| |
When to Expand Your Business
|
|
|
|
|
Knowing when to expand your home based business or gift
basket business.
|

If you're operating a small business as a sole
proprietor, in the early stages of your business - it's
unlikely you'll be in a financial position to hire
employees. Be prepared to devote long hours to your
business, as you'll be wearing dozens of hats. |
Owning a Home Business and Deciding
when it's Time to Expand
|
|
You'll
be responsible for every aspect of your business:
- Marketing and promotion
- Assembly
- Purchasing
- Processing orders by phone, fax and giving our
price quotes
- Reviewing delivered goods
- Shipping and delivery of your product
- Managing the office
- Banking duties
- Filing and keeping your records in order
- Maintain inventory and processing re-orders
It's important to decide where you want your
business to be in one year, three years and five years.
Is it your goal to operate this business without
employees? Is it your goal to grow and become a large
business with many employees?Many business owners
have no desire to expand to the point of requiring
employees. However, there's only so much business volume
one person can handle. It's best to have a plan for when
employees may be needed.
If you decide to run your business alone, be
prepared for times during the year when volume
orders will make it physically impossible to operate
effectively by yourself. Rather than hiring full
time employees, there are other options for finding
part time help. Check with your local business
college or technical training schools. Many have a
list of students who are glad to work for minimum
wage to gain some business experience. Another
option is to contact your local urban society. You
could offer an internship. With these programs, you
don't pay wages, just provide training.
The laws vary by state, as to the maximum amount of
wages and/or hours a casual laborer can incur before
you must register them as an employee and deduct
taxes.
|
|
|
Employees vs. Contractors --
What's The Difference?
|
|
Whether a person is an independent contractor or an
employee generally depends on the amount of control
exercised by the employer over the work being done.
Dictating how a job is to be done or limiting the
actions of the worker may establish an
employer-employee relationship.
An independent contractor:
- Operates under a business name
- Has her own employees
- Maintains a separate business checking account
- Advertises her business's services
- Invoices for work done
- Has more than one client
- Has own tools and sets own hours
- Keeps business records
An employee:
- Performs duties dictated or controlled by others
- Is given training for work to be done
- Works for only one employer
The Internal Revenue Service relies on the facts in
each case. It doesn't recognize the validity of any
written agreement between the parties. Anyone can
get a ruling from the IRS by completing Form SS-8.
For most small businesses, independent contractors
should not be considered as substitutes for regular
employees. Government agencies generally find that
people in the work force are legally employees for
tax purposes and the cost of being wrong, remitting
unpaid payroll taxes, interest and penalties can be
very high.
|
|
|
Staying Small?
|
|
As your sales volume increases, you should think
about hiring either a full-time or part-time
assistant. This person must be a compatible
personality and in agreement with your business
goals.
If you choose to remain in control of the design and
marketing functions, you might delegate the office
and bookkeeping tasks to your assistant. Maintaining
accurate books and records is essential to your
business, and as the company becomes more
successful, the longer these tasks will take.
An assistant should be familiar with aspects of your
business and feel comfortable answering the phone
and dealing with customers. If you find you'd
benefit from an assistant only one or two days per
week, hire someone who will work on a contract basis
and bill you twice a month for their services.
|
|
|
Growing Pains
|
Seasoned owners learn that it's sometimes just as
perilous to stand still as it is to move ahead.
For any healthy business, there comes a time when
the owners must decide to take the risk of a new
growth strategy or to take the risk of staying with
their current game plan. We mention risk in both
cases because the risk of doing nothing or even of
sticking to 'business as usual' in the face of a
changing market can be even greater than the risk of
taking on larger bank loans, more debt, more
employees and more uncertainty in order to grow.
Why? Because the longer you stay in the business
game, the more sophisticated the players become and
the higher the stakes. That's what makes it fun (or
at least never boring) and keeps entrepreneurs
coming back for more, despite the ups and downs.
Newcomers can enter market niches that are being
ignored by players already in the field, but
eventually these players will wake up and muscle
into your game.
Women seem to have a harder time than men learning
this. They more often make the mistake of thinking
that owning a business means merely making money.
The real goal, however, is to increase your net
worth, not just your income. Your net worth is the
assets your business owns after paying off all your
creditors (liabilities). Assets include not just
cash, but real estate, equipment and even the value
of the 'goodwill' your firm has built up.
Misunderstanding the true nature of the business
game is one of the major factors that hold women
back. We still see our businesses as extensions of
our personalities rather than business investments.
We still pride ourselves on 'paying as we go' rather
than understanding the basic rule of capitalism
is not just to make capital but to put capital (your
assets or business worth) to use through leverage. A
basic tenet of business, leverage means using
someone else's money to make more money. You use
your money as collateral to borrow more money to
increase sales, which can in turn be used to
leverage up the net worth of your firm.
Why do most women not play the business game like
men? It may be because we really prefer to run small
businesses that generate income (money to live on)
but not wealth (assets you amass). Or, because of
its scale, income may fit better into our
lifestyles. Or it may be simply that we never
learned how to play on a larger scale. The key point
to examine is whether you're staying small because
you want to or because you're afraid to grow.
Here are some steps that will
help you make a rational decision:
1. Ask yourself what goals you have for yourself and
your business. Do you see your business mainly as a
means to make a nice living and enjoy independence?
Or do you have dreams of becoming a major competitor
in your industry, enjoying phenomenal growth and
perhaps going public and being acquired? If the
latter is true, then you need to learn more about
the capital markets. No business of any scale can be
run out of the owner's pocketbook. It needs a good
banking relationship and possibly investors.
2. Ask yourself if you're limiting the growth of
your company because of unresolved personal issues.
It's found that many people reach the first growth
hurdle with great ambivalence. The idea or dream
they had took hold - now what?
Some of the
unresolved issues you may be wrestling with:
- Commitment. You started your business with big
dreams, but now do you worry about what it will do
to your life if it grows any more?
- Fear of failure. Do you see failing as a major
loss or just a learning experience?
- Fear of success. Do you worry about the impact of
you being a tycoon to your family and friends, and
feel uncomfortable with the new role you visualize
for yourself?
- Fear of losing control. Do hiring professional
managers and learning how to manage them scare you?
- Fear of responsibility. Does the idea of being
responsible for employees and their families, even
when times are bad, give you a knot in your stomach?
- Loss of face. Do you worry about putting your
reputation in the business world at risk for the
sake of growth?
- Losing everything. Does the thought of going
"bust" keep you awake at night?
|
More Questions You Must Ask Yourself
|
|
1. Ask yourself what would happen if you took this
move and what would happen if you didn't take it.
Too often in business seemingly safe moves can be
perilous because of the dynamism of the marketplace.
Business demands aggressive players. Particularly if
you are in an industry that changes rapidly and has
heavy competition. Sometimes not risking is the
biggest risk of all.
2. Refine your decision making techniques. Do you
act on intuition or on the basis of hard data? If
you act intuitively, your subconscious motives may
be interfering. Learn some basic techniques of
decision making; trade-off analysis, cost benefit
analysis, decision trees, and take decisions out of
your gut and into your head.
3. Learn about how other businesses have grown
through leveraging. Talk to other owners, bankers
and financial consultants and learn how financial
deals are made. Financial people use basic tools
such as financial ratio analysis to gauge a
project's potential and its risks. Make sure you're
familiar with these terms and ideas.
Remember, every day in business will bring a new
decision about growth. You can't reap the benefit
from an opportunity unless you take a risk. We learn
this when we first start businesses. Why then is it
so hard to keep remembering?
|
| |
| |
| |
|
|