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ommunity bui
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Sick of bosses? Well, best not start your own business then. Because then you will have lots of people trying to be the boss at the same time: you, the bank manager, your stressed-out partner, your customers and the tax people to name just the ones that may keep you up all night in a cold sweat. But its worth it
it is to lose your job and have to go search for another one. So roll up! Fist-pumping moments of sweet success await; as well as some healthy tax breaks and the chance to stop mumbling into your coffee about how you would run things differently.
ant to work at your own pace without anyone breathing down your neck? Forget that, too. Expect multiple work and payment deadlines, and almost constant pressure from folks you rarely even see. Once youre out on your own, every duvet day comes straight out of your own pocket. If you dont get it done, it doesnt get done, and theres no money at the end of the month. Ideally, try not to get sick and be nice to absolutely everybody you meet, just in case you need them. The good news is that if you have a sound business idea, or can find a fertile little niche to inhabit, you could soon feel the thrill of making your own profits, rather than somebody elses. And if the going gets tough, it can be much easier psychologically and practically to adjust your business to keep the pennies rolling than
The basics
Business.govt.nz offers detailed advice and a host of online tools for those ready to go it alone, and www.nzte.govt.nz also has some handy guides on creating your business.
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You want Tom Peters, one of the worlds top business gurus with 30 years experience, condensed into easy-read Powerpoint slides, and you want it free?! Oh all right then, visit: excellencenow.com
App Store
FREE
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Floppy discipline
Imagine if somebody wheeled a trolley up to your work desk in the morning and said: Hey, heres a video machine that plays endless movies, oh and heres a stack of the worlds best newspapers and magazines, also a stereo that plays all your favourite music, your friends from all over the world are chatting in our Facebook room behind you and under the desk I have left a stack of pornography and an arcade machine, but stay focused on doing the accounts all day, yeah? So just in case you or your employees dont have the selfdiscipline of say, Ghandi, then it might be worth establishing some rules and regulations around computer use in your organisation, backed up with content filtering and monitoring. A good free and customisable filter is available at k9webprotection.com.
Pssst!
The government has some cash for you www.nzfundinggrants.org wants to give you some money to get started. Well, possibly. Check it out.
primary income and employs fewer than 25 people, for a registration fee of $150 you can get two years worth of advice from someone who has been there and done that. If you dont think that is a deal, dont start a business. business.govt.nz Your first step to running a company is to register it here. ird.govt.nz Easy to use taxation advice that isnt even completely terrifying. acc.co.nz This will be covering you, your staff and your customers for any accidents that happen. Get in touch, provide accurate information, and keep an eye on how much you will need to cough up each year. waveaccounting.com If you have a stable and secure internet connection and want to monitor your accounts free and online, this may be for you. ability to be able to state clearly and simply the ways in which what you are offering is important and different to what the other business people have to offer. And you will know if you do get it right because you wont have to compete purely on price, or constantly have to respond to competitors that are one step ahead of you.
This will give you a good understanding of the numbers underpinning your business, help instill good financial discipline and record keeping, and ensure you have the experience to keep a close eye on what the bean counters are up to as time goes on. If your business has some genuinely new ideas at its core, pay a visit to your friendly local specialist intellectual property lawyers. They can do all the normal stuff, but will also advise on just how new your idea is, whether you can protect it from your would-be competitors, or how much protection you need from them.
Boot it up online
Get busy online with these helpful sites: businessmentors.org.nz If your business is your
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Thirty or so people share the new(ish) co-working space The Kitchen, which is based in Grey Lynn. Who are they? Social enterprise startups, with a focus on anything from reducing alcohol-related harm in the gay community through to edible gardens for private and commercial spaces. The Kitchen is the brainchild of academic Murray Sheard, who happened upon the idea after seeing something similar in London. Read all about it on page 32.
tool, to establish the most effective use of resources to get the desired result: more sales. Decent advice can help you do that, so seek it out. The more dependent your business is on computing power, the more robust and reliable a system you are going to need from the outset. The basics should be aimed at avoiding the loss of important work or business information and also making sure you are not upsetting customers with slow response times or virus spreading. The business computers should therefore be no more than about three years old, able to run the latest software and open all the most popular document formats, with up-to-date virus protection, a back-up drive you take home with you each night and a back-up power supply if you are at risk from power cuts frazzling things. Smartphones will allow you and your staff to be reachable for customers anywhere, but you may need to
exercise restraint in order to remain familiar with your partner and children. Before marketing on social networking sites like Facebook and Twitter, talk to an expert, in other words, anybody under 20. Its an emerging artform, and although there are some basic dos and donts, the key thing to remember is that it takes time, effort and a dose of luck to create a real relationship with others in a virtual world that will lead to actual sales. It cant be faked or rushed.
to you what kind of idea you have in the first place. The key questions to ask yourself are: have you got a unique selling point, is there a real market for what you have to offer, and do you have enough money to keep going until you turn a profit? If the answer to all those questions is yes, it is time to do some serious sums and think about writing Dear ex-boss
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