jevs
Well-known member
Turnover is vanity
Profit is sanity
Profit is sanity
I open at 9.30am and close at 5.30pm maybe have a delivery or two on the way home and thats me done, so its not always the case to work 100hrs a week just because you have your own business.Think twice mate, Ive been in business since 1989 and believe me those first few years are really tough.
You maybe of a certain age and this may limit your energy levels, you will need plenty.
Have a good business plan and get people in business to recommend services like accountancy etc. as a recommendation could save you a lot of foot work.
I used to use an accountant named Maggie, her company is Evans Barker, in Peacehaven, if they still exist.
She got me out of a hole several times with minimal damage.
Insist on payment when due, as has been said already, cash flow is your life blood.
Remember to treat yourself as an employee of the business, you work for it and not vice versa.
If you have to register for VAT it is not the end of the world, as long as you do your quarterly statements on time and pay what you owe.
There can be benefits in the long term but there are also a lot of sacrifices that will have to be made, you can forget the 9 to 5 and start thinking of 6 till whenever, plus weekends.
I open at 9.30am and close at 5.30pm maybe have a delivery or two on the way home and thats me done, so its not always the case to work 100hrs a week just because you have your own business.
After 32 years of working in the public sector
Don't leave the gravy train, you'll never get back on!
Don't register for VAT unless you absolutely have to.
Surely that would depend on what sort of business is being run. I'm on the flat-rate scheme, and it probably saves/earns about £600 a quarter.
I think his user name just MIGHT be a clue, as to which part of the public sector he worked in...
(in which case I can well imagine its not something you want to, or might feel able to, do indefinitely.)
be sure that you are willing to work harder than you have ever done in your life before - take as little out of the business as you possibly can, preferably nothing at all - keep on top of the money you are owed - most important of all be certain that the business you are going to start is something you really, really, really enjoy doing.
that is the life for most start-up owners of new businesses for at least the first few years - the eventual rewards can be very satisfying but they don't normally come easily.