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It's not your run of the mill offering. It's a far improved offering over what a small number of businesses are already doing. I bought the accounts of a 'competitor' (not the market leader by any stretch) and they make contracting rates look paltry in comparison:
These are very encouraging figures. Question remains why haven't I committed to this already? Answer - lack of funds in warchest and the 'easy' £ 150k that is just one contract away. Only now it ain't that easy anymore!
With figures like that, why isn't it you Plan A already?? Why continue contracting at all?
The difficulty with trying to offer a service is how do you advertise yourself so that people know you exist. Success is 99% marketing and 1% good product. Your product just needs to be good enough.
The quickest way into a successful business would be to buy one and then improve it. Then you would have the marketing machinery in place.
These are real figures from the annual accounts purchased from Companies House.
The big player in the industry is turning over around £ 1.5m.
The reason I haven't pursued this at the 'expense' of contracting is that clearly it's going to take a couple of years before the income is anything like and, whether right or wrong, my warchest just won't bridge the gap and I have significant outgoings. The only real course of action, to my mind these last 3 months, was to land a contract and then continue with the other business on an evening/weekend. Stop the rot. Pay the bills. Only landing that contract isn't as easy as it used to be and days become weeks and then months very quickly. Hindsight is a wonderful thing. If I'd known I'd be on the bench for 3 months I would have done things differently. More time on the other business and I wouldn't have been consumed with finding a new contract.
Sods law isn't it that I've been called in for a face-to-face for another bank. No doubt a wasted of time and money but I have to go.
These are real figures from the annual accounts purchased from Companies House.
The big player in the industry is turning over around £ 1.5m.
The reason I haven't pursued this at the 'expense' of contracting is that clearly it's going to take a couple of years before the income is anything like and, whether right or wrong, my warchest just won't bridge the gap and I have significant outgoings. The only real course of action, to my mind these last 3 months, was to land a contract and then continue with the other business on an evening/weekend. Stop the rot. Pay the bills. Only landing that contract isn't as easy as it used to be and days become weeks and then months very quickly. Hindsight is a wonderful thing. If I'd known I'd be on the bench for 3 months I would have done things differently. More time on the other business and I wouldn't have been consumed with finding a new contract.
Sods law isn't it that I've been called in for a face-to-face for another bank. No doubt a wasted of time and money but I have to go.
If you really want to start a new business, you would have ben working at this in the time you have had on the bench, and every waking hour you have. Simply drooling over someone elses accounts is not the same thing as starting a business.
Are you sure you're cut out for entrepeneurialism?
If you really want to start a new business, you would have ben working at this in the time you have had on the bench, and every waking hour you have. Simply drooling over someone elses accounts is not the same thing as starting a business.
Are you sure you're cut out for entrepeneurialism?
I'd throw myself into Plan B but keep a bit of time aside to keep looking for a contract. If a contract offer comes up then assess what you want to do then. If not, not much time wasted and you can continue with Plan B.
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