woods89
WKR
I've been self employed for 10 years in the residential construction field. Some thoughts, worth what you are paying for them.
-Right now, there is a lot of demand in many service industries. I'd be cautious about buying an existing business and paying for intangibles, when a little time spent building relationships might result in plenty of work and get you off the ground with only costs for tangible.
-No matter what you are told, if you buy an existing business you will likely lose a certain percentage of both employees and customers just from the change.
-If you buy a business and don't know how to self perform the work, and then lose some key employees, you will be in a very tight spot, and you will damage your reputation in ways that may take years to repair.
-Capital helps, and be prepared to see it evaporate temporarily, hopefully not permanently.
-Your money will be made in knowing your costs very well.
I'm told that 99% of small businesses are gone within 10 years. If people knew what the first 10 years were like, there would probably be a lot less "entrepreneurs". That said, I'm a huge fan of being self employed. I can and do, however, spend a lot of time on-site with a toolbelt on.
-Right now, there is a lot of demand in many service industries. I'd be cautious about buying an existing business and paying for intangibles, when a little time spent building relationships might result in plenty of work and get you off the ground with only costs for tangible.
-No matter what you are told, if you buy an existing business you will likely lose a certain percentage of both employees and customers just from the change.
-If you buy a business and don't know how to self perform the work, and then lose some key employees, you will be in a very tight spot, and you will damage your reputation in ways that may take years to repair.
-Capital helps, and be prepared to see it evaporate temporarily, hopefully not permanently.
-Your money will be made in knowing your costs very well.
I'm told that 99% of small businesses are gone within 10 years. If people knew what the first 10 years were like, there would probably be a lot less "entrepreneurs". That said, I'm a huge fan of being self employed. I can and do, however, spend a lot of time on-site with a toolbelt on.