your own business? Thinking of starting
Starting a business can be an exciting and terrifying prospect! It’s a leap into the unknown, and you have to have faith in yourself and your abilities to take that leap.
Many people consider running their own business as the ultimate exercise in freedom. After all, being your own boss means you call the shots. All of them. You need to decide what you’ll do, how you’ll do it, when, how, what hours, where, and how will you fund this fledgling business and get it airborne? Don’t be intimidated. This is a big step and, like all major life changes, you’ll probably have to fight through the uncertainty, people with good intentions telling you this is silly, and maybe even a few sleepless nights doubting yourself to get up and running but, once you are, it will all be worth it.
Start with time
You might not have the money right now to just set up and go, but that doesn’t mean you have to sit back and wait for finances to fall into place to get started. Sit down and write out a rough plan.
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This may sound obvious but name your business. This could end up being dead simple, a lot of fun, or a major headache. Make sure you put some thought into it. It will, after all, be how people identify you and making a change later on could have some repercussion on how easily existing customers find you online in future.
Build out your brand identity. Do you have a logo in mind? What colours will you use? What font? You need to make sure that people can easily identify your business no matter what material they are looking at, printed or online or just driving by. Consistent branding is important to your business identity.
Be absolutely clear on what you’re selling. Test the waters by selling to a small group of family or friends, maybe do a few test runs with sales to friends of friends. Get a feel for your customer base. Connect
Make The Future Yours! Issue 1
with people in the same line of business or find someone who has something you’ll need and find out if they’re interested in a swap of products or services. This usually works best with another business on the same level as yours. Nothing wrong with aiming high but you’ll have a better shot at getting somewhere with someone who isn’t a multi-billion-pound giant. Identify your customer. Who are you selling to? Where can you find them? Are they on social media? Can you begin a conversation with them now? Set up your social media accounts and make sure the name you use is about the same across all the platforms you’re using. If you’re planning on setting up a website, consider writing a few blogs. That way you’ll have shareable content ready to go and you won’t need to worry about it during the initial whirlwind of getting the business going.
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