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Getting down to business

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DAVE SAYS

DAVE SAYS

Ask yourself some tough questions before starting your own company.

My mom started her business when I was only 6 months old. She was a single mother with only $64 to her name but also had a determination to survive. To make ends meet, she went back to the one thing she knew she was really good at: baking and decorating cakes. When I see small businesses being celebrated throughout the year, I always think back to my roots. It reminds me of my childhood, which is lled with sweet memories from the cake shop my mom started more than 35 years ago. I grew up watching her struggle and work hard as she built a business and a life doing what she loved. But the best part is that it lit a fi in me to help equip other women to do the same.

Because of my mom, I started some side businesses of my own. And later, ed business coach and created the Business Boutique. I wanted to build a place for women to overcome fear and learn everything they needed to know about starting and growing a business.

For many of us, the journey begins (and sometimes ends) with one question: Do I have what it takes to start a small business?

As much as I love small-business owners, the answer isn’t always “Yes.” It takes a certain kind of person with the willingness to put themselves out there and the determination to persevere. You’ve got to be OK with unknown risks, a lot of responsibility and really hard work at times. So, to help women figure out if this might be worth their while, I usually ask them three questions:

1. DO YOU WANT TO HELP PEOPLE?

If you don’t really like people or helping them, then starting a business is probably not right for you. But if you get excited about serving others in some way—improving their lives, meeting their needs, solving their problems or listening to their complaints (because, let’s be honest, there will be some)—then this might be right for you. And if you already have in mind how you want to

There’s a difference between a hobby and a business: A business makes you money, while a hobby costs you money. Many people pursue their hobby as a business and then end up broke, because they just don’t care about making money or they “feel bad” for charging someone for what they do.

Now, if you do want to make profi you have some weird, squirmy feelings about money, that’s normal. I coach women every day to help them face their fears about pricing their product, charging customers, and paying themselves. Just because you have a love-hate relationship with money doesn’t mean you can’t make it. You just need a little help. But you need to have a drive to make money if you’re ever going to make any (translation: stay in business).

I’m not going to sugarcoat this: Business is hard work at times. It just is. But if you want it bad enough and are willing to put in the blood, sweat, and tears, then you can make it. You don’t need a business degree, a pile of money, or all the bells and whistles to build the top. They were just willing to get knocked down over and over again, get back up, dust themselves off, and keep going. ect over these three questions. They’re great indicators of whether starting a business might be a t for you. I sure hope it is, because I love small businesses. Small businesses are the backbone of our economy. They create jobs, pour back into their communities, and lead the charge in new technology and

I can’t help but dream about seeing even more women pursue their passion and build a life making money doing what they love. So, let me ask you, will

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