes up.

    Being aware of rivalry among existing firms

    Highly competitive industries force prices down and profits as well. That’s when you see price wars, the kind you find in the airline industry. One company lowers its prices and others quickly follow. This kind of strategy hurts everyone in the industry and makes it nearly impossible for a new entrant to compete on price. Instead, savvy new businesses find an unserved niche in the market where they don’t have to compete on price.

    Deciding on an entry strategy

    The structure of your industry will largely determine how you enter it. Failing to consider the structure of your industry can mean that you spend a lot of time and money only to find that you have chosen the wrong entry strategy. By then, you may have lost your window of opportunity. For the most part, new ventures have three broad options as entry strategies:

    Differentiation: With a differentiation strategy, you attempt to distinguish your company from others in the industry through product/process innovation, a unique marketing or distribution strategy, or through branding. If you’re able to gain customer loyalty through your differentiation strategy, you’ll succeed in making your product or service less sensitive to price because customers will perceive the inherent value of dealing with your company.

    Niche strategy: The niche strategy is perhaps the most popular strategy for new ventures. It involves identifying and creating a place in the market where no one else is — serving a need that no one else is serving. This niche gives you space and time to compete without going head to head with the established players in the industry. It lets you own a piece of the market where you can establish the standards and create your brand.

    Cost superiority: Being the low-cost leader is typically difficult for a new venture because it relies heavily on volume sales and low-cost production. A new venture can take advantage of providing the lowest-cost products and services when it’s part of an emerging industry where everyone shares the same disadvantage.

    Researching an Industry

    Getting to understand your industry inside and out is critical to developing any business strategies you may have. Yes, it’s a lot of work, but it will pay off many times over.

    Tip Today, it’s much easier than it used to be to research an industry because of all the sources available online. Of course, not everything posted on a website is necessarily true or from a creditable source. Anyone can easily put up a website and tout that they’re an expert in whatever, and if you don’t do any checking, you may end up relying on an unreliable source. So, how do you check on your sources? Here are some things you can do:

    Ask yourself whether the site or author is a recognized expert in the field.

    Ask people who are familiar with the industry you’re researching whether they’ve ever heard of that site or that person.

    Compare what that site or person has said with what others are saying. If you find a number of sources that seem to agree, you’re probably okay. Of course, don’t assume that just because many people are saying something, it’s necessarily true — that’s how rumors get started.

    Remember By the way, when you present information to potential lenders or funders that you’ve gathered from someone else’s research in your feasibility study (covered earlier in this chapter) or business plan (see Chapter 1 in Book 2), you need to give credit to that person with a full citation of the title, author, source, date, and page. Things become a bit trickier with websites because sometimes all they give is the URL. Great sites like Inc. (www.inc.com/) and Bloomberg Businessweek (www.bloomberg.com/businessweek) always attribute articles to their authors and the hard copy source. Be wary of sites that don’t do this. Always be aware that not all sites archive information, so what you find one week may be gone the next. That’s why it’s important to have a citation that includes more than just the URL. Consult a website like www.easybib.com for help on citing resources.

    Tip When it’s time to analyze your industry, you’ll find a wealth of information out there. One good place to start is with the Standard Industrial Classification Code List at www.sec.gov/info/edgar/siccodes.htm. This site lets you search for your industry and industry segment and then gives you the 4-digit SIC code that represents that portion of the industry. This code can prove useful for finding information at many sites you may choose.

    Checking out the status of your industry

    Remember As you begin to do your research, you’ll probably find yourself overwhelmed with data and unsure which is important and which isn’t. Here’s a list of questions to guide you in defining the critical information about your industry:

    Is the industry growing? Growth can be measured in many ways: number of employees, revenues, units produced, and number of new companies entering the industry.

    Who are the major competitors? You want to understand which companies dominate the industry, what their strategies are, and how your business is differentiated from them.

    Where are the opportunities in the industry? In some industries, new products and services provide more opportunity, whereas in others, an innovative marketing and distribution strategy will win the game.

    What are the trends and patterns of change in your industry? You want to look backward and forward to study what has happened over time in your industry to see if it foreshadows what will happen in the future. You also want to see what the industry prognosticators are saying about the future of the industry. But the best way to find out about the future of your industry is to get close to the new technology that is in the works yet may not hit the marketplace for five years.

    What is the status of new technology and R&D spending? Does your industry adopt new technology quickly? Is your industry technology-based or driven by new technology? If you look at how much the major firms are spending on research and development of new technologies, you’ll get a pretty good idea of how important technology is to your industry. You’ll also find out how rapid the product development cycle is, which tells you how fast you’ll have to be to compete.

    Are there young and successful companies in the industry? If you see no new companies being formed in your industry, it’s a pretty good bet that it’s a mature industry with dominant players. That doesn’t automatically preclude your entry into the industry, but it does make it much more expensive and difficult.

    Are there any threats to the industry? Is there anything on the horizon that you or others can see that makes any part of your industry obsolete? Certainly, if you were in the mechanical office equipment industry in the early 1980s, you should have seen the writing on the wall with the introduction and mass acceptance of the personal computer.

    What are the typical gross profit margins in the industry? The gross profit margin (or gross margin) tells you how much room you have to make mistakes. Gross margin is the gross profit (revenues minus cost of goods sold) as a percentage of sales. If your industry has margins of 2 percent, like the grocery industry has (sometimes even less), you have little room for error, because 98 percent of what you receive in revenues goes to pay your direct costs of production. You only have 2 percent left to pay overhead. On the other hand, in some industries gross margins run at 70 percent or more, so you end up with a lot more capital to expend on overhead and profit.

    Competitive intelligence: Checking out the competition

    One of the most difficult tasks you’ll face is finding information about your competitors. Not the obvious things that you can easily find by going to a competitor’s physical site or website (although of course you should do those things), but the really important stuff that can affect what you do with your business concept. Things like how much competitors spend on customer service, what their profit margins are, how many customers they have, what their growth strategies are, and so forth.

    If you’re in competition with private companies (which is true most of the time), your task is that much more difficult because private companies don’t have to disclose the kinds of information that public companies do.

    Here’s some of the information you may want to collect on your competitors:

    The management style of the company

    Current market strategies — also what they’ve done in the past because history tends to repeat itself

    The unique features and benefits of the products and services they offer

    Their pricing strategy

    Their customer mix

    Their promotional mix

    With a concerted effort and a plan in hand, you can find out a lot about the companies you’ll be competing against. This section provides a step-by-step strategy for attacking the challenge of competitive intelligence.

    Pound the pavement

    If your competition has bricks-and-mortar sites, visit them and observe what goes on. What kinds of customers frequent their sites? What do they buy, and how much do they buy? What is the appearance of the site? How would you evaluate the location? Gather as much information as you can through observation and talking to customers and employees.

    Buy your competitors’ products

    Buying your competitors’ products helps you find out more about how your competition treats its customers and how good its products and services are. If you think that it sounds strange to buy your competitors’ products, just remember, as soon as yours are in the marketplace, your competitors will buy them.

    Rev up the search engines

    Go online and hit the search engines. Just type in the names of the companies you’re interested in and see what comes up. True, this isn’t the most effective way to search, but it’s a start, and you never know what you’ll pull up that you otherwise may not have found.

    Tip Try to go beyond Google. In addition to Google (www.google.com), you might try Bing (www.bing.com), Yahoo! (www.yahoo.com), DuckDuckGo (www.duckduckgo.com), and Ask (www.ask.com). And be sure to check out your competition’s social media activity on sites like Facebook (www.facebook.com), Pinterest (www.pinterest.com), Instagram (www.instagram.com), TikTok (www.tiktok.com), and Twitter (www.twitter.com). Finally, see whether anyone is saying anything about your competitors on the customer review site Yelp (www.yelp.com).

    Check information on public companies

    Tip In most industries, public companies are the most established companies and often the dominant players, so check them out. They can also serve as benchmarks for best practices in the industry. There are a host of online resources related to public companies. Here are two to get you started:

    D&B Hoovers (www.hoovers.com): This source provides detailed profiles of public companies. Visit the site to find out about current pricing.

    U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (www.sec.gov): This site contains the SEC’s EDGAR (Electronic Data Gathering, Analysis, and Retrieval) database about companies. It’s not terribly user friendly but has great information. Try Free Edgar, www.freeedgar.com, which is a good place to research public companies and those that have filed to go public.

    Use online media

    Here are some great online sources that you may want to check out:

    Inc. (www.inc.com): This database of the fastest-growing private companies in the U.S. contains information you won’t find elsewhere on revenue, profit-and-loss percentages, numbers of employees, and so forth for the past eight years.

    Fuld + Company (www.fuld.com): This site gives you advice on how to seek competitive intelligence and has many links to information on specific industries.

    ProfNet (www.profnet.com): This site provides a direct link to experts at universities, colleges, corporations, and national laboratories. You may be able to find an expert in your industry and contact that person. Check the site for current pricing.

    ProQuest eLibrary (www.elibrary.com): This is a great site if you’re looking for articles, reference works, and news wires. You can request a free trial; check www.proquest.com/ for current pricing. If you’re near a local university, you may be able to access it from the university’s library computers.

    Look for data at government websites

    You can find an extensive network of government sites with mostly free information on economic news, export information, legislative trends, and so forth. You may want to go directly to often-used sites like the following:

    U.S. Department of Commerce (www.commerce.gov): Here you’ll find everything you ever wanted to know about the U.S. economy.

    U.S. Census Bureau (www.census.gov): This site is the home of the stats based on the census taken every ten years. The amount of information available here is very impressive.

    Bureau of Labor Statistics (www.bls.gov): This is another site full of information on the economy, in particular, the labor market.

    Go off-line for more research

    The Internet isn’t the only place you can find important information. Here are two off-line options you ought to consider:

    Industry trade associations: Virtually every industry has its own trade association with a corresponding journal or magazine. Trade associations usually track what’s going on in their industries, so they’re a wealth of information. If you’re serious about starting a business in your particular industry, you may want to join a trade association, so you’ll have access to inside information.

    Network, network, network: Take every opportunity to talk with people in the industry. They’re on the front lines on a daily basis, and they can give you information that is probably more current than what you’ll find in the media or online.

    Defining Your Market Niche

    Markets are groups of customers inside an industry. Take a look at Figure 1-1 and you can see that in conducting your feasibility analysis (covered earlier in this chapter), you work your way down from the broad industry to the narrower market niche.

    Schematic illustration of finding your niche.

    © John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

    FIGURE 1-1: Finding your niche.

    Narrowing your market

    Within each broad market are segments. For example, the broad market of people who buy books contains segments of customers for

    Travel books (or any other broad category of books)

    Kids’ books

    Books appealing to seniors

    Audiobooks

    Within a market segment, you can find niches — specific needs that perhaps aren’t being served — such as

    Travel books geared toward people with disabilities

    Kids’ books that teach children a new language

    Books that teach seniors how to deal with technology

    Audiobooks that provide current journal articles to professionals

    Market niches provide a place for new businesses to enter a market and gain a foothold before bigger companies take notice and begin to compete. Having a niche all to yourself gives you a quiet period during which you alone serve a need of the customer that otherwise is not being met. As a result, you get to set the standards for the niche. In short, you’re the market leader.

    Remember As you zero in on your market, take care that the niche you ultimately choose is big enough to allow your business to make money. The niche you select must have enough customers willing to buy your product from you, enabling you to pay your expenses and turn a profit.

    Defining your target market is about identifying the primary customer for your products or services — the customer most likely to purchase from you. You want to identify a target market because creating customer awareness of a new product or service is time-consuming and costly, requiring lots of marketing dollars — dollars that few start-ups have at their disposal. So, instead of using a shotgun approach and trying to bag a broad market, aiming at the specific customers who are likely to purchase from you is far more effective. More important still, going to the customer who’s easiest to sell to helps you gain a foothold quickly and start to build brand recognition, which makes selling to other potential customers easier.

    Your first definition of a target customer will probably be fairly loose — an estimate. For example, suppose you target customers are professional women. That’s a fairly broad estimate. But as you conduct market research, you come to know your primary customer well. In this example, the picture may emerge of a woman in law, medicine, or business, between 35 and 55 years of age, married, with children.

    The basic questions to answer about your potential customers are these:

    What are their demographics: Age, education, ethnicity, income level?

    What are their buying habits? What do they buy? When? How?

    How do customers hear about your products and services? Do your customers buy based on TV ads, magazines, social media, web advertising, word-of-mouth, referrals?

    How can your new business meet customers’ needs? What customer need is your product now meeting?

    Where do you find the answers to these important questions? Your market research — actually talking with potential customers — provides answers.

    Remember Not all customers are individuals; many are other businesses. In fact, the greatest dollar volume of transactions conducted on the Internet today is business-to-business. If a distributor, wholesaler, retail store, or manufacturer is paying you, your customer is a business, not an individual consumer. Businesses as customers can be described in pretty much the same way that you describe a person. Businesses come in a variety of sizes and revenue levels. Like consumers, they also have buying cycles, tastes, and preferences.

    Don’t forget that if your customer is another business, that business may not be the actual end user of your product or service. So then you also have an end user to deal with. The end user is the ultimate consumer, the person who uses the product or service. For example, here is a typical channel for distributing a product:

    Manufacturer > Distributor > Retailer > Consumer

    If that distribution channel is filled with your products — refrigerators, for example — who is your customer? It’s the distributor who purchases the fridge from you to distribute to retailers. The retailer, in turn, is the distributor’s customer. The consumer, who actually uses the fridge, is the retailer’s customer and your end user. (The easiest way to identify the customer is to find out who pays you — follow the money.)

    Remember Just because the end users aren’t technically your customers doesn’t mean that you can ignore them. You need to know as much about the end user as you do about the customer, because you must convince the distributor that a market for the product exists and that the end user will buy enough product so that the distributor and retailer can make a profit. Thus, you must conduct the same kind of research on the end user that you do on the distributor.

    Developing a niche strategy

    One primary reason to define and analyze a target market is to find a way into the market so that you have a chance to compete. If you enter a market without a strategy, you’re setting yourself up for failure. You are the new kid on the block. If customers can’t distinguish you from your competitors, they’re not likely to buy from you. People generally prefer to deal with someone they know.

    Niche strategy is probably the premier strategy for entrepreneurs because it yields the greatest amount of control. Creating a niche that no one else is serving is the key. That way, you become the leader and can set the standards for those who follow. Niche strategy is important because, as the sole occupant of the niche, you can establish your business in a relatively safe environment (the quiet period) before you develop any direct competitors. Fending off competitors takes a lot of marketing dollars, and when you’re a start-up company, you have numerous better uses for your limited resources.

    How do you find a niche that no one else has found? By talking to customers. The target market from which your business opportunity comes also holds the keys to your entry strategy. Your potential customers tell you what’s missing in your competitors’ products and services. They also tell you what they need. Fulfilling that unmet need is your entry strategy.

    Zeroing In on a Brand-New Product

    Many entrepreneurs would like to deal in products, but they’re not quite sure how to get started. Of course, you could import products from other countries or buy your products from domestic manufacturers. But if you like the idea of manufacturing and distributing a brand-new technology or other type of product, then you have three choices: invent something, team up with an inventor, or license an invention.

    Becoming an inventor

    If you’re the kind of person who likes to tinker and play around with new ideas that might become inventions, then your role might be to invent a new product. Most entrepreneurs and start-up businesspeople, however, are not inventors — not because they don’t have the ability to invent, but because their focus is elsewhere.

    The mindsets of businesspeople and inventors tend to be quite different, and it’s unusual to find both in the same person. Not only are the mindsets different, but the skills required by each are very different. In general, pure inventor types aren’t interested in the commercial side of things. They invent for the love of invention. Unless an entrepreneur comes along and points out an opportunity, many inventors never see their inventions reach the marketplace.

    Remember Many types of inventors — engineers, scientists, and so forth — would rather spend their time in the laboratory than consider business issues like markets and customers. You have to ask yourself what role feels right to you and do that. You can always find the other talents in someone else.

    Teaming up with an inventor

    Entrepreneurs often team up with inventors to commercialize a new product. Often the opportunity to pair up with an inventor comes out of the industry in which you’re working. You hear about someone who’s working on something; you investigate and discover an interesting invention.

    Don’t hesitate to approach an inventor, but keep a couple of important things in mind:

    Inventors are paranoid about their inventions. They’re sure that someone is out to steal their ideas.

    Inventors typically aren’t business oriented and don’t want to become business people. Their love is inventing, so don’t expect them to be partners in a business sense.

    Tip Be sure your attorney structures a beneficial arrangement with your inventor that doesn’t hamstring your efforts to commercialize the invention. You are each bringing something very important to the mix, so be sure you can work together well. For much more on the details of inventing, check out Inventing For Dummies by Pamela Riddle Bird and Forrest M. Bird (John Wiley & Sons, Inc.).

    Licensing an invention

    Companies, universities, the government, and independent inventors are all looking for entrepreneurs to commercialize their inventions. You gain access to these inventions through a vehicle known as licensing. Licensing grants you the right to use the invention in an agreed-upon way for an agreed-upon time period. In return, you agree to pay a royalty to the inventor, usually based on sales of the product that results from the invention.

    Tip The government owns many core technologies developed for the military and the aerospace program, among others. You can license these core technologies and create a new application for use in a different industry. Alternatively, visit the technology licensing office of most major research universities and you’ll find more opportunities. For example, the Stanford University Office of Technology Licensing (http://otl.stanford.edu) evaluates, markets, and licenses technology owned by Stanford University. Universities are a gold mine of new technology you can tap into.

    Chapter 2

    Refining and Defining Your Business Idea

    IN THIS CHAPTER

    Bullet Recognizing why a good idea can be the engine of success

    Bullet Brainstorming ideas for a new business

    Bullet Identifying new business opportunities

    Bullet Testing a promising idea

    Almost all successful businesses begin with a good idea. The idea may be based on a brand new product or service. Or, it may introduce an existing product or service into a new niche. Great business ideas are born when someone figures out a better way to make something or to provide customers what they need or want. Successful business ideas don’t have to be world-shaking. But no matter how modest or extensive they are, they have to appeal to customers in order to succeed.

    Writing a business plan is one of the most important steps in shaping an idea and putting it to its first test (see Chapter 1 in Book 2 for details). The process of writing a business plan can help you identify both the strengths and weaknesses of your idea. Doing so can enable you to tweak your idea to make it as strong as possible. Count on the following pages to fuel your idea-generating process with tips and tools for taking stock of your personal resources, asking others for advice, brainstorming ideas alone or in a group, putting your possibilities through a make-it-or-break-it reality check, and, finally, weighing the likelihood that investors, customers, and colleagues will want to buy into your business proposition.

    Recognizing the Power of a Good Idea

    Facebook started with a good idea. So did Whole Foods. Toyota had a pretty good idea when it developed a hybrid engine. Apple did too, when the company decided to build a touch screen device big enough to read, draw, and write on. Today, Tesla is an engine of innovative ideas. So is Google. Even simple ideas — like creating a website where people with accommodations to rent connect with people who want to rent them — can grow into billion-dollar businesses.

    Good ideas aren’t limited to major companies. The young couple who decides to open a doggy day care in a town where a lot of people commute to work may have a great idea, too. Or, there’s the home brewer who realizes that a small-town ale can make it big. Even the local caterer who decides to take their business on the road in the form of a fleet of food trucks may be able to turn that idea into profit.

    Remember When coming up with a good business idea, keep these five key characteristics in mind:

    A good business idea meets a real need or desire.

    It offers something new (or at least a little different).

    It’s grounded in reality, not wishful thinking.

    It can generate money.

    It’s something you want to do.

    Read on to begin the process of developing and fine-tuning your business idea to make sure it can stand up to the harsh realities of the marketplace.

    Knowing the difference between passion and profitability

    Plenty of profitable businesses owe their success to a personal passion. A baker who starts a successful bakery, a musician who opens a recording studio, a teacher who starts a nonprofit tutoring service all have passion in common. That’s great. Excitement and confidence are crucial to making a business a success.

    So is a good dose of reality.

    Warning Being excited about what you want to do is no guarantee of success. Businesses that begin with passionate optimism sometimes go belly-up. Personal passion can carry you away, blinding you to the hard realities that any business faces in making it in today’s highly competitive world. The bottom line of all for-profit businesses is ultimately — you guessed it — profit. If you’re hoping to turn a personal passion into a successful business, you need to ask yourself a simple question: Can it make a profit?

    The question may be simple. Answering it isn’t always so easy.

    Tip If you’re sitting down to write a business plan because you already have a knock-’em-dead idea, now’s the good time to give it a test run. Use the following questions:

    Does the idea meet a real need or desire?

    What’s new or different about the idea?

    Who are your customers likely to be?

    What do you offer your customers that no one else does?

    How much are they willing to pay?

    Who are your competitors?

    What’s the best thing about the idea?

    What’s the biggest weakness?

    What will be the biggest challenge you face in turning your idea into a reality?

    How long will it take to get a business up and running?

    Is this idea scalable, meaning can you provide more to meet demand, and if so, how?

    Is this something you really want to do?

    Turning a side gig into a business

    Lots of people have their day jobs — you know, the work that pays the rent or mortgage payment — and then they have the thing they really like to do, whether it’s making pottery, volunteering at the animal shelter, or collecting dolls. And most of them would love nothing more than turning their side interests into a profit-making business.

    Good for them, but it takes more than passion to start a successful business. Most successful entrepreneurs will tell you that they were surprised to discover what goes into making a business work. Often, the surprise is how little they knew about the nuts and bolts of operating a business. Consider the example of a woman who developed her baking skills at home and then started a highly successful northern California bakery. She knew the craft of baking. She knew the equipment she needed to go from home baking to commercial baking. What she wasn’t prepared for was managing a staff. In the first year, personnel problems plagued her bakery and almost scuttled her business.

    Tip If you’re thinking of turning something you love to do into a business, take time to ask yourself some basic but important questions. You can use the following questions to begin the process of exploring what you need to turn passion into profitability:

    What is your product or service? (Be as specific as possible.)

    How will you make money? (Be as specific and creative as possible.)

    How will you reach your customers or clients?

    Where will you conduct your business?

    Will you need employees? How many? What jobs will they do?

    What kinds of equipment will you need to get started?

    How much money will you need to get up and running?

    What are your monthly operating expenses likely to be?

    How much money will you need to earn each month to be successful?

    What are your biggest strengths to start this business?

    What are your greatest weaknesses?

    What can you do to turn those weaknesses into strengths (or at least work around them)?

    Who are your competitors? What are their strengths and weaknesses?

    What are the potential risks a business like this faces? How can you minimize the risks?

    Planning ahead: Great ideas take time

    Most ideas require time to take off. A musician who decides to go professional needs to find gigs (and probably music students). An accountant who decides to leave their company and start their own business needs to set up an office and line up clients. An inventor with the next big thing needs to arrange for manufacturing, distribution, and marketing. They all take time. And while the clock ticks, cash goes out — but no or few revenues come in.

    Remember The more realistic you are about how much time your idea will take and how much you’ll need to spend before revenue kicks in, the better prepared you’ll be. Looking ahead, especially with a new venture, requires a fair amount of guesswork, but be as realistic as possible. Detail what you’re working to achieve and all the major steps you’ll need to take, often referred to as mileposts you’ll need to pass, in order to succeed. Then establish a timeline for when you’ll be able to reach each one. The result? A diagram of the runway for your business or business idea.

    Checking out the competition

    Tip The saying goes that there’s nothing new under the sun. It also applies to most new businesses. Unless it’s a totally new and disruptive innovation, chances are a similar business to the one you’re planning to launch already exists. One easy way to test your new idea is to check out how other people doing roughly the same thing are faring. In some cases, all you have to do is ask. Unless people perceive you as a competitive threat, they’re usually willing to share details about their businesses. If not, you can uncover information in other ways, such as the following:

    Check websites of similar businesses for information about products and services, including pricing. If appropriate, peruse online customer reviews of your competitors, which can provide invaluable tips on how you can do better.

    Search online for business articles about the kind of business you’re planning. Be sure to check publication dates because business reports can go quickly out of date. If you don’t find what you need online, head to your local library to browse the periodical shelves.

    Investigate how similar businesses present and market their goods or services. If you’re starting a local business, check out your competitors’ presence in local media and online. If you’re going after a national or international market, analyze how other businesses in your arena use major media, their own websites, social media, business partnerships, and collaborations to present their offerings.

    Check out local business organizations. Most cities and even small towns have Chambers of Commerce and economic development organizations with websites you can study. If you don’t find what you need there, make a visit to the bricks-and-mortar office to talk to a representative about your business sector, its major players, its current conditions, and its untapped opportunities.

    Talk to prospective customers. If you’re starting a local business, ask friends and family what they consider important as prospective customers and what wants or needs aren’t being addressed. If you’re planning a retail business, visit similar stores and observe how customers move through the aisles and what they do and don’t buy.

    Brainstorming New Business Ideas

    Not all new businesses start with an idea. Some begin with a group of talented people in search of an idea. Others begin when an individual decides to join the self-employed ranks and begin to think, But what will I do?

    Plenty of would-be entrepreneurs have caught themselves thinking, Why didn’t I think of that? or How in the world did they come up with that idea? Great ideas may look lucky or random, but when you look a little closer, you’re likely to find that considerable time and effort went into making them happen. Those visionaries everyone admires were able to foresee market needs and respond with precisely matched product and service solutions.

    Remember Brainstorming isn’t just for when you’re starting out. Even after you’re off and running, you must constantly stay on the lookout for ways to revitalize existing offerings or add new products or services to stay ahead of the competition. That’s especially true these days, with the accelerating pace of

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