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Business Start-up
Strategy
We
SMN-Inc , is in your position earlier. But now its all gone and we are
quite ok with our business. We need you all to share our knowledge so
that you will also find your way to online business. We Strongly suggest
that would-be entrepreneurs do a business plan. As a result of
completing the plan you will be much better prepared and know whether or
not your business idea is feasible. Try the following article for a
short-cut. However, We caution you on following a short-cut unless you
have substantial experience or knowledge about your area. Proceed with
caution without a business plan! -
some of the links here will provide you some great resources - Do use
them
<to Enterprise Resources Planning
home - Excellent Source for ERP>
FIVE
Business-Start-Up
Strategy
How is your business unique, and why will your goods or services appeal
to customers? What are the primary differences between your company and
your competitors? What are the driving factors to choose your business
over another?
In other words, what is the underlying reason a customer would do
business with your company?
1) Define Your
Business & Vision
Defining your vision is important. It will become the driving force of
your business. Here are questions that will help you clarify your
vision:
Who is the customer?
What business are you in?
What do you sell (product/service)?
What is your plan for growth?
What is your primary competitive advantage?
2) Write Down Your
Goals
Create a list of goals with a brief description of action items. If your
business is a start up, you will want to put more effort into your
short-term goals. Often a new business concept must go through a period
of research and development before the outcome can be accurately
predicted for longer time frames.
Create two sets of goals:
Short term: range from six to 12 months.
Long term: can be two to five years.
Explain, as specifically as possible, what you want to achieve. Start
with your personal goals. Then list your business goals. Answer these
questions:
As the owner of this business, what do you want to achieve?
How large or small do you want this business to be?
Do you want to include family in your business?
Staff: do you desire to provide employment, or perhaps, you have a
strong opinion on not wanting to manage people.
Is there some cause that you want the business to address?
Describe the quality, quantity and/or service and customer satisfaction
levels.
How would you describe your primary competitive advantage?
How do you see the business making a difference in the lives of your
customers?
3) Understand Your
Customer
It is not realistic to expect you can meet the needs of everyone, no
business can. Choose your target market carefully. Overlook this area,
and I guarantee you will be disappointed with the performance of your
business. Get this right and you will be more than pleased with the
results.
Needs: what unmet needs do your prospective customers have? How does
your business meet those needs? It is usually something the customer
does not have or a need that is not currently being met. Identify those
unmet needs.
Wants: think of this as your customer's desire or wish. It can also be a
deficiency.
Problems: remember people buy things to solve a specific problem. What
problems does your product or service solve?
Perceptions: what are the negative and positive perceptions that
customers have about you, your profession and its products or services?
Identify both the negative and positive consequences.
You will be able to use what you learn when you start marketing and
promoting your business.
4) Learn From Your
Competition
You can learn a lot about your business and customers by looking at how
your competitors do business. Here are some questions to help you learn
from your competition and focus on your customer:
What do you know about your target market?
What competitors do you have?
How are competitors approaching the market?
What are the competitor's weaknesses and strengths?
How can you improve upon the competition's approach?
What are the lifestyles, demographics and psychographics of your ideal
customer?
5) Financial
Matters
How will you make money? What is your break-even point? How much profit
potential does your business have? Take the time to invest in preparing
financial projections.
These projections should take into account the collection period for
your accounts receivables (outstanding customer accounts) as well as the
payment terms for your suppliers. For example, you may pay your bills in
30 days, but have to wait 45-60 days to get paid from your customers.
A cash flow projection will show you how much working capital you will
need during those "gaps" in your cash position.
We now offer a really neat, FREE, tool to help you do an initial
financial analysis of your business called the Seven Step Starting Costs
Wizard. This tool is not designed to replace detailed projections for
cash flow and financial statements. However, this is a handy tool to
test your assumptions and determine your break-even point and the
validity of your plan. It produces a report and charts seven key areas:
Start up Investment
Assumptions
Running Monthly Overhead
Streamlined Sales Forecast
Cumulative Cash Chart
Break-even Charts
Conclusion
Identify Your Marketing Strategy
There are four steps to creating a marketing strategy for your business:
Identify All Target Markets: define WHO is your ideal customer or target
market. Most companies experience 80% of their business from 20% of
their customers. It makes sense then to direct your time and energy
toward those customers who are most important.
Qualify the Best Target Markets: the purpose of this step is to further
qualify and determine which customer profile meets the best odds of
success. The strategy is to position your business at the same level as
the majority of the buyers you are targeting. It is critical to figure
out who your best customers are and how to best position your company in
the marketplace.
Identify Tools, Strategies and Methods: a market you cannot access is a
market you cannot serve. Marketing is the process of finding,
communicating and educating your primary market about your products and
services. Choose a combination of tools and strategies, that when
combined, increase your odds of success.
Test Marketing Strategy and Tools: the assumptions we do not verify are
typically the ones that have the potential to create business problems.
Take the time to test all business assumptions, especially when you are
making major expenditures.
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