10
Ideas For Starting Your Home-Based Business
Ready to
join the pajama set?
Yes, trading the early
morning rush hour for a commute from your bedroom to
your home office does sound appealing. But running a
home-based business isn't for everyone. "You have to
have the personality for it," says Jeff Berner, a San
Francisco-area author and consultant who has worked from
his home for 33 years. "If you like to work in groups
and need to interact with people on a daily basis, it
may not be for you."
Such warnings haven't
stopped a growing number of people from joining the home
business set. The number of home-based businesses in the
United States surpassed is expected to eclipse 25
million in 2003, according to the research firm
International Data Corp. (IDC). The average household
income of those with home businesses topped $57,000 in
1998, says the IDC. Think about this as you consider
entering the home-business world: Nearly 8,500 new home
businesses start every day, and there are no signs of a
slowdown.
The Internet is largely
responsible for this "no place like home" trend,
offering more ways to do business at home than the
telephone ever could. In 1996, only a quarter of the
home-office households had Internet access, according to
IDC. Three years later, more than 65% were hooked up.
Last year, as a group, small- and home-office workers
spent $52.2 billion on technology, a figure that will
jump to $78.8 billion in 2002.
What kind of a home-based
business will you start? Here are 10 ideas from
Microsoft Central, compiled from interviews and from a
host of lists by other writers and publications. The
criteria to make our top 10 were based on high ease of
entry, relatively low cost, high future demand and
potentially high return. See if one of them sounds like
you:
- Internet sales
and marketing. Yes, indeed, there are dot-com
failures around us. But the Internet train keeps
gathering steam. If you have a product to sell, this
is very likely the way to sell it (or auction it).
If you don't have a product, you can sell someone
else's from the confines of your home.
"Opportunities such as e-stores, e-auctions and site
selling have moved this category into the No. 1
position that and over a billion dollars in sales
last year," writes Brian Delaney in HOMEBusiness
Journal. Get a Web site built and you're off and
running.
- Children's
products and programs. From toys and furniture
to educational programs, this category sizzles with
possibilities. The US birthrate is stagnating, but
median family incomes are rising and so are parents'
efforts to do more while having less time for their
children. "With so many working parents,
after-school and summer programs with substance are
desperately needed," says Marcus P. Meleton of Home
Business Magazine. Children's furniture, painted
murals and training and exercise programs are other
items that will be in demand, he says. Profit
potential is moderate, but you will be doing
something important.
- Information
detective or researcher. Have a bit of Sherlock
Holmes in you? You can make good money by sleuthing
for information that corporate executives and others
need but don't have time to search for themselves.
Government regulations and intelligence regarding
competitors are but two areas to pursue. Technology
has made information gathering easier, but also has
stockpiled the amount of information to plow
through. "Solve someone's time problem by offering
to locate and retrieve the information they need and
you'll have people knocking on your door!" Delaney
says.
- Home inspector.
Home sales are increasingly dependent upon the
results of a professional inspection. The inspectors
generally are independent contractors who are
trained and certified, many also having past
experience as homebuilders or in the construction
trades. While that experience is helpful, it is not
mandatory. But certification is necessary if you
want to move beyond having your mother-in-law and
best friend as clients. Not only do buyers need home
inspectors, but real estate companies, insurance
firms and banks do, too.
- Internet
webmaster. Get started by developing Web sites
for your church, your child's school PTSA or your
politician friend. But building sites for businesses
is where the money is. Training is available through
the Web (naturally) at low cost, but you will need a
scanner, additional disk storage, a faster Internet
connection and other equipment. But if this is a
labor of love for you, and you know how to market
yourself, you will never be out of work. "You can
earn $50 and $100 an hour and hire out as a
contractor to businesses for large [Web site]
developments," says Meleton.
- Personal
assistant. For many business people today, time
is more precious than money. You help them, not by
unplugging their clocks, but by doing their
shopping, running errands, chauffeuring children and
doing other tasks that effectively give them more
personal time. The most ambitious here will also see
ways to become virtual business assistants by
providing services such as word processing,
newsletter writing, even digital photography or Web
site design. "Serve your clients in as many ways as
you know how," Claire Liston, 28, tells Entrepreneur
magazine. Liston turned her in-between-jobs stint
into a service business that could gross $70,000
this year.
- Event planner and
organizer. Life won't become one big party, but
it could become many little ones. Talented
organizers for weddings, bar mitzvahs, morale events
and the like are in high demand if they are strong
marketers as well. But it takes a creative bone, an
entrepreneurial spirit and an indifference to the
traditional workweek. Startup costs? Antonia
Calzetti and Brenda Yagmin spent less than $500 to
begin their home-based business in New York in
October 1999. The two, who met at a small catering
company, have helped build their clientele through
direct mailings, press releases and other marketing
efforts. Their new company's sales should reach
$100,000 this year, they tell Entrepreneur. "We
party every day," says Calzetti.
- Home repairs and
landscaping. Delaney, in his HOMEBusiness
Journal article, calls this category, "Home equity
enhancement." Cute name, but the real words here are
"cleaning," "painting," "repairing" and
"landscaping." The more you can do in increasing the
value of a home in the real estate market, the more
you can make. Selling yourself to real estate agents
is a good first step. How can a PC help? New
technology allows you to provide potential clients
with a look at their home with your improvements
added.
- Personal coach.
Corporate chieftains, entrepreneurs and most
everyone else could use an objective listener to
identify and correct weaknesses. The key here is
that you must possess the ability to help someone,
from skills and experience you have developed in
your own life. You also must be a good listener and
a good self-marketer. Talane Miedaner used a
personal coach in her job at a Manhattan bank then
followed his lead, enrolled in a training program
and became one, too. She now has a business that
works with 40 clients a month and is generating
$150,000 a year in sales. "I love the commute," she
tells Entrepreneur, referring to her home in New
York's Catskill Mountains. "I roll out of bed and
I'm coaching away."
- Technical
support. Those who troubleshoot computer system
problems at businesses big and small will never be
out of work. But you can build a similar business
out of your home, offering training and support
(even security consulting) to small offices, home
offices and residential customers with PCs.
Prerequisites (besides a demonstrated knowledge)
include a passion for technology, a customer service
bent, hourly rates and a flexible but not too
flexible schedule.
But here's a caution from
Azriela Jaffe, a noted author and nationally syndicated
columnist on home-business psychology: "Individuals and
couples must exercise great caution in pursuing
home-based business opportunities simply because they
show up on a top 10 list. The first and foremost thing
that should be leading you to choose a business is your
love for it and your skill in doing it."
From "Home Office," by
Monte Enbysk.
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