Tips For
Running a Buisness - Small Buisness Information
Basics
of Managing a Business
This section offers
guidance in starting a business. But you are not ready to start your own
business until you have given some thought to managing it. A business is
an ongoing activity that doesn't run itself. As the manager you will have
to set goals, determine how to reach those goals and make all the
necessary decisions. You will have to purchase or make your product, price
it, advertise it and sell it. You will have to keep records, and determine
costs. You will have to control inventory, make the right buying decisions
and keep costs down. You will have to hire, train and motivate employees
now or as you grow.
Setting Goals
Good management is the key to success and good management starts with
setting goals. Set goals for yourself for the accomplishment of the many
tasks necessary in starting and managing your business successfully. Be
specific. Write down the goals in measurable terms of performance. Break
major goals down into sub-goals, showing what you expect to achieve in the
next two to three months, the next six months, the next year, and the next
five years. Beside each goal and sub-goal place a specific date showing
when it is to be achieved.
Plan the action you must take to attain the goals. While the effort
required to reach each sub-goal should be great enough to challenge you,
it should not be so great or unreasonable as to discourage you. Do not
plan to reach too many goals all at one time. Establish priorities.
Plan in advance how to measure results so you can know exactly how well
you are doing. This is what is meant by "measurable" goals. If you can’t
keep score as you go along you are likely to lose motivation. Re-work your
plan of action to allow for obstacles which may stand in your way. Try to
foresee obstacles and plan ways to avert or minimize them.
Buying
Skillful buying is an important essential of profitable operation. This
is true whether you are a wholesaler or retailer of merchandise, a
manufacturer or a service business operator. Some retailers say it is the
most important single factor. Merchandise which is carefully purchased is
easy to sell.
Determining what to buy means finding out the type, kind, quality,
brand, size, color, style -whatever applies to your particular inventory -
which will sell the best. This requires close attention to salespeople,
trade journals, catalogs, and especially the likes and dislikes of your
regular customers. Analyze your sales records. Even the manufacturer
should view the problem through the eyes of customers before deciding what
materials, parts, and supplies to purchase.
Know your regular customers, and make a good evaluation of the people
you hope will become your customers. In what socioeconomic category are
they? Are they homeowners or renters? Are they looking for price, style or
quality? What is the predominant age category?
The age of your customers can be a prime consideration in establishing
a purchasing pattern. Young people buy more frequently than most older
people. They need more, have fewer responsibilities, and spend more on
themselves. They are more conscious of style trends whether in wearing
apparel, cars or electronic equipment. If you decide to cater to the young
trade because they seem dominate in your area, your buying pattern will be
completely different than if the more conservative middle-aged customers
appear to be in the majority.
Study trade journals, newspaper advertisements, catalogs, window
displays of businesses similar to yours. Ask advice of salespeople
offering you merchandise, but buy sparingly from several suppliers rather
than one, testing the water, so to speak, until you know what your best
lines will be.
Locating suitable merchandise sources is not easy. You may buy directly
from manufacturers or producers, from wholesalers, distributors or
jobbers. Select the suppliers who sell what you need and can deliver it
when you need it. (Distributors and jobbers are used by most business
people for quick fill-ins between factory shipments.)
You may spread purchases among many suppliers to gain more favorable
prices and promotional material. Or you may concentrate your purchases
among a small number of suppliers to simplify your credit problems. This
will also help you become known as the seller of a certain brand or line
of merchandise, and to maintain a fixed standard in your products, if you
are buying materials for manufacturing purposes.
When to buy is important if your business will have seasonal variations
in sales volume. More stock will be needed prior to the seasonal upturn in
sales volume. As sales decline, less merchandise is needed. This means
purchases of goods for resale and materials for processing should vary
accordingly.
At the outset, how much to buy is speculative. The best policy is to be
frugal until you have had enough experience to judge your needs. On the
other hand, you cannot sell merchandise if you do not have it.
To help solve buying problems, you should begin to keep stock control
records at once. This will help you keep the stock in balance - neither
too large nor too small - with a proper proportion and adequate assortment
of products, sizes, colors, styles and qualities.
Fundamentally, there are two types of stock control - control in
dollars and control in physical units. Dollar controls show the amount of
money invested in each merchandise category. Unit controls indicate the
number of individual items when and from whom purchased by category. A
good stock control system can help you determine what, from whom, when,
and how much to buy.
Pricing
Much of your success in business will depend on how you price your
services. If your prices are too low, you will not cover expenses; too
high and you will lose sales volume. In both cases, you will not make a
profit.
Before opening your business you must decide upon the general price
level you expect to maintain. Will you cater to people buying in the high,
medium, or low price range? Your choice of location, appearance of your
establishment, quality of goods handled, and services to be offered will
all depend on the customers you hope to attract, and so will your prices.
After establishing this general price level, you are ready to price
individual items. In general, the price of an item must cover the cost of
the item, all other costs, plus a profit. Thus, you will have to markup
the item by a certain amount to cover costs and earn a profit. In a
business that sells few items, total costs can easily be allocated to each
item and a markup quickly determined. With a variety of items, allocating
costs and determining markup may require an accountant. In retail
operations, goods are often marked up by 50 to 100 percent or more just to
earn a 5% to 10% profit!
Let us work through a markup example. Suppose your company sells one
product, Product A. The supplier sells Product A to you for $5.00 each.
You and your accountant determine the costs entailed in selling Product A
are $4.00 per item, and you want a $1 per item profit. What is your
markup? Well, the selling price is: $5 plus $4 plus $1 or $10; the markup
therefore is $5. As a percentage, it is 100% ($5 markup = $5 cost of the
item). So you have to markup Product A by 100% to make a 10% profit!
Many small firms are interested in knowing what industry markup norms
are for various products. Wholesalers, distributors, trade associations
and business research companies publish a huge variety of such ratios and
business statistics. They are useful as guidelines. Another ratio (in
addition to the markup percentage) important to small firms is the Gross
Margin Percentage (GMP).
The GMP is similar to your markup percentage but whereas markup refers
to the percent above the cost to you of each item that you must set the
selling price in order to cover all other costs and earn profits, the GMP
shows the relationship between sales revenues minus the cost of the item,
which is your gross margin, and your sales revenues. What the GMP is
telling you is that your markup bears a certain relationship to your sales
revenues. The markup percentage and the GMP are essentially the same
formula, with the markup referring to individual item pricing and GMP
referring to the item prices times the number of items sold (volume).
Perhaps an example will clarify the point. Your firm sells Product Z.
It costs you $.70 each and you decide to sell it for $1 each to cover
costs and profit. Your markup is 43%. Now let up say you sold 10,000
Product Z's Iast month thus producing $10,000 in revenues. Your cost to
purchase Product Z was $7000; your gross margin was $3,000 (revenues minus
cost of goods sold). This is also your gross markup for the month's
volume. Your GMP would be 30% . Both of these percentages use the same
basic numbers, differing only in division. Both are used to establish a
pricing system. And both are published and can be used as guidelines for
small firms starting out. Often managers determine what Gross Margin
Percentage they will need to earn a profit and simply go to a published
Markup Table to find the percentage markup that correlates with that
margin requirement.
While this discussion of pricing may appear, in some respects, to be
directed only to the pricing of retail merchandise it can be applied to
other types of businesses as well. For services the markup must cover
selling and administrative costs in addition to the direct cost of
performing a particular service. If you are manufacturing a product, the
costs of direct labor, materials and supplies, parts purchased from other
concerns, special tools and equipment, plant overhead, selling and
administrative expenses must be carefully estimated. To compute a cost per
unit requires an estimate of the number of units you plan to produce.
Before your factory becomes too large it would be wise to consult an
accountant about a cost accounting system.
Not all items are marked up by the average markup. Luxury articles will
take more, staples less. For instance, increased sales volume from a
lower-than-average markup on a certain item - a "loss leader" - may bring
a higher gross profit unless the price is lowered too much. Then the
resulting increase in sales will not raise the total gross profit enough
to compensate for the low price.
Sometimes you may wish to sell a certain item or service at a lower
markup in order to increase store traffic with the hope of increasing
sales of regularly priced merchandise or generating a large number of new
service contracts. Competitors' prices will also govern your prices. You
cannot sell a product if your competitor is greatly underselling you.
These and other reasons may cause you to vary your markup among items and
services. There is no magic formula that will work on every product or
every service all of the time. But you should keep in mind the overall
average markup which you need to make a profit.
Selling
Whether you operate a factory, wholesale outlet, retail store, service
shop, or are a contractor, you will have to sell. No matter how good your
product is, no matter what consumers think of it, you must sell to
survive.
Direct selling methods are through personal sales efforts, advertising
and, for many businesses, display - including the packaging and styling of
the product itself - in windows, in the establishment, or both.
Establishing a good reputation with the general public through courtesy
and special services is an indirect method of selling. While the latter
should never be neglected, this brief discussion will be confined to
direct selling methods.
To establish your business on a firm footing requires a great deal of
aggressive personal selling. You may have established competition to
overcome. Or, if your idea is new with little or no competition, you have
the extra problem of convincing people of the value of the new idea.
Personal selling work is almost always necessary to accomplish this. If
you are not a good salesperson, seek an employee or associate who is.
A second way to build sales is by advertising. This may be done through
newspapers, shopping papers, the yellow pages section of the telephone
directory, and other published periodicals; radio and television;
handbills, and direct mail. The media you select, as well as the message
and style of presentation, will depend upon the particular customers you
wish to reach. Plan and prepare advertising carefully, or it will be
ineffective. Most media will be able to describe the characteristics of
their audience (readers, listeners, etc.). Since your initial planning
described the characteristics of your potential customers, you want to
match these characteristics with the media audience. If you are selling
expensive jewelry, don't advertise in high school newspapers. If you
repair bicycles, you probably should.
Advertising can be very expensive. It is wise to place a limit upon an
amount to spend, then stay within that limit. To help you in determining
how much to spend, study the operating ratios of similar businesses. Media
advertising salespeople will help you plan and even prepare advertisements
for you. Be sure to tell them your budget limitations.
A third method of stimulating sales is effective displays both in your
place of business and outside it. If you have had no previous experience
in display work, you will want to study the subject or turn the task over
to someone else. Observe displays of other businesses and read books,
trade magazines, and the literature supplied by equipment manufacturers.
It may be wise to hire a display expert for your opening display and
special events, or you may obtain the services of one on a part-time
basis. Much depends on your type of business and what it requires.
The proper amount and types of selling effort to use vary from business
to business and from owner to owner. Some businesses prosper with low-key
sales efforts. Others, like the used-car lots, thrive on aggressive,
hoop-la promotions. In any event, the importance of effective selling
cannot be over-emphasized.
On the other hand, don't lose sight of your major objective - to make a
profit. Anyone can produce a large sales volume selling dollar bills for
ninety cents. But that won't last long. So keep control of your costs, and
price your product carefully.
Record Keeping
The keeping of adequate records cannot be stressed too much. Study
after study shows that many failures can be attributed to inadequate
records or the owner's failure to use what information was available to
him. Without records, the businessperson cannot see in advance which way
the business is going. Up-to-date records may forecast impending disaster,
forewarning you to take steps to avoid it. While extra work is required to
keep an adequate set of records, you will be more than repaid for the
effort and expense.
If you are not prepared to keep adequate records - or have someone keep
them for you - you should not try to operate a small business. At a
minimum, records are needed to substantiate:
1. Your returns under tax laws, including income tax and social
security laws;
2. Your request for credit from equipment manufacturers or a loan from
a bank;
3. Your claims about the business, should you wish to sell it.
But most important, you need them to run your business successfully and
to increase your profits. With an adequate. yet simple, bookkeeping system
you can answer such questions as:
- How much business am I doing?
- What are my expenses? Which appear to be too high? What is my gross
profit margin? My net profit?
- How much am I collecting on my charge business?
- What is the condition of my working capital?
- How much cash do I have on hand? How much in the bank? How much do I
owe my suppliers?
- What is my net worth? That is, what is the value of my ownership of
the business?
- What are the trends in my receipts, expenses, profits, and net
worth? Is my financial position improving or growing worse? How do my
assets compare with what I owe?
- What is the percentage of return on my investment?
- How many cents out of each dollar of sales are net profit?
Answer these and other questions by preparing and studying balance
sheets and profit-and-loss statements. To do this, it is important that
you record information about transactions as they occur. Keep this data in
a detailed and orderly fashion and you will be able to answer the above
questions. You will also have the answers to such other vital questions
about your business as: What products or services do my customers like
best? Next best? Not at all? Do I carry the merchandise most often
requested? Am I qualified to render the services they demand most? How
many of my charge customers are slow payers? Shall I switch to cash only,
or use a credit card charge plan?
The kind of records and how many you need depends on your particular
operation. A boy selling newspapers part time each day does not need
inventory records. He buys and sells his entire stock each day. But shoe
store or dress shop operators will soon find they cannot keep necessary
inventory information in their heads.
Below is a list of records, grouped according to their use. No business
will need them all. You may need only a few. As a matter of fact, you
should not maintain a record without answering these three questions: (1)
How will this record be used? (2) How important is the information likely
to be? (3) Is the information available elsewhere in an equally accessible
form?
The following list may call your attention to records you can use to
great advantage:
- Inventory and Purchasing Records provide facts to help with buying
and selling
- Inventory Control Record
- Item Perpetual Inventory Record
- Model Stock Plan
- Out-of-Stock Sheet
- Open-To-Buy Record
- Purchase Order File
- Open To Purchase Order File
- Supplier File
- Returned Goods File
- Price Change Book
- Accounts Payable Ledger
- Sales Records to help determine sales trends
- Individual Sales Transactions
- Summary of Daily Sales
- Sales Plan
- Sales Promotion Plan
- Cash Records to show what is happening to cash.
- Daily Cash Reconciliation
- Cash Receipts Journal
- Cash Disbursements Journal
- Bank Reconciliation
- Credit Records show who owes you money and whether they are paying
on time.
- Charge Account Application
- Accounts Receivable Ledger
- Accounts Receivable Aging List
- Employee Records show legally required information and information
helpful in the efficient management of personnel.
- Employee Earnings and Amounts Withheld
- Employees' Expense Allowances
- Employment Applications
- Record of Changes in Rate of Pay
- Record of Reasons for Termination of Employment Employee Benefits
Record
- Job Descriptions
- Crucial Incidents Record
- Fixtures and Property Records list facts needed for taking
depreciation allowances and for insurance coverage and claims.
- Equipment Record
- Insurance Register
- Bookkeeping Records, in addition to some of the above, are needed if
you use a double-entry bookkeeping system.
- General Journal
- General Ledger
For efficient business operation, use information from records to keep
inventory stock in line with sales, to watch trends, and for tax purposes.
Use records to plan. A well thought-out business plan as a guide will
strengthen your chances for success.
A record showing the data for your business plan is the budget. Work up
a budget to help you determine just how much increase in profit is
reasonably within your reach. The budget will answer such questions as:
What sales will be needed to achieve my desired profit? What fixed
expenses will be necessary to support these sales? What variable expenses
will be incurred? A budget enables you to set a goal and determine what to
do in order to reach it.
Compare your budget periodically with actual operations figures. With
effective records you can do this. Then, where discrepancies show up you
can take corrective action before it is too late. The right decisions for
the right corrective action will depend upon your knowledge of management
techniques in buying, pricing, selling, selecting and training personnel,
and handling other management problems.
You probably are thinking you can hire a bookkeeper or an accountant to
handle the record keeping for you. Yes, you can. But remember two very
important facts:
1. Provide the accountant with accurate input. If you buy something
and don't record the amount in your business checkbook, the accountant
can't enter it. If you sell something for cash and don't record it, the
accountant won't know about it. The records the accountant prepares will
be no better than the information you provide.
2. Use the records to make decisions. If you went to a physician
and he told you you were ill and needed certain medicine to get well, you
would follow his advice. If you pay an accountant and he tells you your
sales are down this year, don't hide your head in the sand and pretend the
problem will go away. It won't.
Personnel Selection
If your business will be large enough to require outside help, an
important responsibility will be the selection and training of one or more
employees. You may start out with family members or business partners to
help you. But if the business grows - as you hope it will - the time will
come when you must select and train personnel.
Careful choice of personnel is essential. To select the right employees
determine beforehand what you want each one to do.
Then look for applicants to fill these particular needs. In a small
business you will need flexible employees who can shift from task to task
as required. Include this in the description of the jobs you wish to fill.
At the same time, look ahead and plan your hiring to assure an
organization of individuals capable of performing every essential
function. In a retail store, a salesperson may also do stockkeeping or
bookkeeping at the outset, but as the business grows you will need sales
people, stockkeepers and bookkeepers.
Once the job descriptions are written, line up applicants from whom to
make a selection. Do not be swayed by customers who may suggest relatives.
If the applicant does not succeed, you may lose a customer as well as an
employee.
Some sources of possible new employees are:
1. Recommendations by friends, business acquaintances.
2. Employment agencies.
3. Placement bureaus of high schools, business schools, and colleges.
4. Trade and industrial associations.
5. Help-wanted ads in local newspapers.
Your next task is to screen want ad responses and/or application forms
sent by employment agencies. Some applicants will be eliminated sight
unseen. For each of the others, the application form or letter will serve
as a basis for the interview which should be conducted in private. Put the
applicant at ease by describing your business in general and the job in
particular. Once you have done this, encourage the applicant to talk.
Selecting the right person is extremely important. Ask your questions
carefully to find out everything about the applicant that is pertinent to
the job.
References are a must, and should be checked before making a final
decision. Check through a personal visit or a phone call directly to the
applicant's immediate former supervisor, if possible. Verify that the
information given you is correct. Consider, with judgment, any negative
comments you hear and what is not said.
Checking references can bring to light significant information which
may save you money and future inconvenience.
Personnel Training
A well-selected employee is only a potential asset to your business.
Whether or not he or she becomes a real asset depends upon your training.
Remember:
- To allow sufficient time for training.
- Not to expect too much from the trainee in too short a time.
- To let the employee learn by performing under actual working
conditions, with close supervision.
- To follow up on your training.
Check the employee's performance after he or she has been at work for a
time. Re-explain key points and short cuts; bring the employee up to date
on new developments and encourage questions. Training is a continuous
process which becomes constructive supervision.
Personnel Supervision
Supervision is the third essential of personnel control. Good
supervision will reduce the cost of operating your business by cutting
down on the number of employee errors. If errors are corrected early,
employees will get more satisfaction from their jobs and perform better.
Motivating Employees
Small businesses sometimes face special problems in motivating
employees. In a large company, a good employee can see an opportunity to
advance into management. In a small company, you are the management. One
thing you may wish to consider is to give good employees a small share of
the profits, either through partownership or a profit-sharing plan.
Someone who has a "share of the action" is going to be more concerned
about helping to make a success of the business.
Food For Thought
The value in your own life must come from
you. You cannot take it from someone else, or borrow it, or inherit
it, or marry it, or just get lucky and happen upon it. You must
produce it.
Your life has meaning only to the extent that you make something of
it. Only to the extent that you make your own unique contribution to
the world.
Imagine that you are the most powerful and creative entity in the
universe. That you have the power to create your own reality. And you
have done so. You have created everything you ever could have imagined
or hoped for. And yet you are bored by it all. You realize that your
fulfillment comes through challenge, and there are no challenges left.
So, being the limitless creative force that you are, you decide to
create the ultimate challenge for yourself.
You put all your creative energy into building this ultimate
challenge, excited by the prospect of being truly "alive" again. When
it is all ready to go, you open the door that leads to your challenge,
step inside...
And find yourself exactly as the person you are right now, in
precisely the same situation that you are in today.
Now, how will you live out the adventure that you've worked so hard to
create for yourself?
Many times we make problems worse by not wanting to even admit they
exist. It seems easier to simply avoid the problem, rather than face
up to it and deal with it. Ultimately, the avoidance becomes more
painful than the original problem.
Ironically, the best way to limit life's pain, is to accept that some
pain is necessary. Accept that life is full of problems, and that it
is through the pain of resolving these problems, that we learn and
grow.
Many people live in a constant state of denial, afraid of the pain it
would cause to look their situation straight in the eye. Yet, as soon
as you get past that denial, your situation has already improved.
You're able to see the mistakes you've made in the past, and to learn
from your experience. You're able to clearly evaluate your current
situation, and construct a workable, realistic plan for your life.
Realize that, though you are responsible for your actions, who you are
is not defined by what you have done. Everyone makes mistakes. Detach
yourself from your problems, and then look at them realistically, with
the goal of solving them.
Life if full of challenges. Have the courage to look at them clearly,
and you'll see that they are all opportunities in disguise.
For everything that needs to be done, there are always dozens of
excuses for not doing it. Doubt and fear will paralyze you if you let
them. Resolve to bust your excuses by turning them on their head. Your
goals, your dreams are too important to be stopped by lame excuses.
The next time you feel an excuse coming on, fight back with this list
of excuse busters.
I don't know how -- Then make the effort to learn.
It's too hard -- Anything worth having, or doing, or being, requires
effort.
It will take too long -- Then that's all the more reason to get
started right away.
What will people think -- That's their problem. Let them think what
they will. It doesn't matter.
I'll do it as soon as I get back on my feet -- Taking positive action
toward your goals is precisely what will GET you back on your feet.
I might fail -- Yes, when you try you might fail. However, if you
don't try, then you'll certainly fail.
I'm too busy -- What are you accomplishing with all that busy-ness?
Simply being "busy" gets you nowhere. Stop being busy, evaluate your
priorities, and start taking focused, directed action.
I don't know where to start -- Envision the ultimate goal, and work
backwards, step by step, until you arrive at something that can be
done right now. Then do it. "The journey of a thousand miles begins
with a single step." Take that step, and then the next one. Repeat
until done.
I have too many obligations -- In order to be of service to others,
you must first be true to your own purpose in life. Your obligation to
yourself is what enables you to fulfill your obligations to others.
These things never work out -- That is correct. "Things" never do work
out. You must work them out. The various situations you encounter
provide you with opportunities, not sure bets. You must recognize
those opportunities and do the work necessary to take advantage of
them.
|
|