Topic: How To Invest

How to invest in your own business

How-to-invest-in-your-own-business

Our business investing tips will show you how you improve your chances of striking it rich with your new start-up.

There’s a high failure rate for those who start their own businesses, but if you know how to make the right choices, it’s still your best chance of getting rich.

You can still get rich as an employee of a company—ask any highly paid executive of a Canadian corporation. However, high-paying jobs are hard to find. Most corporate structures are pyramid-shaped, with a few high-paying positions at the top and many lower-paying jobs down below. And, with the economy growing slowly and unemployment remaining relatively high, many people continue to vie for higher-paying jobs.

You may improve your chances of getting rich by knowing how to invest in your own business. But this is a risky proposition. Many new businesses wind up failing. As many as 80% go bankrupt or simply shut down in their first five years, according to a number of surveys. Of five-year survivors, as many as 80% fail during years six through 10. Owners of failed enterprises may lose their life savings, and even their homes and marriages.

Today, we look at the risks of going into business on your own. We also spell out our business investing tips that can improve your chance of success with a start-up business.

Why new businesses fail:

  • Owners underestimate the amount and variety of work. In a small business, everything is your job, until you hire somebody to do it. Even then, you still have all of the responsibility.
  • Shortages of capital and the difficulty of building a reliable source of cash flow. In many failures, the owners simply ran out of money to pay their bills before the company’s profits begin to flow.
  • Some “bright idea” businesses fail because there’s no real demand for their product or service.


10 Best Practices of Successful Investors

There are positive steps you can take to achieve the greatest success. Then there are steps that help you avoid costly mistakes that can lead to years spent coming back from devastating losses. These 10 practices cover both—this is how successful investors get that way.

Learn more  >>


Business investment tips to improve your chances for success

  • Keep your job and run the business on the side until it starts making money.
  • Make sure you have adequate capital. Apply for loans, lines of credit, merchant charge-card accounts and so on before you need them.
  • Choose a “me-too” business over a pioneering one. Improve on existing products or services, or buy a franchise.
  • Make it your life’s work. Learn all you can about the industry, and keep learning. Plan on working long hours for many years without supervision or immediate rewards.
  • Above all, stick with it. Many entrepreneurs go broke two, three or more times before they launch the business that makes their fortunes.

Note to investors: The odds against success in your own start-up business apply just as much to shares in start-up businesses that trade on the stock exchange. If anything, the odds against publicly traded start-ups are worse; that’s because some publicly traded start-ups are created by stock promoters who merely go through the motions of building a business, while their real business is selling stocks to the public.

That’s why it pays to downplay junior stocks in your portfolio. Instead, invest most of your money in well-established companies with a history of sales and earnings, if not dividends. That’s why we focus on well-established companies in our newsletters: they put the odds of success in your favour.

Have you started a new business recently? Has it been successful? What are some other business investing tips you can share?? Let us know your experience in the comments.

Comments

  • Aaron 

    My wife and I recently started a business in Markham in the arts sector. She is an illustrator with a background in marketing in the non-profit sector. We offer on-going classes, camps, one-off workshops, fine art printing/reproduction, and picture framing. Our biggest hardship so far is cash flow. We have seen double growth in our second year of business, but our mistake of purchasing our location of operation was a massive massive mistake. We now have a $4k/mo overhead without even purchasing materials. Our saving grace has been indeed.com, where we have found interns and people who want to learn marketing or other arts related skills. In turn for their labour, we offer them transit compensation and food expenses. Eventually we would like to compensate these types of people and situations with a monetary solution, but again, cash flow will be the determining factor. We now have our unit for sale and have our eye on a few other places. Main St. Markham, Main St. Unionville and the new Downtown Markham to name a few.

    I truly wish that I had kept my job at my last company and supported my wife through funding her dream job/company until it was suitable enough for me to slide over at the right point in time. C’est la vie though, and here we are! The trick we are using is to not stop. We worked 7-days a week all summer due to our summer camp programs offered to young kids and teens, and now 6-days a week in the fall, winter and spring months. No job is too small and few jobs are too big. If they are, outsource to help cover the workflow to get your target time met.

    I wish all the other entrepreneurs out there sanity and a stop watch so you can enjoy the company of loved ones. If even only here and there.

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