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The classic common one is where someone signs a lease for a shop or office, or worse, a pub, and only after signing it do they make appointments to see the accountant and solicitor.
..... they will be aware that marketing takes as 5 times much effort as they think etc
I am watching a guy who has just started in a shop similar to one i had last year ,he is selling stuff too cheap
he is proud to be selling screws at less than screwfix
he is selling an iten he buys for 9 pence at 39 pence great % mark up may be but we sold them for £3.25 and paid 7pence .
i tried to explain that the market price is that but he seems to think cheap will bring in loads of customers (i think the term is busy fool )
and to echo a previous poster he has no product knowledge (and wont listen)
he has a very tied up 5 year lease and he is allready saying after 3 months 'how do people in shops make any money ?'
I believe it is normally lack of cash flow. People underestimate how important cash flow is.
After that it is poor costing. All too often people buy at x and sell at x+1 and forget post, packaging, wages, wastage, "lost" deliveries, etc etc. They look at the turnover and see that they are making lots of sales and miss the bottom line.
Also, should add went on a business course where a colleague attended. This colleague reckoned on £10.00 an hour being good for his self employed service, but couldn't see when I and the lecturer both pointed out that it wasn't £10.00 an hour once you took out your expenses. No amount of explaining could make him understand that.
If the education system included in its core curriculum the basics of how to run a business then I think we would see far less failures. People will know what to expect, they will be aware that marketing takes as 5 times much effort as they think etc
And who would be teaching this? Almost by definition NOT people who have been successful running businesses!
+1It was a bad idea to start with. People start businesses with totally unrealistic ideas
Why do so many start ups fail in their first year and what can be done to prevent this from happening?
+1
The retail sector is riff in this area with individuals who have totally unrealistic expectation of potential sales.
So often do I see shops opening up that don't have a chance of reaching the required turnover neccessary to pay expenses (rent, rates, staff and so forth) let alone make any money.
Lack of a strategy to tackle the market place.
Inability to review and/or amend if and when appropiate business plan/model/strategy.
Lack of delegation which can lead to low morale of staff/self/other relevant parties involved.
Poor Credit Control/Debt Recovery processes/procedures
Marketing
Naivity
People buying a business don't seem to take account of the fact that people lie. The number of times turnover turns out to be half that promised is alarming
Too friendly not businesslike
Some people seem afraid to charge.
Government research shows that the major reason for business failure is poor cash flow. This is caused by primarily lack of sales and secondly by poor credit management (late/non payment of debtor invoices).
Best Regards