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Realized by PROTEGE
QV disconnection |
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Starting a Micro enterprise>>market research |
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| Business Selection Checklist The chart bellow is designed to help you choose the business that’s right for you. To fill it, follow these three steps: (1) In the far left-hand column, list the business ideas you’re considering by order of importance. In the top left-hand blank space, put the idea you think you’re most interested in, beneath, it put the next idea and so on until you’ve listed all your possible ideas on the left side of the chart. (table) (2) Now take each idea and rate it on a scale from 0-3 in each of the areas listed. Use the following rating system: 0-none, 1-below average, 2-average, and 3-above average. Here’s a look at each of the categories and some of the things you should consider when rating them: Your knowledge of the business. How much do you know about the area?
Will you have to spend extra time and money teaching yourself the business?
Will you have to take on a partner because you don’t know the business
well enough? Your experience in the field. In some cases, you may have a lot of knowledge
about the subject, but not much experience. Have you ever owned or worked
in this type of business before? To what extent is hands-on experience
crucial to the business? Your skills. Ignore, for now, those skills that might be common to each
of your ideas, and try to concentrate on skills that are unique to that
business. To what extent do you master those skills? If you lack them,
how difficult will it be to acquire them? Ease of entry. Think both of the costs of entering into the business
and of the competitive barriers that might exist. For example, a service
business that you can run from your home might be relatively inexpensive
to start, but if several others are already providing that service, entry
in the field may be difficult. Uniqueness. Uniqueness does not necessarily mean that literally no one
else is providing the same product or service; it can mean that no one
else is providing the product or service in the same way you intend to
provide it, or it can mean that no one else is providing that product
or service in your area. You’re looking for some way to distinguish
your product or service from others who are already in the business. Table 1 : Business selection checklist
(3) Now sum up the numbers. Here are some elements for making good use
of the numbers and for narrowing your list of business possibilities: How many ideas are left? If the answer is “none,” then you need to use the list to identify where you need to improve and you need to develop a strategy for raising the “1’s” to “2’s” or “3’s.” If the answer is “more than one,” you have a pleasant dilemma: a choice of which business to start. If the answer is “one,” you may have just found the business that’s perfect for you.
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