Tag Archives: Pete Savage

Best Start-up Business Resources For 2010

At the end of each year, I like to supply a list to the best small business book resources I have found on how to start a business.  2010 was a great year for entrepreneurship and next year will be even better.  I have found some terrific authors whose books and e-books will help would-be and start-up entrepreneurs avoid having to learn so many expensive lessons. Enjoy!

The Wealthy Freelancer; 12 Secrets to a Great Income and an Enviable Lifestyle  By Steve Slaunwhite, Pete Savage, Ed Gandia: This is one of the best business books I have read this year.  Most small business start as a side hustle or freelance business, and these guys have nailed down what you need to do in order to build the kind of business where you make a profit and are not just skating by, barely able to pay bills. All three authors are super smart and they are relentless marketers—which is what you need to be to start a successful business.

Plan As You Go Business Plan by Tim Berry Tim Berry is the foremost expert on business plans among

small business thought leaders I know. Berry is a seasoned entrepreneur and adjunct professor who founded Palo Alto software, a business that is still in existence and annually grosses over $10 Million in revenue.  One of their top products is Business Plan Pro software, which is an excellent resource for starting a business plan. I’ve included my affiliate link if you want to grab a download of the software.

In his book, the Plan As You Go Business Plan, Tim emphasizes that business plans are not a one shot deal.  He also gives the reader options for pulling together their business plan in a way that is not too overwhelming. Tim also gives plenty of resources and practical advice to make your business plan a success.

Your Idea, Inc.  12 Steps to Building a Million Dollar Business – Starting Today!  by Sandy Abrams Your Idea, Inc. by Sandy Abrams is for people with product ideas who want to create a small business. Sandy creatively provides step-by-step details and motivational stories from the inner rumblings of idea to seeing your product on store shelves or HSN or QVC.  The book’s concrete examples will set anyone up for success.  Use her million dollar tips and biz brainstorms to take yourself from inventor to business owner.

Become Your Own Boss in 12 Months; A Month-by-Month Guide to a Business that Works By Melinda F.  Emerson This is my book which features a month-by-month countdown to starting your small business.  If you always wanted to start a business and were not sure how to start, this is the book for you.  It would be great to start my system in January. They say it’s also a great professional development course for existing business owners too.

Are You Ready To Become Your Own Boss Workbook by Melinda F. Emerson This is my brand new workbook which will walk you through to go/no go decision to start your small business. The takes the Emerson Planning System from my book Become Your Own Boss in 12 Months and     breaks it down do that you can fill in the blanks about your business idea. You will finish this workbook with a clear life plan, financial plan, business concept, niche customer and marketing plan.  You will understand whether or not you have a viable business idea.

The blog post is the debut of this new product and I am so excited to share it with you.  You can down load it or order a hard copy workbook with at 8.5 x 11 in size so that you have plenty to room to write down your answers to all the thought provoking questions about your business idea.

Life Planning Journal By Melinda F. Emerson You have often read and heard me say that you need a life plan before your ever write a business plan.  Well now we’ve taken the basic life planning tools in the book,  Become Your Own Boss in 12 Months, and developed a 76-page, life planning journal, that you can use to get clear about what you want out of life. I have been using this dynamic PDF (which means you can type right in it and print) with my clients who need to get centered, reinvent, or want to start a business but are not sure what business to start.

We all need to spend quality time with ourselves so that we can plan a course of action.  Use my life planning journal to help you figure out what you want out of life so that you can build a business around that.  Do not be one of these people who start a business that is not a good business for them.

Do you have another start-up book that I left off the list? Let me know, I love to find new resources.

If you’re ready to start or grow your small business subscribe to Melinda Emerson’s blog at www.succeedasyourownboss.com

WANT TO USE THIS ARTICLE IN YOUR EZINE, E-NEWSLETTER OR WEB SITE?  You may, as long as you include this complete blurb with it:

Become Your Own Boss in 12 Months Books By Melinda EmersonMelinda F. Emerson, known to many as SmallBizLady is one of America’s leading small business experts. As a seasoned entrepreneur, professional speaker, and small business coach, she develops audio, video and written content to fulfill her mission to end small business failure.  As CEO of MFE Consulting LLC, Melinda educates entrepreneurs and Fortune 500 companies on subjects including small business start-up, business development and social media marketing. She has been featured on NBC Nightly News, the Tavis Smiley Radio Show, in the Wall Street Journal and Black Enterprise Magazine. She hosts #SmallBizChat weekly on Twitter for emerging entrepreneurs and publishes a resource blog www.succeedasyourownboss.com Melinda is also the author of the national bestseller Become Your Own Boss in 12 months; A Month-by-Month Guide to a Business That Works. (Adams Media 2010)

$27.00

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How to Turn a Hobby Into a Small Business

This is the first of a two part blog series on how to turn a hobby into a small business.

Hobbies are fun personal interests that people pursue out of love. Some use hobbies to spend quality time with loved ones, friends or themselves. Some people use hobbies to relax. Popular hobbies including scrap booking, fishing, quilting or writing. Some people make scarves, bake cakes, party favors or frame special mementoes. If you are someone who has a hobby that people line up for—you could be on to a profitable business idea. It’s ideal to do something you love to do and get paid for it. But there is a big difference between making some extra pocket change at holiday time and running a business full-time. Here are some tips on how to turn a hobby into a small business.

There are many ways to turn a hobby into a business.

You can sell products, but don’t forget that you can also sell information as a business model. If you like collecting coupons — you could create a subscription service to notify people of the best supersaver deals each week. If you like baking, you could start selling brownies and pies or you could create a membership website for recipes for homemade baked goods that are for people with food allergies that are wheat/gluten free. Now the greater your production demands eventually you’ll need access to a commercial kitchen—but some economic development agencies across the country are creating food incubators for this very reason. If you enjoy making jewelry, why not sell your products via an online store, rather selling through the typical route of women’s conferences, craft fairs or boutiques.  All these pastimes can be turned into lucrative businesses.

Freelancing is a great way to transition your hobby into a full-time business.  I recently conducted an interview on #Smallbizchat with Pete Savage, the co-author of The Wealthy Freelancer. He’s got great insight into starting slow and building strong. Here are six additional steps that you should take if you want to start a full-time business. 

Be Honest With Yourself. Do you have the energy and stamina to crank out your hobby in volume enough to make it a viable business? Make sure you don’t ruin something that brings you joy. People pursue hobbies to blow off steam.  If you add a lot of pressure—you could blow your stack. Do your research to make sure there’s a paying customer before you bet the farm on your hobby. Successful businesses require dedicated work and responsibility. It’s easy to take the fun out of your hobby if you do not plan well.

Use Low Cost Business Resources. Once you decide that starting a business is for you, there are many books that you can read to develop your plan including my new book Become Your Own Boss in 12 Months. This book gives a comprehensive look at starting a business. It takes you month-by-month through a planning system to help you transition from having a job to starting a business. You should also make an appointment with your local Small Business Development Center and sign up for a business planning course or SCORE chapter which can provide online and face-to-face counseling.

Check Out Your Local Library. You can get plenty of market research data help from the business librarian at your local branch. Also, find out information on legal entities, sales taxes, business insurance and small business accounting systems.  There is also opportunity to learn about any business licenses or regulations that you will need to comply with to start your business.

Start While You Are Still Working a Job. There are two reasons why this is a good idea.

  1. You need to save a significant amount of money before you leave your job to become an entrepreneur—so it’s best to keep the paychecks rolling in as long as possible.
  2. Your job is one of the best sources for a customer base, particularly if your hobby has nothing to do with your day job.

Update Your Contacts And Skills. Start networking externally. Reach out to all your contacts and make sure you have your contact database on a flash drive that you keep at home. Learn the latest social networking sites and how to write press releases. Use your down time to do internet research for sourcing vendors and suppliers and to confirm your target market.

Figure Out How to Stand Out.  It is very difficult for small businesses to compete on price. You must clearly identify your niche customer and spend some time developing a signature product or signature services.  Anyone will buy something once.  How will you get them to buy it over and over again from you?

Turning your hobby into a full-time business is a great way to become your own boss. Why not work at something you love – and earn a living from it?  Do your research before you start your business. You’ll need a lot more customers than the 30 people that buy cakes from you every holiday to replace your full-time salary. Make sure there’s viable market for your goods and services, and start saving money at least 12 months before you start your business.

Next Week:  7 Questions Hobbyists Should Consider When Starting a Small Business

WANT TO USE THIS ARTICLE IN YOUR EZINE, E-NEWSLETTER OR WEB SITE? You may, as long as you include this complete blurb with it:

For more tips on how start or grow your small business subscribe to Melinda Emerson’s blog www.succeedasyourownboss.com.

Melinda Emerson, known to many as “SmallBizLady,” is a Veteran Entrepreneur, Small Business Coach and Social Media Strategist who hosts #SmallBizChat weekly on Twitter for emerging entrepreneurs.  #Smallbizchat is the trusted resource on Twitter to discuss everything entrepreneurs need to know about launching and running a profitable small business. Her first book Become Your Own Boss in 12 Months was released in March 2010.

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How to Become A Wealthy Freelancer

How to Become A Wealthy Freelancer

Every week as SmallBizLady, I conduct interviews with experts on my Twitter talk show #SmallBizChat. The show takes place every Wednesday on Twitter from 8-9pm ET. This is excerpted from my recent interview with Pete Savage Co-Author The Wealthy Freelancer:12 Secrets to a Great Income and an Enviable Lifestyle (Penguin)., and co-founder of the popular website TheWealthyFreelancer.com. For FREE chapters and other goodies  visit www.theweaththlyfreelancer.com/bonus. Pete built a successful freelance copywriting/marketing consulting business by hand. His clients include Motorola, HP, AT&T Wireless, 3M and AOL. He’s also an accomplished speaker and coach. If you’re looking for someone to champion your desire to build your own “business of one”, you’ll find the inspiration you need from Pete in The Wealthy Freelancer (Penguin Books).

Smallbizlady: Can you really earn as much as a freelancer versus being an employee?

Pete Savage: Yes! In fact, this is one of those realizations that turn some people on to the idea of becoming a freelancer / consultant / solo professional. One day they just start thinking about it, then they pull out a calculator and they shock themselves. They run the numbers 10 times in a row just to be sure, but they sit there staring at their notepad, going, “Man! I’d only have to get 15 hours of billable work per week to match my full-time salary…”

It’s like one of those things where the answer was always right in front of your nose but you didn’t see it. Once you actually see it, a light goes on… and for some people, that alone is motivation enough to start plotting their escape from the corporate world.

Smallbizlady: What’s the first thing you should do to start a freelance business?

Pete Savage: The easiest, most low cost and most important first thing you should do is spread the word. To your friends, your family, your financial advisor, your past employer, your manicurist… tell absolutely everyone about your new freelance business. Everyone has a network, and you never know where opportunities will come from. Honestly, your dentist might have a brother who is the perfect client for you.

And then you can do more formal “networking” type efforts, both online and off. Join groups on Linked In, look at local networking organizations and if they are a fit, try them out. Just be smart about in-person networking because it can be an enormous time drain. If ideal prospects for your business don’t gather together at the local Chamber of Commerce meeting… there’s no point in you going there either.

Smallbizlady: What’s the #1 most effective promotional strategy for a freelancer?

Pete Savage: That a popular question, and I understand why, because people are looking for the one answer to build a successful business. But the truth is, there is not one right answer. There are several techniques that have historically worked, and are working recently. One I always like to mention is direct mail. That’s an important one because for years, many top freelancers recommended this as the number one strategy for approaching prospects. It worked for me, it’s still working for freelancers and it involves building a list of potential prospects and sending them a sales letter.

Smallbizlady: What should your sales letter say?

Pete Savage: First let me tell you what the sales letter should NOT say, which is, it should not be a straight pitch which says, “Here’s who am I and why you should hire me.” Instead it’s better to take a “give before you get” approach. In other words, you offer to give out something that your target audience would find valuable, for free. A special report works very well here. In fact, that’s another promotional tool which I highly recommend.

Smallbizlady: Can you describe a special report and why you like it as a promotional tool?

Pete Savage: Sure, a special report is exactly what it sounds like – an informational report that you create on your own, with the intention of creating interest or “buzz” about it among your target audience.

In fact, this sort of promotional device is commonly referred to as a “buzz piece.” One reason why it’s such a great idea for a promotional tools is that you can promote it through a variety of channels… as the focus of a sales letter, as I just mentioned, on your web site, as the focus of a press release, and of course, you can tweet about it. In everything you do, you offer this type of report for free. The “give before you get approach.”

Smallbizlady: How do you go about creating a buzz piece?

Pete Savage: In order for a buzz piece to work, you must put excellent content into the report. It can include any combination of research, strategies, analysis, predictions, tips, guidelines, etc. You could interview subject matter experts and include that in the report. The format doesn’t really matter, as long as the content is helpful to your target audience. Talk intelligently about a key issue that your audience faces and provide strategies to overcome these challenges.

Think of any great seminar or webinar or workshop you attended in the past, or even some of the best blog posts you’ve ever read. The best ones teach you something, and give you real, actionable things to go away and do. Write your special report with that in mind: impart knowledge and provide actionable takeaways for the audience. Give it a great title like, “7 Ways Manufacturing Companies Can Reduce Supply Chain Inefficiency in 30 Days” Something very specific like that, which identifies your audience and makes a promise.

Smallbizlady: As a freelancer, do you need to be constantly marketing?

Pete Savage: Yes. You should always be looking for new business, but the marketing effort to find new business can decrease in time. As your freelance business you’ll have different “levels” of clients, say, A-level, B-level and C-level. A-level clients are clients that pay well and give you regular work. B-level clients may pay decent and give you occasional work and C-level may pay not very well and give you infrequent work or always come to you with rush requests. C-level are basically the kind of clients you don’t enjoy, but you work with out of necessity. As long as you have Cs and Bs, you want to be marketing because the goal, of course, is to build a stable of A-level clients, or mostly As with maybe one or two Bs.

However, having said that, over time, you can focus less on marketing for new business, and shift the focus to more on growing your business by marketing to new clients. In other words, selling more services to fewer clients, and the strategies for growing the amount of business you get from a client are different.

Smallbizlady: What are the steps to getting more business from existing clients?

Pete Savage: First thing you have to do is to look at your current clients and perform an honest assessment of the client. Ask yourself two questions: 1) Is this a client from whom I think I can get additional business? And, 2) What makes me think that? Answering these questions is important because you don’t want to try growing business from a client who may have no further need for your services, or who may not have the budget to send additional work your way.

So once you’ve identified ways to do that, there are a variety of things you can do such as:

1)       Come right out and ask for more work. This sounds obvious, but not everyone does this. One way to open up this conversation is, “So, what’s coming next for you, or your department, once this project is wrapped up?” Your contact may tip you off as to more work on the horizon, to which you can respond by saying, “Oh, I’d be interested in helping you with that…” and there you go, the door is open.

2)       Ask to be introduced to others in the company who may have need for your services. This works particularly well in larger companies.

3)        Offer a free training session, in the form of a seminar or an on-site lunch ‘n learn.

How important is it to be a specialist or serve a specific market niche?

It’s very important. Having a specialty or picking a niche makes marketing your business a whole lot easier. Sometimes the niche or market you wish to serve is obvious to you. But if it isn’t, and you haven’t started your freelance business yet, it’s better to just get started in SOME direction you feel comfortable with, rather than wait for the perfect niche to show up. You might not know what niche opportunities exist right from day one, but you can explore this based on your skill set, your interests, passions as well as opportunities you see in the market, and experience you glean from projects and clients as you go along.

Smallbizlady: In your book, The Wealthy Freelancer, you focus on the importance of bringing a strong mental game to being a freelancer. Why did you include that in the book?

Pete Savage: The number one reason most freelancer’s shut their business down is because they give up too soon. We also felt that there has been, and still is far too much of a “survivalist” attitude out there among freelancers. Too much attention paid to the struggle and advice on how to just “make ends meet” and not enough on the segment of the freelance population who do very well. These people exist. It is possible to earn a terrific living as a freelancer, but that will never happen if you bring a “woe is me” attitude to the game. So we start the book right of the bat with what I think is the most important of the 12 secrets, which is, “Secret #1: Master the Mental Game”.

Smallbizlady: What are some of the key teachings from that chapter on mastering the mental game?

Pete Savage:  Invest in your success. This means invest in books, courses, programs, coaching, etc. in your subject matter but also on the more “softer” things like goal setting, productivity, building a positive outlook, being willing to take chances. Those “softer” skills are what will push you to succeed.

Develop unshakeable belief in yourself. As a solo professional, YOU need to be the one person who is always, unconditionally in your corner. It’s great, and very helpful, to have supportive people around you. But if you lack belief in yourself, you’ll give up when the challenges arrive. One way to do this is to read biographies about the incredible power of the human spirit. True rags to riches stories of people like Oprah Winfrey, J.K. Rowling, Tony Robbins – and there are countless more examples – can help you nurture the belief that anything is possible.

Expect this unshakable belief to be shaken. I’m not speaking tongue-in-cheek here… there will be times when you experience anxiety and fear over your own ability to deliver. It’s normal. When it happens, if it takes you by surprise, it can knock the wind out of your sails. But if you expect and accept it as normal, you’ll be better equipped to cope with challenges, and you’ll bounce back.

Absorb the feelings of success when they come. Hey, you’ll have some great successes – enjoy them! Enjoy the feeling, and the money, that they bring, and adopt that as your new “norm” and you’ll insulate yourself from the “starving artist” stories that are out there.

Smallbizlady: What’s one other important piece of advice for someone who might want to launch a successful freelance business?

Pete Savage: I’ll give you two pieces of advice, the two most important ones: Never stop marketing. And never give up. Do both of those and you’re bound to succeed.

If you found this interview helpful, join us on Wednesdays 8-9pm ET follow @SmallBizChat on Twitter.

How to participate in #SmallBizChat: http://bit.ly/S797e

Melinda F. Emerson, also known as Twitter’s @SmallBizLady is a seasoned entrepreneur, professional speaker, and small business coach whose areas of expertise include small business start-up, business development and social media marketing. She hosts #SmallBizChat weekly on Twitter for emerging entrepreneurs.  Her book “Become Your Own Boss in 12 months; A Month-by-Month Guide to a Business That Works was released in March 2010 by Adams Media, grab it on Amazon or in bookstores nationwide.

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Who’s Coming Up in May 2010 on #SmallBizChat

Who’s Coming Up in May 2010 on #SmallBizChat

The M in May stands for Marketing on #Smallbizchat, where each show this month will focus on an element of marketing and your small business.

  • May 5th Jill Lublin @JillLublin Public Relations Expert and Co-Author, Guerilla Publicity – How to Develop Free Publicity to Grow Your Small Business.
  • May 12th David Siteman Garland @Therisetothetop Founder, Rise To the Top – How to Build Buzz for Your Online Content
  • May 19th HankWasiak @HankWasiak Veteran Ad Exec. Co-Founder of Concept Farm – How to effectively mix traditional marketing techniques and social media marketing.
  • May 26th Pete Savage @PeteSavage Co-Author, Wealthy Freelancer – Learn the secrets to having a great income as a full-time freelancer.

How to participate in #SmallBizChat: http://bit.ly/S797e

Melinda Emerson “SmallBizLady” is a Veteran Entrepreneur, Small Business Coach and Social Media Strategist who hosts #SmallBizChat weekly on Twitter. Melinda also publishes a resource blog on small business best practices at www.succeedasyourownboss.com Her first book, Become Your Own Boss in 12 Months was released by Adams Media in March 2010

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