10 Steps to Open for Business

Step 2: Choosing a Business Model

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Brick-and-Mortar

This is a business with a classic physical location outside of the home. It involves a dedicated facility - whether retail, wholesale, service or manufacturing.

Upside

  • Gives you an opportunity to work face-to-face with people and become more involved in your community.
  • A physical location may attract walk-in traffic to supplement traffic you gain through marketing efforts, depending on your type of business.
  • Gives you a dedicated space to go to work each day and become mentally and physically immersed in running your business.

Downside

  • Higher risk and startup costs (build-out costs to set up your location, lease/purchase costs)
  • Requires a full-time commitment upfront to get the facility ready for business, as well as to hire personnel to staff it.
  • If your concept is retail-oriented, you must acquire inventory to merchandize your store.

e-Commerce

In this model, you don’t have foot traffic in your business, only traffic to your website. You sell your product through your website to consumers or to other businesses.

Upside

  • As with a home-based business, this is a lower risk, lower cost business to start. You don’t necessarily need lots of personnel, inventory and facilities.
  • You can choose to do it full-time or part-time.
  • Easily scaleable – you can make your e-commerce business as big or small as you’d like to suit existing commitments, such as parenthood and a day job.
  • You can tap into a national, or even global, customer base through the internet.

Downside

  • As with a brick-and-mortar store, shipping, inventory management, and credit card processing can all become headaches if you don’t do them right, particularly if you are a one-person show.
  • Over 800 million people access the internet globally, but it’s a challenge to a) get that traffic to come to your site and b) convert them into a customer confident enough to make a purchase.

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Comments

Solotr Solotr Posted: 4/13/2008 11:05:05 PM

I whole heartedly agree that any business model must begin with 'Who Are You?'. Many times people jump into things like MLM, Affiliate Marketing or something equally as challenging without first...

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JohnsBests JohnsBests Posted: 4/9/2008 10:27:30 PM

Business model. I teach young entrepreneurs that your business model resides within. "You are your business model" takes them from the old school paradigm of thinking the answer is out there...

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beetracer beetracer Posted: 10/26/2007 2:07:20 AM

This pertains to Multi-Level Marketing as a business model.  I tend to disagree at some point on the notion that people at the top makes all the money and people at the bottom loses...

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MLMLeverage MLMLeverage Posted: 9/27/2007 1:08:43 AM

Hello,   I just wanted to comment on SuN's comments in Step 2 (Choosing A Business model) regarding MLM.   An MLM business that focuses on upline distributors selling / marketing...

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