Everyone wants to be an entrepreneur these days, but the one thing holding them back is lack of money. The banks are reluctant to lend to start ups, a tough economic climate makes it hard to borrow from friends and family, and funding it on your credit card comes with big risks. If you do need some cash, government-backed Start-up loans are for people who’ve been turned down by banks. But funding isn’t always necessary. The good news is that providing you follow a few basic rules, starting a business with almost no money are entirely possible. Here’s how to do it:
1.
Use the resources at your fingertips.
Work from home or a local café or
library which offers free wifi. Have a car? You could offer a local delivery
service. Have a kitchen? You could start making cakes or providing catering for
parties.
2.
Build a business round the skills you already
possess.
What can you do that someone else might be prepared to pay for? Can you
make clothes, paint and decorate, programme a computer, speak Italian? Do you
have a hobby you could turn into a business? If you possess a skill that other
people don’t, or would need to invest time and money learning for themselves,
that immediately puts you at a big advantage.
3. Sell a product or service which people need rather than want,
which they instantly understand, and which they feel
comfortable buying without having to consult anyone else first. Umbrellas at
£10 each are a better bet than hot tubs at £10,000 each.
4. Get customers to pay you upfront –or
at worse, half upfront, half later, so that your costs are always covered.
5.
Tap into free advice.
The
British Chambers of Commerce runs free events for start-ups; Startup Britain
has an enterprise calendar on its website listing events for entrepreneurs
around the country, many of them free. The Business and IP centre at the
British Library has a wealth of resources for start-ups.
6. Source any equipment you need for free through Freecycle,
a community website where people can
recycle unwanted items, or the freebie section of listings sites such as
Gumtree and Craigslist.
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