Originally posted by seyre1972
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Plan B - Open a pharmacy
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"You’re just a bad memory who doesn’t know when to go away" JR -
You can't just 'open' a pharmacy.
You need to apply for a license. The license can be used to cover a specific area for prescriptions. These are designed to ensure that there is coverage within a specific area. The for example a dispensary at a local surgery cannot provide/fulfill prescriptions for patients within specific areas that are covered by a pharmacy.
Then of course, once you have the license for a given area/population, then you need professionally trained staff etc etc.
I only know this from a discussion with the local pharmacy that opened a few months ago with the chap who had been a consultant opening and obtaining licenses for pharmacists(he deciced to do it himself. Now my local surgery will not dispense to us because of his license). It seems to work on a population/pharmacy ratio.
From someone else I know(who's brother in law owns a number of pharmacies) he reckons they are incredibly profitable at 80/90% and his BIL makes a bloody fortune. Personally having run different shops on the high street I'm not convinced.
Have you ever thought of Thai Tat?What happens in General, stays in General.You know what they say about assumptions!Comment
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Try buying Kamagra online - they cost a pound each. You can sell them round the clubs for £10/£20 a go.
Of course you have to tolerate going into a club....Comment
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Originally posted by BrilloPad View PostTry buying Kamagra online - they cost a pound each. You can sell them round the clubs for £10/£20 a go.
Of course you have to tolerate going into a club....What happens in General, stays in General.You know what they say about assumptions!Comment
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Originally posted by NorthWestPerm2Contr View PostI just can't think of a good plan B which is feasible.
What does a good pharmacist charge? £50k a year minimum. That's best part of £200k in my book total cost to employ. What is the profit margin pharmacists make?
Even if you cream in 20% you're looking at £1mln in sales before you've paid for the staff.
My advice is that unless your OH has very very very good experience in the management of a pharmacy (not just dishing out pills) then avoid. If you don't know it will work and can produce the numbers to prove it I'd guess you don't know enough about it.Comment
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Originally posted by Sockpuppet View PostSurely if your OH and your family friends who are qualified pharmacists open a pharmacy then it's up to them? FWIW unless you're a qualified pharmacist you're going to struggle to make money while others do the work as you'll need at least 3 x Pharmacists (working 50 hours) to cover 100 hours of opening.
What does a good pharmacist charge? £50k a year minimum. That's best part of £200k in my book total cost to employ. What is the profit margin pharmacists make?
Even if you cream in 20% you're looking at £1mln in sales before you've paid for the staff.
My advice is that unless your OH has very very very good experience in the management of a pharmacy (not just dishing out pills) then avoid. If you don't know it will work and can produce the numbers to prove it I'd guess you don't know enough about it.Comment
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Originally posted by NorthWestPerm2Contr View Postalso looking at other options e.g. buying an existing business with normal hours.....'CUK forum personality of 2011 - Winner - Yes really!!!!Comment
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Originally posted by NorthWestPerm2Contr View Postalso looking at other options e.g. buying an existing business with normal hours.....
Do your research and ensure you are confident in your own business model. You can use CUK for sounding out ideas but 99/100 posters on here think they're Dragons Den entrepreneurs when in truth it's only 1/100 who actually bother to put their money where their mouth is and open a real business. All the rest don't have the bottle and they remain IT contractors because they can't even hack getting into management let alone going it alone in true business.
Let Excel be your friend, and if that stacks up, go for it, it's only ever money you risk and it's better to be a 'had a go and failed' than a backseat 'I told you so'.
(Succeeding is even better though)What happens in General, stays in General.You know what they say about assumptions!Comment
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Originally posted by MarillionFan View PostAll I will add is:-
Do your research and ensure you are confident in your own business model. You can use CUK for sounding out ideas but 99/100 posters on here think they're Dragons Den entrepreneurs when in truth it's only 1/100 who actually bother to put their money where their mouth is and open a real business. All the rest don't have the bottle and they remain IT contractors because they can't even hack getting into management let alone going it alone in true business.
Let Excel be your friend, and if that stacks up, go for it, it's only ever money you risk and it's better to be a 'had a go and failed' than a backseat 'I told you so'.
(Succeeding is even better though)
Yep can't disagree with that. It's not easy to be an entrepreneur but contracting has definitely pushed me in the right direction towards the possibility of being one....Comment
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