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Starting a Business in 7 simple steps

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Год написания книги
2019
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Starting a Business in 7 simple steps
Alex Ritchie

Natalie Campbell

7 simple steps to a successful start upSo you’ve thought about starting a business, but how do you get started? We’ve broken it down into 7 simple steps.This book includes all the advice you need, from working out the objectives and vision of your company and defining your USPs, to writing a business plan and developing the sales and marketing strategy. Follow our simple steps and learn everything you need for a successful start up. Before long you’ll be watching your hard work pay off and doing something you love.

Contents

Cover (#ua61c3194-cb2a-5b4f-9a94-12efd6775878)

Title Page (#u676efbda-98b6-52ea-9df4-0430d68ec57b)

Step 1 Know your business (#uc0bf6086-1c3a-540a-a551-e6189aa2e50f)

Step 2 Form a business plan (#u86a6b457-0e52-5e16-b0d9-c9b68c42417a)

Step 3 Create your identity (#litres_trial_promo)

Step 4 Sell your product or service (#litres_trial_promo)

Step 5 Set up your office and staff (#litres_trial_promo)

Step 6 Grow your business (#litres_trial_promo)

Step 7 Review your business and progress (#litres_trial_promo)

Keep Reading (#litres_trial_promo)

About the Authors (#litres_trial_promo)

Copyright (#litres_trial_promo)

About the Publisher

Step 1 (#ulink_08d71acd-9100-56ad-a07a-755bcc928f24)

KNOW YOUR BUSINESS (#ulink_08d71acd-9100-56ad-a07a-755bcc928f24)

‘The secret of getting ahead is getting started.’ — Mark Twain (1835–1910), American author

Five ways to succeed

Start a business you believe in.

Use your skills, experience and contacts.

Be ambitious with your vision and aims.

Identify what differentiates your business – your USP.

Understand your market and customers.

Five ways to fail

Underestimate your customer.

Believe you’ll get rich quickly.

Assume you can work all day, every day.

Fail to make the most of your network.

Ignore the tax man.

What kind of business will you run?

So, you know that you want to run your own business. You have a few ideas in mind that get you excited but how do you decide where to start?

Your passion, skills and experience

Take a good look at yourself. Is there something you’re particularly passionate about? Have you always wondered whether you could turn your passion into a business? You may have a talent or skill which would enable you to start a business in a certain field, such as hairdressing or baking. Or you might be a professional, such as a lawyer, dentist or physiotherapist, and have realized that, rather than working for someone else, you now have the skills and experience to set up your own practice. Alternatively, you have identified a problem in your community that you think you might just have a solution for, or maybe you’ve come up with an idea that would make your life or the lives of others much easier. These could be a great starting point for deciding what your business will be. Dame Anita Roddick started up her business, The Body Shop®, after realizing a passion for producing and retailing beauty products that prohibited the use of ingredients tested on animals. Maurice and Charles Saatchi founded the advertising agency Saatchi and Saatchi after gaining years of experience and skills, along with influential contacts in the world of advertising.

Got a few ideas – now what?

If you have one or more ideas that you think you’d like to try, draw up a list of pros and cons. Think about all aspects of the business, such as the number of hours per day you’ll need to work and the cost of any necessary equipment. Running a café will require a different amount of time to setting up as a consultant. Estimate how much money you’re likely to make and what your running costs are likely to be.

List everything you can think of; you may find that some items appear as both a pro and a con. Once you have your list, go through each point, particularly the cons, and think about the implications. Are they small hurdles or big issues? Do you have any solutions?

Idea 1: Artisan bakery

Pros:

I love to bake and experiment with new culinary ideas.

There’s nothing similar in my local area.

It has good profit potential.

I could set up an online offering alongside the shop.

I could sell to consumers as well as to cafés or restaurants.

Cons:

I’d need premises.

I’d need to work long hours to make it work.

There would be high start-up costs.
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