8 Strategies when Bootstrapping Your Business

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[R]DeVore

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Jul 12, 2006
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Well, I've been reading up on bootstrapping for a while now, and decided to write my outtake on everything I've learned. I am breaking it up into 8 parts on my blog, but will post an overview of all 8 posts in this thread here. You can read the full detailed sections on my blog if the overviews aren't enough for you. (help me out here, I'm trying to build up a good blog with a lot of useful information and at the same time, give WickedFire some useful information as well).


Strategy #1: Find the right product or service

The title explains itself. You need to find the perfect product or service to offer. This is the hardest part. If you have done arbitrage, then you know how the process goes. If you are working on a bigger scale then just small websites like that, and actually have a business to promote, it can get a little tougher.

Bootstrappers will know how to look past the small gain products/services, and dig a little deeper to the real big solutions. One tip to find out if your product or service is going to turn a profit is to grab your phone and call 50 business owners/potential clients, and pitch your idea. If you can get them to bite, you know it will work. If not, then all you wasted was a little time and a phonebill.

Strategy #2: Immerse Yourself

Whatever your start-up method, all of the phone calls to prospective customers might seem never-ending, but it is all worth it. This activity is the bedrock of bootstrapping. Doing some basic research of your niche market will help as well. Find out what different methods you can cover that most other businesses are not. Figure out what to do to make your company BETTER than the rest, and offer what others don't. Fill their mistakes, and you will do well. Immersing yourself is a big process of gaining knowledge in your business. You need to work to make money, and you need to learn in order to be successful. Trial and Error.

Strategy #3: Become the Expert Yourself

You need to beware of the experts. Believe half of what you see and none of what you hear. This is by far the greatest quote ever when it comes to Becoming the Expert instead of Using the Expert. Most people in your field who claim to be experts generally are only giving off secondhand knowledge. Things you could learn yourself, for free. They also are only following the trends, and might not see what the bootstrapper sees in a business opportunity. Therefore, becoming the expert yourself will save you a lot of money in having someone give you a consultation that is full of crap.

Strategy #4: Think in Black and White


Most business schools make things very complicated in running a business, and generally just 'fluff' everything to make themselves seem more knowledgeable (ie: Strategy #3). To the bootstrapper, the time and money wasted on being distracted by things is very costly, so the bootstrapper must think only in black and white. Put your business needs in primary colors and focus on the solid's and not the watered down scenerios. Staying focused and making things run as smoothly and simple as possible is key for the bootstrapper.

Strategy #5: Get Read for Rough Times

Noone said life was easy, right? Well, noone said that business is easy either. "Too much money in the beginning makes you stupid" says Jon Nordmark, the founder of eBags.com and it is very true, even if you do not want to admit it. Do it from the ground up - start with zero and you will be more pleased then if you got a big loan from a lender. You should know that you will not wake up the second day of business and be rich, but you will have that urge in your gut to push forward, and thats what a real bootstrapper needs. The drive to make it. So, "too much money in the beginning makes you stupid" and makes you not work as hard as you would without that cushion to fall back on.

Strategy #6: Don't Buy an Existing Business


Why? Simple, the existing workers already are used to running things "their way". I don't mean it as they run the shop, but they know how the previous owners ran things and they are usually set in their ways. Getting a fresh team of people behind your idea to work for you, will work out way better then trying to convince a group of people to change their views and follow you.

Strategy #7: Consider Carefully Before Joining With A Partner

Joining with a partner could do great for your business, but in most cases, it does very poorly. You may have a great idea, and a set mind on how to do things, and if your partner wants to be difficult, you are in for a slow start of your business. Starting by yourself insures 2 things: 1.) You do what you want, how you want. 2.) You own the company and all profits are going to you only. I am not saying to NOT partner up, but choose wisely if it is the best option for you currently. Maybe you can start solo, and then once the load gets to be too much, bring in an extra helping hand to help with day to day operations.

Strategy #8: Just Jump In!

There comes a time when all of the planning, and thought needs to be pushed to the side, and you need to get in the trenches and actually do some work. That is when you really learn everything needed to grow a successful company. You can plan for a year, and then start, or you can plan for a day and start now, so when that year is up, you are turning huge profits and your business is growing nicely. Sure, there are bumps and bruises to face, but if you are not ready to get dirty, what the hell are you here for anyways?

As a bonus to this post, I am posting the 14 keys that the founder of PrintingForLess.com said was the steps he used to become a successful bootstrapper.
  1. Find a niche within a niche.
  2. Choose a name that instantly means something to the clients.
  3. Provide exceptional customer service.
  4. Big bucks are made in simplifying, not complicating a business process.
  5. Use the press to broadcast your innovation.
  6. Think conterintuitively.
  7. Keep a hawkish eye on your receivables management.
  8. Get customers to pay up front whenever possible.
  9. Train your staff to be perfect handlers of customers.
  10. Try to ride a trend, rather than create one yourself.
  11. Don't offer drone jobs to great people.
  12. Get everyone to think like the owner concerning expenses.
  13. Maximize experimentation by embedding it in the company.
  14. Keep a dog in the office - it's great for morale.
 
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i think #8 is the best advice - and i think another great addition would be 'start small'...

I had a fantastic idea (IMO) that I tried for a couple of years to get off the ground after college. Problem was that it was just too big for what my experience and funding level was... it never got off the ground, but remains on my mind for some future day.

Started getting into trying to make money online and man I wish I had known all I know now ten years ago when I was into programming and shit in high school - you seriously can make serious cash without a ton of risk, and without a lot of start up capital - the perfect bootstrapping environment.

Right now I'm not making a fortune - about $50/day w/ arb. But I have one site being designed right now - and three more in the works. I took out a small low interest loan to finance the page design (prosper.com is great for this) and hope to have them all up and running soon. Even if they don't work out - I can afford the monthly loan repayments (I feel this is very important for everyone starting something w/o a ton of startup capital).

Don't overextend yourself - but don't be afraid to take risks! Losing a few hundred here and there on small ventures might suck - but if you learn something from it and it won't kill you financially, then what is the harm?? Try stuff out - something will stick eventually (at least I'm hoping ;) )!
 
Well, I've been reading up on bootstrapping for a while now, and decided to write my outtake on everything I've learned. I am breaking it up into 8 parts on my blog, but will post an overview of all 8 posts in this thread here. You can read the full detailed sections on my blog if the overviews aren't enough for you. (help me out here, I'm trying to build up a good blog with a lot of useful information and at the same time, give WickedFire some useful information as well).


Strategy #1: Find the right product or service

The title explains itself. You need to find the perfect product or service to offer. This is the hardest part. If you have done arbitrage, then you know how the process goes. If you are working on a bigger scale then just small websites like that, and actually have a business to promote, it can get a little tougher.

Bootstrappers will know how to look past the small gain products/services, and dig a little deeper to the real big solutions. One tip to find out if your product or service is going to turn a profit is to grab your phone and call 50 business owners/potential clients, and pitch your idea. If you can get them to bite, you know it will work. If not, then all you wasted was a little time and a phonebill.

Strategy #2: Immerse Yourself

Whatever your start-up method, all of the phone calls to prospective customers might seem never-ending, but it is all worth it. This activity is the bedrock of bootstrapping. Doing some basic research of your niche market will help as well. Find out what different methods you can cover that most other businesses are not. Figure out what to do to make your company BETTER than the rest, and offer what others don't. Fill their mistakes, and you will do well. Immersing yourself is a big process of gaining knowledge in your business. You need to work to make money, and you need to learn in order to be successful. Trial and Error.

Strategy #3: Become the Expert Yourself

You need to beware of the experts. Believe half of what you see and none of what you hear. This is by far the greatest quote ever when it comes to Becoming the Expert instead of Using the Expert. Most people in your field who claim to be experts generally are only giving off secondhand knowledge. Things you could learn yourself, for free. They also are only following the trends, and might not see what the bootstrapper sees in a business opportunity. Therefore, becoming the expert yourself will save you a lot of money in having someone give you a consultation that is full of crap.

Strategy #4: Think in Black and White

Most business schools make things very complicated in running a business, and generally just 'fluff' everything to make themselves seem more knowledgeable (ie: Strategy #3). To the bootstrapper, the time and money wasted on being distracted by things is very costly, so the bootstrapper must think only in black and white. Put your business needs in primary colors and focus on the solid's and not the watered down scenerios. Staying focused and making things run as smoothly and simple as possible is key for the bootstrapper.

Strategy #5: Get Read for Rough Times

Noone said life was easy, right? Well, noone said that business is easy either. "Too much money in the beginning makes you stupid" says Jon Nordmark, the founder of eBags.com and it is very true, even if you do not want to admit it. Do it from the ground up - start with zero and you will be more pleased then if you got a big loan from a lender. You should know that you will not wake up the second day of business and be rich, but you will have that urge in your gut to push forward, and thats what a real bootstrapper needs. The drive to make it. So, "too much money in the beginning makes you stupid" and makes you not work as hard as you would without that cushion to fall back on.

Strategy #6: Don't Buy an Existing Business

Why? Simple, the existing workers already are used to running things "their way". I don't mean it as they run the shop, but they know how the previous owners ran things and they are usually set in their ways. Getting a fresh team of people behind your idea to work for you, will work out way better then trying to convince a group of people to change their views and follow you.

Strategy #7: Consider Carefully Before Joining With A Partner

Joining with a partner could do great for your business, but in most cases, it does very poorly. You may have a great idea, and a set mind on how to do things, and if your partner wants to be difficult, you are in for a slow start of your business. Starting by yourself insures 2 things: 1.) You do what you want, how you want. 2.) You own the company and all profits are going to you only. I am not saying to NOT partner up, but choose wisely if it is the best option for you currently. Maybe you can start solo, and then once the load gets to be too much, bring in an extra helping hand to help with day to day operations.

Strategy #8: Just Jump In!

There comes a time when all of the planning, and thought needs to be pushed to the side, and you need to get in the trenches and actually do some work. That is when you really learn everything needed to grow a successful company. You can plan for a year, and then start, or you can plan for a day and start now, so when that year is up, you are turning huge profits and your business is growing nicely. Sure, there are bumps and bruises to face, but if you are not ready to get dirty, what the hell are you here for anyways?

As a bonus to this post, I am posting the 14 keys that the founder of PrintingForLess.com said was the steps he used to become a successful bootstrapper.
  1. Find a niche within a niche.
  2. Choose a name that instantly means something to the clients.
  3. Provide exceptional customer service.
  4. Big bucks are made in simplifying, not complicating a business process.
  5. Use the press to broadcast your innovation.
  6. Think conterintuitively.
  7. Keep a hawkish eye on your receivables management.
  8. Get customers to pay up front whenever possible.
  9. Train your staff to be perfect handlers of customers.
  10. Try to ride a trend, rather than create one yourself.
  11. Don't offer drone jobs to great people.
  12. Get everyone to think like the owner concerning expenses.
  13. Maximize experimentation by embedding it in the company.
  14. Keep a dog in the office - it's great for morale.

um not so good advice actually

if your kinda a n0ob those are good tips but they are slow and time consuming and not very effective

better advice is to learn how to make money using skills.

Dont be wasting your time on stuff that isnt effective like creating a business and then not making money cause you will be a n00b then

Also, it seems you have little idea what your talking about. Your give innacurate advice.
 
um not so good advice actually

if your kinda a n0ob those are good tips but they are slow and time consuming and not very effective

better advice is to learn how to make money using skills.

Dont be wasting your time on stuff that isnt effective like creating a business and then not making money cause you will be a n00b then

I don't think you get it. These tips are to help people figure out a PROFITABLE BUSINESS and not just jump into something because they think its "cool" and then lose money. These tips are not even slow and time consuming either. The main idea behind them is to "JUMP IN AND DO IT" so how is that time consuming? I didn't post this for the people doing arbitrage only, I posted this for people who want to start a legitimate business online or offline.
 
I have an affiliate account that makes me $300 a day and it is a legal business but I only formed an LLC AFTER making money. Is seems you have it backwards. The business is just a legal entity. If you suck at making money it wont make a difference.
 
See, again, you are not understanding. I didn't tell anyone in my origional post to go and form an LLC, get a good niche to work in and THEN make money. It was saying to FIND a good niche, by calling and emailing potential clients to see what their needs and wants are so you know your product/service is needed, and THEN start making money. I never said, set up an LLC, become a legal business and THEN make money. Read, and re-read what I wrote and you might better understand.

You can be a bootstrapper with no name for a company, and no products. How? Easy. You find out what the people need. Thats the core of being a bootstrapper. Finding what the world LACKS and fill the gap, while doing it with little to no start up money.
 
The title of your thread said 'bootstrapping your business'. By using the word business I thought you were referring to an actual business entity such as an LLC.

Back to my other point, I read your blog and it seems you arent qualified to offer money making advice considering your make little online yourself. Its kinda ironic how that is


Also there is no need to bootstrap if you know how to make moeny online as I do cause your starting costs will be very small. I started making money online with only $100 to pay for some advertising and a website.

All those
 
How do you read my blog an assume that I am making little online? Are you serious? I'm not trying to get into the "I made XXXXX last month" discussions, but I am making money.

No need to bootstrap? Then you say you started your money making online with 100.00 In case you didn't know, thats a form of bootstrapping: "Starting a business with little to no money". Was it that hard to understand?
 
Some of thoe advice is kinda lame though as if it were written by someone without much expierence regarding business or making money online.

Number 1 for example.

Strategy #1: Find the right product or service

No shit...
 
It's funny that 95% of all your posts are on some dumbass replies. You still are not making any valid points in this thread, so I would like if you just stayed out of it and let people read in peace. So, the #1 idea is a "no shit" response from you, but without that part of the process, everything is not going to work. It was more about HOW to find the right product or service anyways, not just "find it"
 
buying an existing business is not a bad idea at all. Ask Warren Buffet, he says he would never invest in a start-up. Why build something yourself when you can buy something that already making money. (For the right price of course). If you have a brand that's making money, and the people there won't change their ways. Fire them and get people who will (assuming you are 100% right about everything).
 
buying an existing business is not a bad idea at all. Ask Warren Buffet, he says he would never invest in a start-up. Why build something yourself when you can buy something that already making money. (For the right price of course). If you have a brand that's making money, and the people there won't change their ways. Fire them and get people who will (assuming you are 100% right about everything).

The buying of a buisness needs to be chosen wisely. I didn't say to NEVER do it, I just said to be careful, and that I would not recommend it. Think about it also as, the whole community is used to a certain mom and pop shop running things a certain way, and seeing certain people in it. If you come in, fire all of the people there and do things your own way, people will lose respect for your business in the sense of it not being the 'business you bought anymore' and will risk you losing a lot of the same customers who used to shop there numerous times per week. That strategy was all about risk factor, and I was planning on talking about that more on my blog as well. I just wanted to post the overviews here.
 
The buying of a buisness needs to be chosen wisely. I didn't say to NEVER do it, I just said to be careful, and that I would not recommend it. Think about it also as, the whole community is used to a certain mom and pop shop running things a certain way, and seeing certain people in it. If you come in, fire all of the people there and do things your own way, people will lose respect for your business in the sense of it not being the 'business you bought anymore' and will risk you losing a lot of the same customers who used to shop there numerous times per week. That strategy was all about risk factor, and I was planning on talking about that more on my blog as well. I just wanted to post the overviews here.

Your rambling again ...
 
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