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EXPANSION
How
often have you heard the term “grow or die”? For
most small businesses
the goal is to grow the business from a one-person operation into some
kind of large corporation. If this is what you want, proceed carefully
because businesses are very vulnerable during periods of extreme
growth. You should probably look elsewhere for information because this
book is geared to the one-person business. However, check out the list
below for some of the things that are involved with expansion to a
large business.
Accounts receivables
become a large part of your
business. You will have to develop good collection methods to make
certain that your company gets paid for all of sales in a timely
manner. You can’t let things pass because that affects cash
flow
adversely. Without sufficient cash flow you won’t be able to
pay the
bills that will continue to come in regardless of how collections go.
This situation can lead to bankruptcy because you are unable to pay
your debtors.
Expansion always involves
hiring employees and this
brings many new problems into play. First, of course, you must make
certain that you hire good, productive employees who will care about
their work. You also have the problem of payroll deductions and payroll
payments to the IRS. This means your entire accounting system must be
upgraded to deal with this in a way that meets government standards.
And we still have not covered the additional cost of insurance and the
large cost of worker’s compensation. This means that an
employee that
works for $10.00 per hour will probably wind up costing you more than
$20.00 per hour.
My experience with
expansion in my woodworking
business was not good. I decided that if I hired a competent woodworker
I would have more time to concentrate on projects and the other
woodworker could also increase my overall productivity. I really
believed that it would free me up to do other jobs. Unfortunately, it
did not work out that way.
I hired a professional
woodworker and started
sharing the work with him. I would do the designs and even create the
cut lists and drawings. As it turned out I never had enough time to
just concentrate on my projects. Instead I wound up overseeing his work
to make certain that it met my standards. This drained time away from
my work and reduce the benefits significantly.
Because of my consistent
and stressful pushing, I
got a lot more work done during the first six months. My gross income
was somewhat higher for that 6 months period but the amount of profit
was the same as when I worked alone. And, percentage wise, my profit
margin was actually lower. I decided at that point to just work alone
and simply hire someone to help me deliver and install projects.
Working alone I completed
fewer projects but I made
just as much money and avoided all the stress of dealing with an
employee. Plus I avoided all the payroll hassles. I continued in the
business for many years without employees.
One of the reasons that I
explored the employee
route was that my volume of work had increased significantly. At one
time I had a project backlog of more than eight weeks. After my
experience with hiring an employee I decided to deal with my large
backlogs by raising my prices significantly. After a few adjustments I
got to the point that I maintained a two or three week backlog of work
most of the time and was charging top dollar.
During those large
backlogs I also learned to
adjust prices based on my feelings about the potential customer. Since
time is critical, those customers who take up more of your time should
be paying more. You can usually tell a lot about a customer while you
are trying to negotiate prices or work out designs. I begin using my
normal pricing for those potential customers that seemed easy to work
with and raising my prices drastically for those that were troublesome.
This may seem unfair but
it is no more so that the
idea that prices are affected by supply and demand. When there is a
large supply of something and a small demand, the price remains low.
When the supply is small and the demand is high, the price goes up.
It’s the same item but not the same price. So why not adjust
for levels
of difficulty and unpleasantness. By doing this, your outcome related
to troublesome customers is always good. If you get the job, you will
get paid more for putting up with the difficulties. If you
don’t get
the job, you won’t have to tolerate the difficulties. Either
way you
win.
Remember your reason for
starting your own
business. You wanted to be free from the hassles involved with your
day-to-day job and do the kind of work you enjoy. Expansion,
troublesome employees and unpleasant customers are not conducive to a
happy small business environment. I suggest that you avoid them as much
as possible.
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