Category Archives: Owning a Business

Business is More Than a Crap Shoot

Those who haven’t owned a business tend to think businesses are built on mystical gut feelings that readily morph into bulging bank accounts, hot cars and holidays. Sure, Mark Zuckerberg and Bill Gates did just fine by following their hunches, but the hype overshadows the massive amount of work it took to make Facebook and Microsoft successful.

Statistics on the failure rate of small businesses can be sobering. Conventional wisdom suggests that about half of small businesses (those with revenues under $30,000) survive after three years, while approximately a third survive after five years. To be sure, this category of business activity, also referred to as micro-enterprise, includes a lot of businesses that are simple to start and easy to jettison when something better comes up. The statistics deal with the most developmental business arena, where a lot of newbies cut their entrepreneurial teeth. It also includes a lot of drive-bys who jump in long enough to check out the self-employment scene, and bail out once they realize they’re earning less than minimum wage.

Whatever else the high failure rate of new business tells us, it hints that success is more than blind luck. Some would characterize entrepreneurs as risk takers. While there’s a bit of truth to this, successful business owners are not so much gamblers as they are effective risk managers.

One of the cornerstones to becoming an effective risk manager is to find a healthy balance between intuition and due diligence. Due diligence is the research needed to validate your hunches and clarify your business case. A business case is built on more than notions and dreams; it has to have a solid indication of demand for your goods, customers that are willing to pay the right prices, and a bulletproof plan for getting in front of customers.

New business owners can increase their chances of survival by doing due diligence in the following three ways.

  1. Validate the Demand. To confirm demand for products or services, business owners will learn all they can about their customer’s wants and needs. This education can come through a combination of reading, working in the target industry, conducting surveys, and most importantly, talking to customers.
  2. Validate the Prices. When it comes to setting prices, there’s no confidence builder quite as convincing as making sales. However, prior to making sales, entrepreneurs can learn about pricing by knowing what it costs to produce their goods, and by learning everything they can about the industry and in particular, the competitors. The Internet is by far the easiest source of information on prices.
  3. Develop a Marketing Plan. Think of marketing as everything you will do to communicate to potential customers. Your marketing plan will detail how you’ll get your goods in front of customers, including costs each marketing campaign or activity.

Business success is much more than a crap shoot, and much riskier than buying a lottery ticket. It’s also true that business, managed effectively, is a surer path to success than gambling. And if you enjoy the work you do, it can also be fun getting there.

Gates and Zuckerberg are inspirations for us all, but don’t be blinded by the hype. If you’re feeling intuitive and lucky, buy a lottery ticket. If you want to build a successful business, by all means follow your instincts, but do your homework by validating your hunches before putting any significant investment on the line.

Burning Business Plans is Sexy LOL

Last week I was compelled to click on an article that dissed business plans… again.

Why, when the Internet is cluttered with articles that extol the benefits of writing a business plan, would I invest time reading anti-business plan rhetoric?

It is fear? Fear that some guru has figured out a way to bypass the business plan and transformed business start-up into a safe, clean, effortless experience. Not really.  Nor have I discovered any such gem—in fact, it seems to get more and more complicated to own a business, not easier.

Perhaps it’s a fascination with the idea that people are generally more easily attracted to negative news than positive. So, it rather makes sense that a headline that slags business planning would attract more reads than a positive title might. Maybe.

Perhaps I resent just a bit that people are drawn to articles telling them to take the lazy approach. It’s plain sexy to imagine that you can create the next Facebook without lifting a finger or getting your hands dirty.

Invariably, once I read the article bearing the business plan dissing title, I find it’s either a blatant marketing campaign for a slightly different product or someone advising entrepreneurs not to bother with writing a business plan. It’s easy to negate the benefit of a business plan when it’s not your investment or risk on the line.

And now, I have shamelessly used a negative title to get you to read this blog. Guilty. Oh well. If you read this, perhaps the end justified the means.

So, while you’re here and I’m shamelessly marketing, I invite you to check out the Online Business Planner’s RoadMap at http://www.riskbuster.com/online-business-planners-roadmap-description/

Dan’s Business Playground Nuggets


1. Abundance is all around us.

2. Ask and listen and the answers will appear.

3. Be courteous – say please and thank you.

4. Believe in people and they will continually amaze you.

5. Family and friends are gifts from God – love them openly.

6. Give and you will receive.

7. Paddle with the current, when possible.

8. When you must paddle against the current, do it with purpose.

9. Keep your eyes on the prize, not your demise.

10. Listen to your customers and they will tell you what they want.

11. Problems are always accompanied by solutions.

12. Rent seekers will find you and cling to you – be vigilant and frugal.

13. Scrimp and save your money daily, your savings will save you one day.

14. Serve customers well and they will pay you and tell their friends and return for more.

15. Taking action is more energizing than stressing about problems.

16. The more money is at stake, the more energy surrounds it.

17. Work hard and you will be rewarded.

18. Under promise and over deliver.

19. When things go badly in business, you the owner will always be blamed.

20. When things go well in business, you will sometimes get the credit.

21. Maintain physical, mental, emotional and spiritual fitness and balance.

22. Most people will be friendly, but not all.

23. Loyalty is more precious and rare than money.

24. Time is more precious than money.

25. Surprisingly large projects can be completed over and above your regular workday.

26. When you get tired, problems will appear to be larger.

27. When you get tired, allow yourself to rest.

Cheaper Prices Don’t Build Goodwill

By Dan Boudreau

You’ll never build goodwill by under-charging your customers. Those new to business are prone to undervaluing their products and services. This is one of the great pitfalls when starting a new business.

Whether from insecurity or just not knowing the costs, new business owners tend to want to shower their customers in great value by charging less than the other guys. Aside from the fact that undercutting is a sure recipe for going broke, it invariably leads to problems down the road when you want to increase your prices.

  • Once customers are used to your low prices, it’s difficult to train them to pay more, and you are sure to lose a few when you increase your rates.
  • Customers who have received your goods at lower prices tend to think you’re cheating them when you start to charge more.
  • When you do begin to push your prices upward, you are bound to lose a few of the old customers who were just along for the free ride.

If you underrate your goods, your customers are almost certain to downgrade them too. A well intentioned deal might be perceived as worth a bit less, but you don’t want the customer thinking your services are completely worthless.

As a new business owner, one of the first pricing decisions you’ll make is to decide whether you really want to compete on price. If your strategy is to compete mainly on price, keep in mind that a large competitor will almost always crush a smaller business like a bug. Deeper pockets always prevail when price wars occur.

Here are a few suggestions for anyone tangling with the issue of pricing.

  1. Decide whether you want to be the cheapest, the fastest, or the best. Pick any two; trying to be all three is a sure recipe for going broke.
  2. When you’re setting your prices or rates, learn how much your competitors are charging and then position your prices where you want them to be. You don’t have to charge a lot less than the other guys to be perceived as giving a better deal.
  3. When it comes to providing a service, you will need to determine a value for your time. If you’re transitioning from a role as an employee to become self-employed, it’s important to remember that your hourly charge-out rate now needs to be much higher to help cover the cost of operating your business.
  4. Instead of simply attempting to undercut your competitors, find ways to provide more value to your customers; sometimes it makes more sense to compete by offering higher quality, or better service.
  5. If you’re already in business and your prices are too low, it may be time to begin to ratchet them up a bit. Be prepared to lose customers who refuse to adjust. In some cases, you may feel a shameless sense of relief as the more tenacious hagglers head off to buy from your competition.

When all is said and done, business owners need to pay the bills and earn a living. If your prices are too low to achieve these two goals, it may be time to increase your prices or consider winding down the business.

Related Articles and Resources:

Deadly Overhead Costs to Consider When Setting Your Prices

Small Business Goodwill is in the Eye of the Beholder

Free Business Planning Tools and Resources

66  Worksheets to help you write your business plan