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How Do I
Start a Home Business?
by Elena Fawkner
From time to time (at least once a day actually)
I'll get an impossible-to-respond-to email that
says something like, "How can I work from home?",
or "I want to start my own home business. Please
send info." or even, "Please send free info.".
Naturally such vague, generalized requests are not,
for reasons of time (among others), going to elicit
a particularly helpful response but it does
exemplify the mindset of a proportion of my site
visitors - they think they want to start a home
business but where on earth do they
start?
HOW DO I START A HOME BUSINESS?
The best advice I can give to someone who asks a
question as vague as this is that they're asking
the wrong question. The first question they should
be asking themselves is: "SHOULD I start a home
business?", not HOW do they do so.
The person who asks how to start a home business
has not given much, if any, thought to what they
might do as such a business (otherwise, their
question would be "How do I start an errand service
home business?" or "How do I start a gourmet gift
basket home business?").
So, first things first. Why do you want to start
a home business? What are the advantages as you see
them? What are the disadvantages? What
entrepreneurial qualities do you bring to the table
that make you think you could make a success of
your own business? What is your plan? What product
or service will you market? Who are your customers?
When will you give up your day job? Are you
thinking about this because you just LOST your day
job (if so, warning bells should be ringing very
loudly!)? A home business is most definitely NOT
for everyone and it's certainly not a solution to
unemployment per se.
There are financial considerations too,
obviously. How will you support yourself until you
generate a profit? Where will you obtain
financing?
For more thought starters, read "Look Before You
Leap ... Is a Home-Based Business REALLY For You?"
in the AHBBO Articles Library at http://www.ahbbo.com/lookb4uleap.html.
Assuming you work your way through the above
considerations and conclude that you do, indeed,
want to start your own home business, then, and
only then, should you ask "HOW do I start a home
business?"
There are as many answers to this question as
there are individuals who ask it. There is no one
answer that fits all sizes. Generally speaking,
however, the process of starting one's own home
business can be broken down into seven broad
steps.
IDENTIFY YOUR PASSIONS
If you're truly starting at ground zero and you
don't already do something on the side that you'd
kind of like to see if you could make fly, your
first step is to decide what it is you'd like to do
as your business.
I'm a firm believer in following your passion,
whether that be for gardening (start a herb and
spice business or cultivate cuttings for
distribution via mail order), lead-lighting (design
and create stained glass lampshades), accounting
(run a home-based small business accountancy
service) or website design. It doesn't matter
whether other people are equally as passionate
about what you're passionate about. It's YOUR
passion that counts and it's YOUR passion that will
propel you towards success. Do something you love
to do in other words. Make your work your joy and
you won't be able to help but succeed.
IDENTIFY A NICHE MARKET FOR YOUR
PASSION
Now, it's one thing to know what you're
passionate about, it's quite another to identify an
unmet need in that field. But that's what you must
do if you want to turn your passion into a truly
profitable business venture. Identifying your niche
is a pretty straightforward process:
1. Identify your general category and
sub-category
Let's say your general passion is gardening.
Gardening is your general category. Let's also say
that you're particularly interested in growing
herbs and how they can be used for cooking and
medicinal purposes. Herb growing is your
sub-category.
2. Hang out with people interested in your
sub-category
In order to identify unmet needs in your
sub-category (step 3.), you must find out from
people interested in your sub-category what they're
looking for that they can't find. A good way to
find out is to hang out where they hang out -
offline and on. Offline, you may belong to a local
gardening club or cooking class at which you hear
that so-and-so has been looking high and low for a
certain type of specialty herb that isn't commonly
grown in your country. Online, you may sign up for
mailing lists and hang out in newsgroups to listen
to what people are asking time and again.
3. Identify unmet or under-met needs in your
sub-category
If you follow step 2, chances are, if you hear
the same things repeatedly, you've found potential
unmet needs or needs that aren't being adequately
serviced by your competition. After all, if the
need is being met, it won't be the subject of
repeated questions.
4. Inventory your experience, interests and
competencies
In order to decide what to focus on in
particular out of a group of potential unmet or
under-met needs, take account of your experience,
interests and competencies. People are generally
good at what they enjoy and are interested in,
after all.
5. Fill the unmet or under-met
need
Once you've identified the unmet need(s) in your
sub-category, you can start thinking about how your
business can fill that unmet need.
SURVEY THE MARKET AND YOUR
COMPETITION
At this stage, you need to take your business
idea and survey your niche market and your
competition.
If you have competition, can you be better? If
your market is dominated by a few large,
well-established players and you really don't bring
anything new or different to the table, then the
competition is probably going to be too stiff. On
the other hand, if that competition is focused on
the high end of the market leaving the lower end
largely uncatered for, then this could well be an
excellent niche for you.
The bottom line is to identify your best
competition in your niche and decide whether you
can be better.
Only if you believe you can be the best in your
niche should you proceed. If not, keep looking
until you find a niche perfectly suited to your
particular blend of experience, interests and
competencies in which you can be the absolute
best.
BUSINESS PLAN
Once you've identified your niche and surveyed
your market and competition and are reasonably
confident you can be at least as good as your best
competitor, it's time to get down to brass
tacks.
This is where you take your business idea and
shape it into a battle plan. Formulating a business
plan is goal-setting for your business. For a more
detailed treatment of writing a business plan, read
"Putting the Plan Back Into Your Business Plan" at
http://www.ahbbo.com/busplan.html.
Once you've thought through and recorded your
business plan you should have an extremely thorough
understanding of your industry and the challenges
you must overcome to make a success of your
business. Take your business plan and establish
objectives, goals (which support attainment of the
objectives) and tasks (which support attainment of
the goals).
Put your tasks and goals into action to achieve
your objectives. Decide where you want your
business to be in five years time and work
backwards until you have 5, 4, 3, 2 and 1 year
objectives and goals to support them and tasks to
support the goals. The end result should be a daily
to-do list of things that will directly lead you
closer to the achievement of your goals and
objectives.
ACTION
Once you have your daily to-do list, DO IT! The
best laid plans of mice and men are useless if not
translated into action. It's action that will
propel you and your business towards success. Mere
thoughts and plans are necessary but insufficient.
They must be translated into activity.
TRANSITION
If possible, transition from whatever you're
doing now into your business. Test the waters, in
other words. If you're currently in a paid job,
stay there and run your business part-time, taking
the risk on someone else's nickel until you can be
confident this thing's going to float. Know when
you're better off devoting your full time and
attention to your business (i.e., know when an hour
of your time is worth more when spent invested in
your business than your job) for that is the time
to shift into full-time entrepreneurship.
MAKING THE LEAP
Finally, make the leap with faith and courage.
Sure, you'll have moments of self-doubt, thoughts
of "can I do this?" when you're wondering where the
next order's going to come from and you think back
to the nice, safe, secure paycheck you used to be
able to count on in your job. But recognize these
insecurities for what they are. They are your mind
playing tricks on you. You can do anything you set
your mind to. You just have to want it badly
enough. So, when the time comes to make the leap,
do it and hold nothing back. Your success or
failure is up to you alone. There are no
excuses.
So, in answer to the question "how do I start my
own home business?", it's quite simple really. You
do what it takes.
Brought to you by: World Wide
Information Outlet - http://certificate.net/wwio/,
your source of FREEWare Content
online.
Elena Fawkner is editor of A
Home-Based Business Online ... practical home
business ideas for the work-from-home entrepreneur.
Visit http://www.ahbbo.com
Because
The Radical Academy publishes essays and articles
on its website does not imply acceptance or
approval of the comments or opinions expressed by
the author of the material. Nor is the Academy
responsible for any misrepresentation of the facts
included. It is your job to be a critical
reader.
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