
eBook - ePub
Startup Money Made Easy
The Inc. Guide to Every Financial Question About Starting, Running, and Growing Your Business
- 272 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub
Startup Money Made Easy
The Inc. Guide to Every Financial Question About Starting, Running, and Growing Your Business
About this book
Let the experts at Inc.guide you through every critical step and potential pitfall as their on-the-ground reporting shows how to locate funding, manage your money, and smart hack your way to a comfortable retirement.
Startup Money Made Easy gathers the best advice from the magazine’s pages, spotlighting celebrated entrepreneurs and inspiring stories. You’ll hear from:
- FUBU founder Daymond John, who mortgaged his family home for start-up capital—and built a $6 billion empire
- Makeup artist Bobbi Brown, who turned a modest lipstick line into a profitable 30-store enterprise
- Alexa von Tobel, who dropped out of Harvard Business School to launch the equity-magnate LearnVest.com
- Mark Cuban, Sallie Krawcheck, Max Levchin, and other founders who overcame financial obstacles on their way to the top
Additionally, these stories include on-target tips that explain how to:
- Raise your first $10,000 in capital
- Power through the lean years
- Get friends and family to back you up
- Round up outside investors
- Go public or sell, while still staying in charge
- Reward people with great salaries and benefits
- Eliminate tax season surprises
- Grow without growing pains
Cash flow problems are the number-one business killer. Whether you’re dreaming up a startup idea or knee deep in the craziness, learn to shore up your finances and safeguard the business.
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Yes, you can access Startup Money Made Easy by Maria Aspan in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Business & Corporate Finance. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
Information
1
STARTING FROM SCRATCH
âWhen I was twenty-two years old, a guy who owned a little bodega in my neighborhood told me, âIf you really want to start a company, you better dig under your couch for a couple of extra dollars, stop going out to dinner four times a month, trade in your car for a cheaper one, and raise that $40,000 or $30,000, if you can, by yourself.ââ1
DAYMOND JOHN, Shark Tank investor and FUBU founder
YOU WANT TO START a business. Youâve got the idea, youâre ready to hustle, but how much money do you need to launch your startup?
Ten years ago, the average cost of starting a small business was $31,150, according to one study.2 That seems laughably large today. While some businesses still require lots of money to get off the ground, at Inc., we regularly hear from founders of fast-growing companies who started their businesses for hundreds, not thousands, of dollars.
âToday a smart entrepreneur with a website can start making in six months what we were making after six years,â says Bert Jacobs, cofounder of the apparel company Life Is Good.3
Technologyâs rapid advance is bringing down many startup costs, as Jacobs points out. He and his brother John launched the first iteration of their company in 1989, with $200 borrowed from another brother, Allan. The early days were scrappy, to say the least, as Jacobs told Inc.âs Leigh Buchanan:
We would have used that technology if weâd had it. Instead, we spent years building a company with employees we met at pickup basketball games; customers we joked with in the streets while keeping one eye peeled for the beat cop; and advice from retailers up and down the East Coast whom we dropped in on. It may not have been the most effective process. Definitely it wasnât the most efficient. But a lot of our companyâs values came out of that early need to do things cheap and in person.4
Life Is Good now sells $100 million worth of apparel every year. And there are parts of Jacobsâs experience, especially the grit and patience, that remain relevant today. If youâre dreaming of starting a business that could someday rival his success, you donât necessarily have to spend money in the same ways.
Entrepreneurs who have started their companies more recently agree that the technology of today, well, rocks.
âItâsâoh, my godâ1,000 percent easier now to go out and set up your own thing,â Matthew Schwab, cofounder and president of San Francisco flower-delivery startup BloomThat, told me in 2016.5
Schwab set up his company using Stripe, the payment-processing platform that makes it easier for many online businesses to start selling goods or services. And Stripe is just one part of the large ecosystem of tech services that exist to help you get your startup off the ground cheaply and quickly; what we at Inc. call the âinstant startup kitâ:
Websites, billing, payment processing, cloud computing, communications, fundingâall have been made simpler by the likes of Squarespace, Slack, Kickstarter, Dropbox, Amazonâs ubiquitous Web services division, and PayPal. . . .
In the past ten years, these building blocks have greatly reduced the timeâand costâinvolved to start a business, especially high-tech ones. Thanks to âthe emergence of the internet, open-source software, cloud computing, and other trends,â some experts estimate tech-reliant ideas âthat would have cost $5 million to set up a decade ago can be done for under $50,000 today,â according to a 2014 paper from the National Bureau of Economic Research.6
Good news: You probably donât need $5 million to start your business! You might not need $50,000 or $30,000. In fact, you might not even need half of that: In 2014, 49 percent of Inc. 500 founders responding to our annual CEO survey7 said they used under $5,000 to launch their businesses. The next-biggest group, 15 percent, said they needed between $10,000 and $50,000.
The amount of money you need will vary depending on your answers to the following questions:
â˘What kind of business do you want to start?
â˘How many people do you need to run your startup?
â˘Where are you starting your business, and how much space do you need?
â˘How quickly do you need to get your product or service to market?
â˘How long can you afford to live without a salary?
Letâs go through each of these questions.
WHAT KIND OF BUSINESS DO YOU WANT TO START?
This is the most fundamental factor in determining the kind of money youâll need up front: What are you selling, and is it a product or a service?
Product-based businesses tend to be more expensive to initiate. If youâre making T-shirts or baking cupcakes or designing mobile apps, youâll need the raw materials to create your product, the equipment for the production, the people to perform the manufacturing or baking or coding, and the space to do the work.
Planning on doing it all yourself, at least at the start? Remember that youâll also need to spend time actually selling your product and marketing it so youâll have customers interested in buying it.
Melissa Ben-Ishay, cofounder of mini-cupcake company Baked by Melissa, got her start during a dark time: The day she was fired from her job as a media planner, in 2008, Ben-Ishay went home and baked two hundred cupcakes. She gave them away to friends to bring into their offices, which piqued caterersâ interest. Still, the early days were full of self-doubt and imposter syndrome. Ben-Ishay told me:
After I was fired from my advertising job, I worked out of my apartment for seven months, by myself. Iâd cold-call catering companies and say, âHi. This is Melissa from Baked by Melissa. Iâd like to bring you a free tasting of my cupcakes.â I remember crying to my brother, âWho the hell do I think I am?! âMelissa of Baked by Melissa?ââ I felt like a fraud.8
Within seven years, Ben-Ishay was selling her cupcakes in fourteen New Yorkâarea stores and nationally online.
Inc.com columnist Jason Albanese, cofounder and CEO of digital consultancy Centric Digital, describes the challenge for product-based startups as âup-front product development costs, coupled with the risk of market acceptance. In other words, thereâs no real way of knowing whether or not the product youâre investing in is going to succeed and offer any kind of substantial return.â9
Service-based businesses are, in many ways, a lot easier and cheaper to launch, particularly if you already have industry expertise and contacts. If youâre a lawyer or an accountant or a digital marketing expert or have any other specialized business experience, you have the product (your expertise) and, potentially, the market. You can start selling your services on your own to people and companies that may be familiar with you and your work.
You donât have to hire anyone else, at least at first. You donât necessarily have to spend more money on office space, as long as you can work out of your home. And ideally, you donât have to spend as much time marketing your services.
The downside: Albanese points out that service-based companies face more costs and complexity later on as they try to scale, since their growth depends on having more people. Weâll address expansion costs in Chapter 6.
HOW MANY PEOPLE DO YOU NEED TO RUN YOUR STARTUP?
As we discussed above, if youâre selling yourself and your services, youâll need less money up front than if you expect to hire others. For product-based businesses, you can do what you can on your ownâand you can beg friends and family to helpâbut itâs more likely that youâll soon need to pay for help.
That doesnât necessarily mean bringing on full-time employees; you can also consider hiring consultants or part-time workers. An increasing number of online marketplaces provide one-off help with specific tasks, as well as remote help with recurring work. Freelancer and remote job sites include Upwork (all sorts of freelancers), Working Not Working (creative and design work), and PowerToFly (tech talent, much of it remote and looking for longer-term assignments, specializing in matching tech jobs with qualified women).10
If youâre planning to start a business that requires full-time employees, your immediate expenses, beyond salaries and healthcare costs, may include other insurance, rent for your workspace, and retirement plans. There are less obvious costs, too, as we will discuss in a later chapter.
WHERE ARE YOU STARTING YOUR BUSINESS, AND HOW MUCH SPACE DO YOU NEED?
Can you work out of your home? Do you need office space, or desks in a coworking space? And are you starting your business in an expensive, densely populated city or in a place with lower real estate costs?
Cities across the Midwest and in the growing tech hubs of Utah are some of the best places to start a business, due in part to their affordable real estate, according to annual rankings by personal-finance website WalletHub.11
Meanwhile, the six most expensive cities for office space are all in California, as many a Silicon Valley founder knows, which has led to lots of competition for office space, and some creative cost-saving strategies.
One California-based startup, social-media analytics firm Buffer, tried to save some rent in 2015 by closing its San Francisco office, âsince too few employees were using it,â Inc.âs Victoria Finkle reports. âInstead, the startup covers coworking memberships for those who want them, an estimated 15 to 20 percentâ of the startupâs then-staff of sixty-four people.12
HOW QUICKLY DO YOU NEED TO GET YOUR PRODUCT OR SERVICE TO MARKET?
Do you have a brilliant idea to solve an immediate problem, and will customers still buy your product if you spend months or years developing it? In the meantime, how many competitors will introduce a version of your idea?
If speed is of the essence, you may need outside ...
Table of contents
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1. Starting from Scratch
- 2. Business Planning and Bootstrapping
- 3. Friends, Family, and Finances
- 4. Looking for Outside Investors
- 5. Exit Strategies
- 6. The Economics of Expanding
- 7. Everything Employee
- 8. Enjoying It
- Conclusion
- Sources
- Index