By clicking “Accept All”, you agree to the storing of cookies on your device to enhance site navigation, analyse site usage, and assist in our marketing efforts
These cookies enable our website and App to remember things such as your region or country, language, accessibility options and your preferences and settings.
Analytic cookies help website owners to understand how visitors interact with websites by collecting and reporting information anonymously.
Marketing cookies are used to track visitors across websites. The intention is to display ads that are relevant and engaging for the individual user and thereby more valuable for publishers and third party advertisers.
There are loads of gaps in the marketplace.I am 21 years old and I dream of running my own business, but I find it almost impossible to think of a gap in modern day markets.
There are loads of gaps in the marketplace.
The bloke who cleans the wheelie bins is retiring so will be selling his business. A young lad I know has started washing cars in one of the business parks. Two locals have just begin a winter gardening service clearing leaves and all the dead plants. They also dig over and prepare beds for spring. There are always opening for dog walkers or pet-sitters. You could be visitor for the elderly, become a courier, man with a van, learn a trade or a zillion other sole trader opportunities.
What do you like doing most?
You mean do what the advert says and build a godaddy site selling tat and make loadsamoney. Must be true 'cos it said so on the telly.Does sitting behind a keyboard thinking of ways of making money without having to do all those horrible things count?
You mean do what the advert says and build a godaddy site selling tat and make loadsamoney. Must be true 'cos it said so on the telly.
That's what you love, not what you're good at.
Generally they are two very different things.
Are / were you selling art, TV/speakers or working in retail (order taking)? They are very different things.
If you can sell then you could work as an agent for brands with very little investment, this applies to art and audio visual.
Ok, so find an AV brand that you like and that either isn't in the UK or doesn't have a UK office and little market penetration and approach them to represent them.
You sell the brand to retailers, shops place orders and you get paid a margin / commission by the suppliers on all orders as long as you support the brand.
You're doing something you love, something you're good at and something there is a demand for.
Capital requirements are minimal, shops order direct from the suppliers, you never hold stock.
NO! Sitting behind a keyboard thinking of ways you can contribute, that you love to do, that may well make some money if done right, does.Does sitting behind a keyboard thinking of ways of making money without having to do all those horrible things count?
Genius, thank you so much for your help, what a fantastic and easy way of thinking!
The market, any market these days, is very tightly arbitraged already. So unless you are an autistic savant, just thinking will not enable you to find a gap in modern day markets. (The autistic savant will see the gaps, but not have any interest in exploiting them!) You have to get involved. Go get involved in a market that really spikes your interest. Do some following. Do some grunt work. THEN the gap in the market will show up. Working on the inside the little gaps where no one else is doing a really superb job in fulfilling demand will suddenly show up. Good Luck!Hi All,
I am 21 years old and I dream of running my own business, but I find it almost impossible to think of a gap in modern day markets.
Am I looking in the wrong places or is there a certain way I should be thinking?
Please help.
Ryan
The market, any market these days, is very tightly arbitraged already. So unless you are an autistic savant, just thinking will not enable you to find a gap in modern day markets. (The autistic savant will see the gaps, but not have any interest in exploiting them!) You have to get involved. Go get involved in a market that really spikes your interest. Do some following. Do some grunt work. THEN the gap in the market will show up. Working on the inside the little gaps where no one else is doing a really superb job in fulfilling demand will suddenly show up. Good Luck!
I long for a coffee shop where I can get a fresh cup of coffee served to me without waiting (all automated - I mean seriously, watching someone hold a jug of milk getting steamed until it's sufficiently is not that efficient at all). Think Dominos - where you can see your order time counting down ...but for coffee (therefore much lower waiting times than dominos!)
You mean you want a bunch of these stacked next to each other in a room.
![]()
No, those things produce woeful coffee.
I want fresh milk (not long life or powdered)...and nice coffee. Basically, I want a coffee that's of the same quality (& the same process) that a human makes ...just without the humans being involved. Also, I don't want to be charged approx £3.00 for what amounts to a few ground beans & a cup of steamed milk.
No, those things produce woeful coffee.
There you go, one business idea..... run with it.
Their adverts claim they use freshly ground coffee beans, fresh milk and tastes identical to the barista making it in their coffee shops.
It has been done before and will require a huge amount of money to research, set-up, find sites and manage.
Better to get a robot coffee kiosk - start with one at a well populated mainline/underground (If you can get a license). No humans required for the making of the coffee. Just a daily top up of consumables. The robot alone will attract onlookers.
It's the future.
If something has been done before then how much of a huge amount of research will be needed compared to last time?
Another idea I had was to run a (city based) coffee-on-the-go shop with a variable price based on peak/non-peak times (a BIG digital display in the shop window shows the current pricing)...therefore at peak times you pay the same as the local competition for a cup of coffee (high), but at off peak times the price reduces a touch ... not everyone needs to buy a coffee at certain time (some can slip away from their desks for 5 minutes). The idea being is to smooth out the supply/demand peaks/troughs.
Not as mad as it sounds....you'd be surprised what some will do to save 20p!
Another idea I had was to run a (city based) coffee-on-the-go shop with a variable price based on peak/non-peak times
The problem with that is human nature
people won't think; great it's cheaper at 3:00 they will think why is it expensive at 1:00![]()
Which is why I said at peak times "priced the same as the local competition" ...when customers realise the 'peak price coffee' is priced the sameas everywhere else, they can hardly cry "dear!".
Parking the variable price for a moment ...I reckon any city based coffee-on-the-go shop that undercuts the crazy prices charged for coffeee is likely to be onto a winner (it's as if every cafe is in on a some form of coffee price cartel & nobody breaks ranks!). I used to work in the city...our local cafe there was struggling to pull punters in...even though his coffee was about 25% cheaper than the major coffee purveyors (& just as good). I told him to get a whopping big digital sign in his (large) front window shouting about the price of a Late to pull the punters in - once they're in you cross sell (doughnuts, sandwiches, crsips etc.). He never did...his cafe remained relatively quiet...he bailed out & sold to another person who thought they could make a go of it too!