Why Start A Business From Home

The are many reasons to start a home-based business: to earn extra income, to supplement an existing salary, looking to new horizons after leaving a permanent job through redundancy or company downsizing or to fulfill a lifelong dream. Whatever your motives, thanks to the growth of the internet and the changes in the way people work, there has never been a better time to start your own business. You too can take advantage of the freedom offered by running a business from home, with its lower costs, reduced travel expenses and the flexibility to choose both the environment and hours that suit you.

Top Tip: You are in good company as Apple Computers, Lush Cosmetics, Facebook and even the Ford Motor company are just some of the household names that started as small home-based businesses! So, let's get started.

Step 1 - Make A Solid Commitment To Your New Venture

Ask yourself a question: how many of the success stories that you have read about were founded by people who simply sat back and dreamt about it? The hard truth is that if want to achieve something then you need to make a commitment - for as long as it takes to succeed. It's highly unlikely that you are going to make your fortune overnight, but if you persevere you will succeed. It doesn't matter if you can only commit 15 minutes a day, what is important is that you make those minutes count by always giving 100% effort.

Top Tip: Apparently Thomas Edison took 1,000 attempts before he invented the light bulb. He never said I failed 999 times; he said I spent 999 learning how not to invent a light bulb!

Step 2 - Have You Got What It Takes To Become Your Own Boss?

The answer is yes! It helps if you enjoy taking risks and the responsibility that goes with it. It also helps if you like hard work, making decisions and the challenges that come with owning your own venture. And finally, it's extremely useful to be well organised, have the ability to stick to deadlines and can work with figures. But the fact is if you don't have all of these qualities (and very few people do), then simply find someone who does. So, for example, if you aren't familiar with the requirements surrounding keeping records, hire someone!

Top Tip: Success is 5% inspiration and 95% perspiration.

Step 3 - What Business?

It could be that you want to start your own nail salon, a pet grooming service, be a language tutor, physiotherapist, landscape gardener, affiliate marketer, eBay seller, create self-help videos, set up an ecommerce website... the list is almost endless. The fact is that it doesn't really matter. Because the steps to success are the same for every business. What does differ is the way that you manage and respond to the needs of your particular business or sector. If you haven't yet decided upon a particular business, then there are literally thousands of ideas for business, covering every imaginable product and service. Whichever you choose, ask yourself the following questions:

Is there an identifiable gap in the market for your product or service?
Have you identified a product or service that you just can't seem to find?
Can you make a living from your hobby or something you are passionate about?
Can you offer a product or service better than someone else?

Top Tip: At this initial stage it's also worth exploring the common mistakes that start-ups make and how to avoid them.

Step 4 - Developing Your Business Idea

The next step is to dig a little deeper and define exactly what products and services you intend to sell and, equally importantly, who you are going to sell them to. Even if you already have a fixed idea of what you want to sell, you still need to focus more intensely. It's not enough to say you are going to sell pet products, you need to focus on what types of pets and as a consequence what products those pets would need. Marketing your product and conducting a little market research yourself can make all the difference between success and failure. You can discover the buying habits of your target market, geographical location and even who your competitors are. You can gather a great deal of this information, by simply spending some time searching the internet and gathering a list of businesses that are already trading in your chosen field. In addition you can scour the ads in local newspapers and shops to see who is out there or even conduct your own market research by asking people in the street if they would be interested in your services.

Top Tip: Your family and friends often say it's a great idea, even if they think otherwise, just so they don't hurt your feelings. So ask some independent people.

Step 5 - Do You Need A Business Plan?

The good news is that not every business requires a formal plan, especially if your home-based operation doesn't require any outside funding. Click here to learn more about Sources of Funding for Start-ups. The problem with a business plan is that not only will you have to learn how to put a plan together, they can also take weeks to prepare, time that may be better spent concentrating on getting your business off the ground. In fact, studies have shown that having a formal business plan for a small home-based venture really makes no difference to the ultimate success of the business. The time when you may need to produce a business plan is when you're looking for potential financial support. It's not just for banks, but also if you have to approach family, friends or business connections. The clearer your vision and the more organised you look, the more likely you are to get the support you desire.

Top Tip: Matt Coffin, founder of LowerMyBills.com, secured funding of $4 million from investors simply by using a 10-page PowerPoint presentation!

Step 6 - Initial Start-up Costs

OK so let's assume you have your idea, have spent some time examining the sector and its market potential, now is the time to make sure you have all the tools necessary to carry out the first phase of your venture. Below is a list of the most common items that a home-based business requires to starting functioning:

A computer and associated software
Internet access
Build a website
Fixed and/or mobile phone
Business cards
Access to sufficient stock - if you're selling products
A designated space, preferably in a quiet location
A desk

It's not a long list and can all be obtained without breaking the bank.

Step 7 - Additional Finance And Funding

It may be that you are starting up a business while you are still employed or have another source of income to cover you while the business finds its feet. If you don't require any outside funding then skip this section for the time being and move on to the next. But there are a number of reasons why you might require funding, above and beyond simply paying for office equipment, website development, advertising etc. One of the main requirements is sufficient funds to cover personal expenses while the business gets under way and your customers start paying you! As a rule of thumb, many business advisors suggest that you should have at least three months' money squirreled away, as it may be this long before you start seeing any returns. So where do you go for funding? Well to start with there are your own savings (if you don't have faith in your idea, who will?), then there are family members, friends and business associates. A little further afield there are additional sources of funding, such as bank loans, grants and equity funding from private investors. In these instances you are strongly advised to produce a business plan in order to persuade and secure the necessary funding.

Step 8 - Keeping Records

Not the most enjoyable aspect of running a business, but nevertheless essential. It is extremely important to keep an accurate record of your income and expenditure from day one - start as you mean to go on and introduce a proper system. Not only does it enable you to keep a close eye on how well your business is progressing, it's also a legal requirement!

A few tips:

Retain and file all your invoices and receipts that relate to your business (if in doubt, keep them anyway and ask your accountant if you can claim on them)
As you will be using part of your home for business, keep copies of the utility bills so that you can work out how much relates to your business
You need to be able to show what you have spent personally and what is spent on your business. So having a separate bank account will make life a lot easier
If you are employing staff, then you must keep records of their wages and tax and National Insurance you have deducted and paid to HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC)

Keeping good records will pay huge dividends in the long term as you will reduce your overall tax bill, make filling in tax returns much easier and help ensure you pay your tax bills on time and avoid any interest or penalties.

Step 9 - Promoting Your New Business

People used to say "build the best mousetrap in the world and people will beat a path to your door". But today there are so many businesses offering such a wide variety of products, how do you know which door to open? You have at your disposal a vast array of both online advertising services and more conventional offline advertising services, which when combined create a powerful weapon to attract and retain those all-important customers!

Key Factors That Make a Business Valuable



Intuitively the value of a business should reflect its attractiveness and the generation of profits or dividends for its owners.

The fundamental basis of valuation is that:

• The value of an asset today is the present value of the future cash flows that the asset is expected to provide its owners.

So the value of a business (the asset) is the present value of future cash flows (or "adjusted" net profits).

The typical methods used to assess the value of a business include:

• Earnings Multiple.

• Discounted Cash Flow Analysis.

• Asset or Book Value.

• Return on Invested Capital.

Ideally the valuation range should be arrived at using a number of these valuation methods, and the range should be as narrow as the assessment process allows.

The valuation should be performed with a typical buyer or range of buyers in mind. After all, it is the buyer that ultimately decides the value of your business. The value is never known until the buyer gives you a cheque and the funds have cleared in your account. Until this point the value can only ever be estimated within a certain range.

There are three major assessment criteria for assessing the business value. These are:

1. Is the business transferable?

2. What is the relevant cash flow that the buyer will get a benefit from?

3. How attractive is the business to other buyers?

Is the Business Transferable?

No one wants to buy a business that they can't operate. If it relies on the owner to bring in the customers, service them and manage the business, there is a big question as to whether it can be transferred to someone else.

Many professional services businesses exist because of the relationship with the owners. If these relationships cannot be transferred, there is little or no value in the business.

What is the Cash Flow?

Cash flow refers to the operating profit generated over and above any wages or salaries that should be paid to the owner. If the owner is working in the business, then they should receive a wage for their efforts. But the business should also generate a cash flow in addition to this wage.

The cash flow can be adjusted to remove the effects of one-off expenses or revenue or non-operating items.

The higher the cash flow, the higher the business valuation.

What influences the attractiveness of the business?

The attractiveness of a business is a combination of the profitability and the key factors that influence its financial performance. These key factors contribute towards the Earnings Multiple. If one business is more attractive than another similar business it will have a higher Earnings Multiple and hence a higher valuation.

Selection of the Earnings Multiple will depend on factors such as:

• Type of business, industry and location.

• Size and profitability.

• Attractiveness of business.

• Demand for this type of business.

• Perceived risk of the business.

• Efficiency of operations of the business.

Understanding the value of your business will allow you to develop plans to increase the value. An experienced professional can identify the key factors in your business that will increase its value and what actions you should take. Knowing the value of your business is the starting point to change it, and is not just for those buying or selling.

We have helped hundreds of business owners understand the value of their business and discover the actions that increase the value of the business.

Places Where You Can Still Get A Business Loan Today



Let's look at some of the recent news headlines regarding small business lending:

"Why Aren't Banks Lending to Small Business? Ask Bernanke." - The American.

"Are the Big Banks Keeping Their Commitment to Small Businesses?" - The Wall Street Journal.

"Banks keep lending standards tight for small firms." - CNNMoney.

So, the obvious conclusion for those starting new businesses or looking for ways to access capital to grow their existing business is that you or your small business can't get any financing - right.

Not so fast.

Banks may not be lending (or are only lending to large businesses who don't really need the capital) but banks are not and have not always been the best options for small businesses or startups.

Most banks won't touch a startup business - regardless of the economy and very few banks will fund growing businesses as most growing businesses have short-term cash flow issues (something that banks say is too risky and shy away from).

Therefore, banks really don't matter to your small business when it comes to lending.

So, what can smaller firms do to gain the money they need to get off the ground or expand?

The simple answer is to do what every other business has done since the start of history - find another way. So, put on your entrepreneurial hat and look into these 4 alternative sources of capital.

4 Places To Find Business Capital Today

1) Private Business Loans:

Did you know that there are other businesses out there (big and small) that all they do is lend to small businesses? It is their business (how they make money) and they are pretty good at it.

In fact, in order for these private lenders to stay in business and make profits (just like you want to do) they have to make business loans to companies just like yours - banks do not have to as they have clearly shown.

You are their targeted customers and they are there for you. Private lenders have more leeway as they don't have regulators watching their every move and as such have created more products (more business loan programs) to fit your individual needs. Plus, most decisions of these lenders are made right there on the spot - no waiting weeks or longer.

How do they do this? Well they don't look at your entire business or your overall cash flow or your overall profitability. They look to the next event in your operating cycle - where your business earns revenue.

It's all based on the conversion of assets. Your business lands a new customer, completes that job and waits to get paid. The lender knows that you will get paid and will provide your business needed working capital until that point. Then, you start the process all over again. Thus, these private lenders will lend against your outstanding accounts receivables - not based on your overall profits or the long-term cash flow prospects of your company.

Or, let's say that your business has orders coming in but doesn't have the capital to even get those jobs started. Well, these private lenders will fund 100% of what you need to start and complete those orders or jobs allowing you to satisfy your customers and earn that all coveted profit.

Now, clearly these seem like a great option for existing businesses. But, if you are a startup, you just have to work a little harder to either get yourself in that position (i.e. getting orders in hand) or use some of these other options (see below) to position your business to generate the needed accounts receivables or purchase orders required by these lenders.

2) Personal Loans:

Most business owners hate to use personal resources to get business capital. But, when all is said and done - money is just money after all. However, personal loans have been the catalyst for growing new businesses since the beginning of time.

For a business loan, banks want business cash flow, profitability and commercial collateral. Items that most new or small businesses don't have.

However, personal loans don't have such stringent requirements.

Home loan rates are at record lows opening up the possibility to tap into home equity for money to start or grow your business. Build your business and use the business to pay off the home equity loan. No different than taking a business loan, building your business and paying the loan off. But, with a home equity loan, you get a lower interest rate and longer term for a lower payment and more flexibility. Plus, these loans are so much easier to get approved.

Or, utilize your retirement funds. Roll over your 401(k) or IRA into your business. Not much difference than in investing in your business or investing your retirement funds into someone else's business. Plus, since this is not a loan - NO interest, no terms and the ability to pay it back when it is best for you and your business and not in the best interest of the bank or lender.

Lastly, use your personal income to make a business loan to your business. This means keeping your day job (or getting one) and running your business part-time until it is strong enough to support you and itself - all being funded from the money you make from your job.

3) Alternative Loans:

Since banks have not been lending to small businesses over the last four plus years, other lenders have been stepping up to fill some of the gap left behind.

Some alternative lenders are finding new ways or better ways to provide those old tried and true methods of business financing - like Business or Merchant Cash Advances. If your business is earning revenue from customers who pay via credit or debit cards, your merchant processor can advance cash against those future customer payments. As this is now becoming one of the leading ways to finance small businesses today, many of these lenders have innovated new ways to provide these loans - programs that can meet nearly any business in any stage of development.

Or, following those merchant cash advance lenders, other, new alternative loan programs have cropped up that, instead of just focusing on credit card and debit card payments from customers, they just simply look at the volume of cash that flows through your bank account. These so called bank statement loans are great for businesses that take all forms of customer payments from cash and checks to credit and debit cards.

The only real requirement with these types of alternative loans is that the business has to actually be conducting business and generating some revenue. But, the business does not have to be profitable or met many of the other rigorous requirements that banks and similar lenders require.

Additional alternative business loans resources to look into are micro credit loans that have programs for both startup business - up to $35,000 in loan amounts - and existing businesses - up to $50,000 in loan amounts. And, never forget about other resources that by-pass bank and traditional lenders all together like peer-to-peer social lending where other people, just like you, become your small business lender.

4) Friends and Family Loans:

Lastly, tap those that know you best. Most lenders or investors in small businesses don't necessary focus on the business itself but on the people who run it. If you can demonstrate a track record - that you can run a business and make money - then you stand a better chance of getting your loan approved.

But, if you don't have the track record and cannot convince a lender about your abilities, you may still be able to convince those that know you best - like friends and family. If you believe in your business and your friends and family believe in you - then you have the perfect match - everyone wins.

While personal loan resources are the number one way that most small businesses fund themselves, friends and family loans are a close second.

As stated, banks are not usually the best option for new or small business when seeking capital. And, as shown here, banks are not your only option either.

Business is about using the set of assets and resources that it currently has and employing them in such a way to get the biggest return from whatever opportunity that arises. Thus, if your resources are limited - you just have find new ways tackle those new opportunities with what you have at hand.

You will find that in marketing your business, you will face many challenges and obstacles in getting customers in your door. In managing your business, you will face many challenges and obstacles to ensure that your business is profitable and growing. And, in financing your business, you will find many challenges and obstacles in ensuring that your business has the money it needs to succeed.

To overcome all of these challenges and obstacles, you cannot always use the same old tried methods that worked for other people or businesses. You have to find your own way - and, in this market - financing your business is no different.

So, if you are sure that your business cannot get a business loan from a bank - then you are probably right and should not be in business anyways. But, if you are willing to turn over every stone or look under every rock - you are already on your way to success. Start here with these 4 methods to finance your small business and see where or how far they can take you.