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SBA counselors say you should be able to give positive answers to most of these questions. If not, then reconsider whether you really ought to go into business for yourself. You can find more information online at www.sba.gov under the "Starting Your Business" section or in the SBA's free Small Business Resource Guide publication for your region, available through your area SBA office.
The Georgia State SBDC also offers an Entrepreneur Risk Assessment Quiz online at the SBDCnet Small Business Development Center National Information Clearinghouse, http://sbdcnet.utsa.edu, under the "Getting Started" section.
Preliminary Research
Before you invest major time, money or effort into any business idea, the experts suggest you take some preliminary research steps and think about these areas:
Business criteria - What kind of income could you earn from this business? Would you be a working owner or absentee? Does this business sound fun and interesting to you? If you did start it, could the business be easily duplicated if it were successful, giving you room for expansion? Can the business be branded? Can it be systemized? Are there ways you could eventually produce other streams of revenue by branching out from the core part of your business?
History - Is someone else already doing what you want to do? If not, there's probably a reason. Is there no market for it? Is the timing wrong?
Finances - Do you have resources for funding the start-up phase of your business? If so, how long will those resources last? If you don't have the money in your bank account, do you have access to a second mortgage? Family backing? A line of credit? If you haven't even thought about this, you could be in trouble already.
After the initial research, it's time to take more concrete steps: choose an industry and a niche; write a business plan that includes a marketing plan; put together an action plan and a flowchart; and make sure you're financially prepared for your new venture. These will be discussed in Chapters 2, 3 and 4.
For more information about starting a business, read Taking an Idea to Market: How to Turn Your Vision Into a Successful Business Venture by Molly Tschida Brennan, published by NAWBO in 2004.
Checklist
To read more, order Tapping Your Inner Entrepreneur by visiting https://memberservices.nawbo.org/nawbo/source/
Orders/index.cfm?section=Orders.
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