While it's impossible to avoid all risk when starting a business, careful planning can help get businesses up and running with a minimal amount of risk. These six strategies can help reduce your exposure while at the same time saving you money and headaches during your business's early stages.
Here are six low-risk ways to start a business:
- Start your business from home
- Start your business part time
- Start an e-commerce business
- Buy an existing business
- Buy a franchise
- Hire independent or freelance employees
Start your business from home
Choosing a business location requires you to lock yourself into a lease and pay rent, utilities, and other costs for the space. But many types of businesses can just as easily be operated from home.
By running your business from home, you not only save the overhead costs of commercial space, but you also save the time and money you would normally spend commuting, which can boost productivity.
Start your business part time
If your schedule allows, you can start a business while keeping your full-time day job. This gives you the cushion of a regular paycheck and benefits from your job until your business is making enough to support you.
If running a business and working full time is too much, consider getting a part-time job to pay the bills while you launch your business. Look for part-time work that has flexible hours to give you time for your business.
You can even turn it into a business education; for instance, if you're starting your own fashion-design company, get a part-time job at a boutique so you can learn the industry from the customer's point of view.
Start an e-commerce business
These days, a retail business doesn't need a bricks-and-mortar location to succeed. By selling your products online, you can reach a nationwide or even global customer base. You significantly cut your costs, since you aren't paying rent on a storefront and don't need to hire salespeople.
Depending on how much business you get, it's possible to run an e-commerce business all by yourself, at least when you first start out. You can also launch an e-commerce site as a way of testing the waters and then expand to a brick-and-mortar location once your sales start to take off.
Buy an existing business
If the costs and risks of starting a business from scratch intimidate you, consider buying an existing business. Although investing significant amounts of money up front can be risky, that is mitigated by the fact that you will be buying a business where the location, employees, customer base, and systems are already established.
Since you won't have to go through the trial-and-error process you would with a brand-new business, you'll save time, effort, and money.
You should pick a business that has proven itself successful and stands a good chance of thriving under new ownership. Enlist a business broker to help you find the right one and have your attorney and accountant help you with the due diligence. If you do your homework, you'll be buying a known quantity and greatly decreasing your risk of failure.
Buy a franchise
In a franchise you pay the franchise company (also called the franchisor) a fee, and ongoing royalties in exchange for the right to do business under the franchisor's name using its business procedures. As a franchisee, you're paying for a proven system of doing business.
Just as with buying a business, you need to do thorough research into the company under consideration. Do it well, and you should end up with a franchise that trains you how to run the business, assists in finding a location and opening your business, provides marketing and advertising support, and offers advice and help on an ongoing basis.
Franchising is often described as "being in business for yourself, but not by yourself," because having the franchisor to back you up greatly lessens your risk. You can read more franchising tips here.
Hire independent or freelance employees
Hiring salaried employees adds greatly to your risk. First, there's the ongoing cost of regular salaries as well as payroll taxes and the cost of any benefits. Your business will be spending time and money staying on top of federal and state employee laws (or hiring someone to do so).
In addition, employees open up liability risks, such as your need to get workers' compensation insurance or the risk of legal action taken by a disgruntled worker.
No wonder many entrepreneurs find independent contractors or freelancers a smarter way to go. There are no salaries, benefits, or insurance issues to consider. Thanks to technology, it is easier than ever to work collaboratively with a team of independent contractors without being in the same office. In addition to cost savings, contractors offer flexibility because you can hire them on a per-project basis.
By All Business.com

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