Jump Start Your Business

2006

   
 

Ten Steps To Jump Starting Your Business 

by Daniella Russo

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So you have decided to do it. Months of planning, sleepless nights, hesitation and encouragement from family and friends - and now you are ready. Where do you go from here?

Here are the top ten steps successful entrepreneurs make on their way to starting and growing their businesses.

1. Harness your passion  You know what it is. Do not trade it for someone else's idea. Ask yourself: What do you love? What do you know how to do best? What are you good at? Better than anyone else? This is the area where you can start a business. Remember to ask this question even after you have launched the business. This is the best way to get out of hesitation and second thoughts. Do what you love and do it better than anyone else.

2. Understand your value  Being great at something is not enough. You need to find a large group of people who can benefit from your skill or the product you create.   These people are your target customers. Chances are, you already know who they are. Do not think of them as individuals, but rather as representing groups - moms,  dads, working moms, pharmacists, florists etc.   Be very careful not to "fall in love" with your product. Instead, carefully think about why each of your target customers would choose your skill or product. Convenience, price, novelty - all are possible and all good value propositions.

3. Understand your customer  Be very thorough in understanding your target customers. Where do they shop? What other products do they like? What is their price range? What magazines do they read? Do they have children? Are they married or single? Each of these answers will offer a valuable insight that begins to shape your marketing and advertising strategy. Your choice of advertising media, your pricing structure, your packaging decisions - all of these decisions depend on who your target customer is.

4. Understand your competition   Before you begin spending money on advertising, web site design and physical presence, carefully research the competition. How do they reach their customers? Where do they advertise? Is it working for them? What is their pricing model? How successful are they? Ask. Read. Ask again.

5. Protect yourself   Now you have a pretty good idea of what you will do, who your customers are, how you will take your idea to market. Take steps to protect your intellectual property. Write down your idea, keep dated notes in your business journal and stop talking about it, until you actually launch your business.

6. Craft your image   You must be careful here. Your image introduces you to the world when you are not around. Your logo, your choice of colors, your choice of words - they all create the composite image of your business. And that image must appeal to your targets customers. Remember, your image will continue to build after you launch your business. Customer references, happy quotes, word of mouth, your blog are all facets of the complex nature of your business.

7. Set your PPPs   You are almost ready. Now you need to figure out the three Ps of marketing: pricing, positioning and packaging. Each of them feeds into the other and they all are affected by your knowledge of your target customers and target market. Your pricing must reflect what your customers will pay, not what your product or service costs. If there is a big discrepancy, you must revisit your business model. Positioning is how you speak of your business, your image and your value and how you communicate them.  Packaging and presentation are absolutely essential to your business image. Every product or service is packaged - in your advertising, on the web site or in a physical box.

8. Become available   You know your value. You know your customer. Now you need to make sure they know about you! It is not as simple as it sounds. Develop an advertising strategy that is smart and effective. It includes every aspect of your physical presence (windows dressing and aesthetics), your online presence (web site) and your professional look (business cards, mailing address, telephone). If you are running a home-based or web-based business, carefully consider the choice of domain name and e-mail address, as well as which phone number and street address to use. The best way to stay professional and protect your privacy is a dedicated phone line for your business, as well as a mailbox address.

It is too early at this stage to invest in a fancy logo, pricey stationery or web site. Chances are your decisions will change within the first six months of business, so save your money.

9. Execute, execute, execute   Now you just have to do it. It is a simple as that. No hesitation, no doubts, sheer perseverance and execution. Write up your plan, break it up in smaller chunks and begin work. There will be days with serious doubts, there will be days with huge successes. Do not get distracted. Keep going until you complete your first major milestone. This is the time to come up for air, look at your workload and accomplishments. If you are not breathless yet, you are not working hard enough.

10. Have no fear  Fear of failure is the worst companion for your venture. Choose to look at it as a new and positive experience. It will be a learning experience, regardless of the final outcome. Launching the business is a huge success in of itself. You can do it.

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Daniella Russo is the CEO  of Mindzone, Inc. Since 1999 Mindzone has helped businesses reduce time to revenue, launch their brands and create successful marketing strategies. To find out how Mindzone can propel your business or idea into the marketplace, drop us a line at info@mindzone.com.

 

 

 

 

 


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