Choosing A Business Opportunity - Starting Your Own Business
There are many good reasons why this can be a wise move. Being
your own boss means you can set your own hours. This can be very
important if you have small children, or simply want to spend
more time at home. Working from home can also save valuable
time, if the alternative is spending two or three hours every
day commuting back and forth to your work place. And of course,
working for yourself also gives you the opportunity to make a
whole lot more money.
In other words, being your own boss gives you that valuable
commodity called freedom. It sets you free from the limitations
of being someone else's paid employee, and in return makes you
responsible for your own future. As a self-employed entrepreneur
you are free to set your own hours, establish your own work
habits, choose what work you will do or will not do, create your
own products, drum up your own customers, and do what you have
to do to make those customers happy.
And perhaps most importantly, when you are self-employed you are
free to set your own prices and make as much or as little income
as you are able. You will not have to answer to anyone other
than yourself, your suppliers, and of course, the ever-present
taxman, after you become successful.
**How to get started -- Two Alternatives**
There are two obvious ways you can go about starting your own
business. The first way is to quit your day job and launch full
bore into your new business. We'll call this the "All or Nothing
Approach". The second way is to continue on with your current
employment and develop a business on the side, in your spare
time. We'll call this the "Spare Time Approach".
Depending on your point of view, taking the All or Nothing
Approach can be either an act of bravery or just plain
recklessness. Unless you are independently wealthy, planning and
timing are very important with this approach. That's because
once you leave your previous employment your source of income
will be gone and you will have a limited amount of time to make
your business work. It is "sink or swim". And you can sink
pretty quickly without a source of income.
So that means you should plan the changeover to self-employment
very carefully. Every situation will be different. An
acquantance of mine was able to step from his quasi-government
job into a private consulting business because he spent the last
few months of his employment developing leads and contacts
within his industry. When he went on his own he had customers
waiting in the wings and was able to more than double his income
in his very first year.
But most of us are not so lucky. We do not have the quality
leads or the specialized skills. Nor do most of us have the
opportunity to use our present employment to build a launching
pad of potential customers before we take off into the wild blue
yonder of self-employment. Most of us are starting from scratch
with a few vague ideas, a questionable set of yet-to-be-defined
skills, and severly limited income. So our venture into
self-employment had better take off within a few months or we're
likely to crash and burn.
That is why the Spare Time Approach is best for most new
self-employed entrepreneurs. The Spare Time Approach lets you
test your ideas, develop your skills, and build your business
slowly. If you are unsure about the products or services you
intend to sell, the Spare Time Approach lets you try out
different product lines and see how well they fit in with your
overall objectives. Often new entrepreneurs find that their
first ideas are not realistic, or there is no market for the
services they want to provide. Or they find they cannot charge
enough to make any money providing the products or services they
have chosen.
**Choose your product carefully**
Like all new entrepreneurs, whether you take the "all or nothing
approach" or the "spare time approach" you should be very
tight-fisted with your limited resources. That means do not
invest any serious money in a product or business idea until you
have checked it out thoroughly. The best way to "check it out"
is to:
- Talk to people who are already selling the product or service.
- Establish the credibility of the person or company providing
the product or service.
- Make sure the company provides on-going support for their
product(s).
- Make sure there are no hidden or unexpected costs (such as
franchise fees) that will eat away your profits.
This applies whether you are looking at an online product such
as an MLM or affiliate scheme, or a more traditional product or
service aimed only at local customers.
For example, an associate of mine produces Business Card
Displays. The idea behind this product is that it provides new
entrepreneurs the opportunity to set up an advertising service
for local businesses. With this product, the entrepreneur
creates a network of displays placed in high traffic retail
outlets like grocery stores, hair salons, and bowling alleys.
Then local advertisers can place their business cards in one of
the compartments in the displays across the network. If someone
browsing one of the displays sees a service they are interested
in, they just take a card for future reference.
Sure, it's not everybody's cup of tea. But for someone willing
to put in a few months of hard work at the beginning, it is a
pretty easy way to create a business that will return a handsome
income for years to come.
And this manufacturer stands behind his product. He can show you
examples of successful advertising networks where his displays
are used. He will also provide testimonials and contact
information from real people whom you can ask how well the
product is working for them. And to top it off, he uses the
product himself in a network of over 40 displays, and can
provide hands-on information about how it actually works in a
real-life situations.
This is pretty rare in the world of "business opportunities".
Many are run by "take the money and run" types who make wildly
exaggerated claims about how successful you can be. But in many
cases they have never actually made the idea work for
themselves.
As any successful entrepreneur will tell you, your choice of
products is crucial to your success or failure. Many products
are simply bogus ideas with no hope of working. And many others
are designed to produce maximum profits for their creators, and
minimum profits for people like you and me who sell them. So no
matter how hard you work, or how committed you are to being
successful, if you choose the wrong product you will be
operating with a millstone around your neck.
About the author:
Get more information about business opportunities -
http://www.freecard.com/business-opportunity.html ==> Read more
about making money with your own business ==>
http://www.freecard.com/making-money.html ==> Rick Hendershot is
a writer and online publisher. For online promotional ideas see
http://www.small-business-online.com