How To Start A Successful Business During A Global Pandemic

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If you’re wondering how to start a successful business during the global pandemic, there’s good news and bad news. The good news is that there are still many opportunities to create and start a successful business, even as the world is in the midst of the Covid-19 pandemic! The bad news is that although it’s never particularly easy to create a successful business, it will be a bit harder still with much of the world on lockdown or at least taking some preventative measures in the face a this deadly Coronavirus.

So, what should you do to improve your odds and start a successful business when most would argue that it may be a better idea to wait until the global health crisis settles down?

Start with what you can control. Here are 5 key things you can control when you start a business:

1.) The idea you’ll pursue: ideas are a dime a dozen, as the saying goes, but “good” ideas are very tough to come by. Don’t jump at the first idea that comes to mind. Do adequate market research before you get started and make sure, most importantly, that you’re solving a problem that persons or companies are willing to pay to have you profitably solve.

2.) The money you’ll invest: when some people try to start a successful business, the first thing they want to do is empty their savings, or even their retirement account, and pour every last dime they have into their startup venture. They may have heard that this is the only way you can succeed in business, or they may just do everything all out, fully committed, which is a mentality I can appreciate. Before you invest all your money, though, make sure you at least are looking at a venture where you can break even in a reasonable amount of time (or at all). Many people skip this step and live to regret it later on. Some businesses should never be started, as they have little or no chance to become profitable, ever. You don’t want to find out too late that yours is such as business.

3.) The expectations you have: there are very few businesses that generate a profit and throw off cash flow to the owner from the get-go. They exist, but they are very few and far between. When and if you try to start a successful business, go into the process with your eyes wide open. Understand that creating and building a startup business is usually a marathon and not a sprint. In reality, you may feel like you’re sprinting and breathless most of the time, but you will need to be able to sustain your effort and your mental strength as if you’re running a marathon.

4.) The reasons you’re starting a business: Be honest with yourself about why you are starting a business. Is it to feed your ego? Is it because you’ve lost your job and have no alternative? Is it because you’re sick of having a boss? While all of these may be part of the reason most entrepreneurs start businesses, the very best reason to start a business is because you’ve identified a problem that needs to be solved. It does not need to be an earth-shatteringly large problem, but it does have to be one that creates a sufficient sense of urgency in your target market that they are willing to pay to have you solve it, and they are willing to pay a price that allows you to make a solid profit in the process of solving it.

5.) Whether your startup makes sense in the realities of the pandemic: We don’t control most things about the pandemic, but we do control our own actions. One action you must take before trying to start a successful business in this global health and economic crises, is to seriously consider whether your startup will have a role to play in the new world in which we live. Take a look at the businesses that are doing well in our new reality and take a look at the businesses that are struggling. Where would your startup idea fit in? Are you trying to start a travel business when most of the world is not permitted to travel? Are you trying to start a restaurant when most are hanging on by the skin of their teeth? Take a look at the big picture, then starting drilling into the market realities to determine whether your startup idea makes any sense in the context of this pandemic and beyond.

Once you’ve considered all the aspects you can control, you’ll also want to go back to the basics and put together a business plan before you commit your time, money and other resources to trying to start a successful business during a global health and financial crisis. That business plan should contain, at a minimum, the following elements:

Problem Description: this section must make very clear the problem that your product and/or service will solve. It should leave no doubt that you are not speculating that such a problem exists, but rather have done sufficient primary and secondary market research to confirm that there is a real need in the market, and one that people and/or companies are willing to pay you to solve.

Overall Market Description: here you will want to provide as much pertinent information as you can about the market. It’s key to keep the information relevant to the problem you are solving. Try to get as much current data as you can and try to size the market, both in terms of the number of potential customers and the potential dollar volume per year. Provide an indication of expected growth or decline in the market over the next five to ten years.

Market Niche(s): Now that you’ve provided an overview of the market, it’s time to talk about the various segments or niches in the market and specifically, go into greater detail regarding those you expect to target. Discuss why these segments are most relevant and attractive from your perspective and indicate how you expect to go after them. It is also important here to provide an indication of the size of these segments and how they fit into the overall market that you described above.

Products/Services: While you may have touched briefly in Problem Description on the products and services you will be offering, this is where you’ll go into greater detail, including how they will solve market needs better/cheaper/faster than the solutions currently available. Here you will want to cover the important characteristics of the offering, as well as the various versions you expect to bring to the market, based on the unique needs and desires of the particular niches you will be targeting. It is in this section that you will also cover the pricing of your offering and why your intended price points make sense in the context of the existing market and its expected evolution.

Competition: The first key point to make regarding competition is that as you think through and develop this section, remember that there is always competition. While there may be no competitors do exactly what you are expecting to do in the market, if a need exists, without a doubt there are alternative or substitute solutions being proposed to the market by other providers. There are very few situations where this is not the case. So, do yourself a favor and acknowledge that there is competition, however minimal or ineffective it may be. You will want to describe the existing competitors and their offerings, including the pricing. You will also want to point out their strengths and their deficiencies and where you think your offering will be more appealing to the market. Base your statements on primary and secondary research, not foundationless assertions. Don’t business plan “in a vacuum”.

Marketing Strategy/Tactics: What will be your marketing strategies and tactics for selling your products and services to your target market? It is in this section that you will exhibit your market knowledge and insights into the buying habits of the target market. You will discuss the typical buying process/cycle for the products and services you are introducing and you will describe any innovations you expect to bring to this process. For example, does your target market respond best to being sold through the internet, or have they never bought anything in your space unless it was sold by a salesperson face-to-face? A lot of the answers here will of course depend on the complexity and price point of your offering. If you expect to take a very innovative approach to marketing and selling to your target market, your argument will be a lot more compelling if you have done tests and primary market research to prove that the market is open to such an approach. Human behavior is not easy to change, and this is not lost on potential investors.

Management Team: It has been said many times that a potential investor cares more about having a good management team than about having the perfect product or service offering. In fact, it has been said so much, that it is largely taken as a truism by those in the entrepreneurship field. Why would this be? Well, veteran entrepreneurs and investors know that very few successful businesses end up being successful based on the exact formulation on which they were founded. Typically there are many course corrections that need to take place – the business and the offering morph as the founders and their team get more feedback from the marketplace. Given this reality, no one expects a perfect formulation of the business at the outset, but most realize that if the management team is not apt, it will have a very hard time making the ongoing adjustments necessary to become successful. So, in this section, you must describe your management team and why you believe that in this particular marketplace, you think your team is the right one to make your company a success as the business grows and evolves.

Financial Summary: This is the section of the plan that gives non-financial and non-quantitative people the most pause. In fact, in my observation, this is the section that causes many to not even bother starting the business plan. They don’t understand it and they realize that it will not be an easy road to understand it. That said, if you are starting a business, you must have a basic understanding of break-evenprofitability, and financial statements if you want to increase your probability of having a successful business. You don’t need to become a “numbers person” or a “quant jock” overnight, but you do need to be willing to step outside your comfort zone a bit, so you can understand how the world keeps score in business, which is by use of financial information. There are programs to help you put the financials together and there are also people out there who will help you put them together quite affordably. However you decide to approach it, make sure that you are not simply handing it off to someone else, without developing at least a basic understanding of the subject matter yourself. It is very difficult to effectively run an enterprise, if you do not at least understand the basics of how to “keep score”.

The essential elements that you’ll want to include in your Financial Summary include the following:

Break-even Analysis: a calculation of the point at which the company covers all its fixed and variable costs. Although it may look and sound daunting, it is a very simple calculation, especially when you’re just “thumbnailing” it. You’d do yourself and the readers of your plan an injustice if you didn’t do this calculation.

Key Assumptions: a description and quantification of those elements about which you don’t have certainty that will play a role in your financial model. Unless you possess supernatural powers to know the unknown and predict the future, you will not be certain about the values of all the variables that will go into your financial projections. For example, you will not know with certainty at what price or rate your offerings will sell in the marketplace, so you’ll need to make estimates or assumptions. You will have many assumptions, with some having a very important impact on your projections and others having a minimal impact. In this section you will want to focus on the important assumptions and describe them in as much detail as practical, to give yourself and the readers of your plan an indication of their variability and their importance in your financial projections.

Projected Financials: here, based on your assumptions, you will project the three major financial statements: the Income Statement, the Balance Sheet, and the Cashflow Statement. The Income Statement provides the reader with a window into the expected revenues, costs and profitability of the company. The Balance Sheet provides a snapshot of the company’s assets, liabilities and equity at a particular point in time. The Cashflow Statement does exactly what its name implies – it provides the reader with a window into the cashflows based on the company’s operating, investing and financing activities. The three financial statements are inextricably linked and you’ll need to project all three to provide a full understanding of the expected financial performance of the venture.

Key Financial Indicators: Based on the projected financial statements, in this section you will provide the reader with financial ratios that can yield insights into the potential financial strengths and weaknesses of the venture. These ratios indicate such things as liquidity, profitability, return on equity and asset utilization, among others, and are important for gaining an understanding of the likely financial attractiveness of the venture.

Capital Requirements: One of the reasons you’re creating a business plan may be to raise money from equity investors or get a loan from a bank. Any potential investor will be very interested in the projected finanical statements you created above. They will also want to see a more specific breakdown of the capital requirements you see for the venture, into the future. The relevant time horizon will vary, but you’ll want to project this for at least five years. These capital requirements can result from several potential factors, but the largest chunks are likely related to expenditures on equipment and facilities, startup costs, including the hiring of key senior and technical staff beyond the founders, and working capital.

Do your homework before you try to start a successful business given the new market realities during and after the pandemic. No one said starting a business would be easy, but you’ll be happy you put the work in before you start investing large amounts of time and money.

Image by Alexandra_Koch from Pixabay

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Paul is a serial entrepreneur, strategic and risk management advisor, marketer, speaker and coach who has dedicated the majority of his career to entrepreneurship, leadership and peak performance. Paul has worked with various entrepreneurial companies in senior management roles and has led the development, review, and selective implementation of several hundred start-up and corporate venture business plans, financial models, and feasibility analyses. He has performed due diligence on and valuation of many potential investment and acquisition candidates. Paul was also the Director of a consulting operation in Wharton Entrepreneurial Programs and holds a Bachelor of Science degree in Economics and an MBA from the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania. Paul has lived, worked, learned and traveled extensively in Latin America, Europe, and Asia and speaks and writes English, Portuguese, and Spanish.